Artist's albums
Flares 'N' Slippers and Unheard Rejects
2001 · album
Back On The Street
2000 · album
Flares 'N' Slippers and Unheard Rejects
1993 · compilation
Lethal
1990 · album
Quiet Storm
1984 · album
The Wild Ones
1982 · album
The Power and the Glory
1981 · album
Greatest Hits Vol 3: Live and Loud
1981 · compilation
Greatest Hits Vol. 2
1980 · compilation
Power Grab
2022 · album
Same Ol' Same Ol'
2022 · single
Chapecoense
2017 · single
It's Gonna Kick Off!
2016 · single
Goodbye Upton Park
2016 · single
Hammer (The Wild Ones / Quiet Storm / Lethal / Nathan's Pies & Eels)
2013 · compilation
Nathan's Pies & Eels
2013 · compilation
East End Babylon
2012 · album
Your Country Needs You
2012 · single
Unforgiven
2007 · album
Fists Of Fury
2007 · single
Live and Loud!!: Bridgehouse Tapes
2007 · album
Unheard Rejects 79/81
2007 · album
Greatest Hits Vol. 4 (Here They Come Again)
2005 · compilation
Out of the Gutter
2002 · album
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Biography
Inspired by the critically reviled working-class punk of Sham 69, the Cockney Rejects helped give voice to the punk subgenre tagged Oi!, partly thanks to the group's 1980 song "Oi! Oi! Oi!" The Rejects' sound was loud, brash, and crudely performed, with an irreverent sense of humor and an inclination toward mindless anarchy that made them appealing to frustrated lower-class youth and, unfortunately, the more extreme right-wing racist faction among the growing skinhead movement, an association the group did not encourage but for which it was soundly berated. Vocalist Jefferson Turner, guitarist Mick Geggus, bassist Vince Riordan, and drummer Keith Warrington were discovered in London's East End by Sham 69 singer Jimmy Pursey, who helped the group get a record deal. The Rejects' initial output was voluminous; their first two albums were both released in 1980 and jokingly titled Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 and Vol. 2. Greatest Hits, Vol. 3: Live & Loud!, featuring "live" versions of their best-known songs (actually recorded in a studio with an audience), and The Power and the Glory followed in 1981. The latter album found the group trying to broaden its approach, employing acoustic guitars and a more melodic orientation. Released in 1982, The Wild Ones marked a shift toward heavy metal; unsure of their direction, the Rejects eventually disbanded in 1985, with several compilations of live and unreleased material appearing (1985's Unheard Rejects, 1987's Live and Loud!! The Bridgehouse Tapes). The Cockney Rejects reunited in 1990 for the album Lethal, which failed to make much of an impression. Ten years later saw the release of Back on the Street, followed by Out of the Gutter in 2003 and Unforgiven in 2007. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi