We go back to 1980s Sheffield today for the
entire catalog of industrial funk band Workforce, who put out just two 12-inch singles, but they're among the best of that time and place. The first was "Skin Scraped Back" in 1985, released on Cabaret Voltaire's Doublevision label (and that stamp of approval should carry more weight than anything I could write). The record contains two mixes of the title track plus "Heap the Blame." The lineup:
Paul Wheatcroft: Vocals Guitar Violin Keyboards
Alan Fisch: Drums Percussion Tapes/Treatments
Rod Leigh: Guitar Keyboards Tapes Voice
Tim Owen: Wind Instruments Percussion Keyboards
Special thanks to Adi Hardy Bass Guitar
The throbbing bassline really makes the song tick; Workforce comes across as a harder-edged
Chakk. I found an interesting post on the
Sheffield forum from Tim Owen about Amrik Rai, the NME music writer who co-founded FON Records:
He always seemed to have some project or other up his sleeve when I briefly knew him. I played in Chakk rivals, Workforce for a while [sax, percussion, keys, tapes]. Rai interviewed us for NME after our first Peel Session and single, but the NME interview mysteriously never saw the light. I put it down to the fact that he was also the manager of Chakk, and didn't want similar [although more experimental] bands such as Workforce and Hula to steal Chakk's thunder.
In 1986 Workforce released their second and last record, the "Back in the Good Books" 12-inch on Rorschach Testing.
Again, there are two mixes of the title track (which cranks the tempo up a couple notches from "Skin"), and one more song, "This Is the One," which sounds uncannily like Chakk. The lineup is the same but now three members have "programming" in their credits, and special thanks go to Terry Todd (of
The Box) who I presume played bass. And that's all there is from Workforce, except for another remix of "Skin Scraped Back" from
Abstract Magazine 6 (Audio/Visual), which I have included for completeness' sake. Get it
here or
here.