| The Labrats were formed in Sydney in 1986 following
the breakup of Ironheart. Internal
conflicts within Ironheart, mainly revolving around the lead singer and his ever
present advisory panel resulted in the remaining members deciding to go it three-piece
with guitarist John Botica taking over lead vocals. The band having grown
tired of the bullet belted, stud wearing, finger pointing, tongue poking, face
pulling, devil worshiping heavy metal scene of which it was never a part of, changed
its name to the Labrats and began playing music which was generally more open
ended and unrestricted and absolutely full to the brim with what could only be
described as ( Rats humour). This style appealed more to the alternative inner-city
scene which at the time was growing in popularity with bands of all descriptions
emerging in venues all over Australia.The Rats were support to many of these bands
and only occasionally played their own shows, enjoying the exposure to the audiences
of the better known and established bands such as X, The Screaming Tribesmen and
the Trilobites to name a few. After a year and a half of belting up audiences
all over Sydney and still no signs of any industry support the band packed up
and flew over to England armed with only their guitars, a few drum sticks,
a bio and a self produced demo tape. A turbulent one month stint playing
the London underground venues
saw the tired, hungry and financially crippled Australian band
finally crumble, with the sudden departure of bass player Mark O'Connor.
A representative from Arista Records was to see the band perform the very next
week. Unable to find a replacement on such short notice, the remaining two thirds
of the band decided to pull the plug. Drummer Brendon Venner stayed for two
more weeks while Botica stayed for a year until returning in 1990 and formed Full
Moon Radio with Venner. This band recorded a self titled mini album on the AMO
label which was distributed through Mighty Boy Records. The Labrats may
not have reached any dizzy heights but they were one of the tightest and most
unique bands you'd ever have seen or heard! Trent
Masterton 1999
From Answers.com
The Labrats were a post punk power trio formed in Sydney Australia
in 1986 by former members of the heavy rock group Ironheart. Following
Ironheart's disbanding in 1986, the instrumental elements of the
band, namely John Botica (guitar), Brendon Venner (drums) and
Mark O'Connor (bass guitar) made a calculated foray into the Sydney
innercity power-pop scene, seeing Botica taking over the band's
lead vocals as well as guitar, something he hadn't done for several
years since his first high school band called 'Bad News' some
ten years prior.
Initially inspired by bands such as Radio Birdman, Motorhead
and even Frank Zappa the Labrats became a permanent fixture on
the Sydney alternative scene throughout the late 80's and did
the rounds of the indie circuit for at least 2 years before being
ultimately picked up by Johnny Kannis (Johnny Kannis Explosion,
Hitmen D.T.K). Kannis, acting as sarogate manager to the band
helped to secure regular support slots to his own stable of bands
such as the Psychotic Turnbuckles, Screaming Tribesman and his
own J.K Explosion.
Move to London
After 3 years of solid activity and building frustration through
their seeming inability to muster sufficient industry support,
the Labrats finally packed bags and moved to London in search
of a record deal and before too long found themselves headlining
at venues such as the Greyhound and the Mean Fiddler where they
played as support to Irish blues legend Rory Gallagher among others.
Independent music journalist Paul Jolands after having witnessed
the Labrats performing their first headline show at the Greyhound
in London in early 1989 described the band thus, "John Botica,
Brendon Venner and Mark O'Connor look like hard nuts and make
a hard sound. They may trample you with out a second thought with
what appears to be instinctive unity".
A sudden and by all accounts turbulent breakup in the UK in late
1989 saw the band's bass guitarist Mark O'Connor walking out on
the band, catching the first available flight back home to Sydney.
Botica and drummer Brendon Venner each eventually made their way
back to Australia where around a year later they formed yet another
power trio called 'Full Moon Radio' recruiting a working session
guitarist by the name of David Fleming who took up bass guitar
duties for the band.
Full Moon Radio despite still leaning towards the heavier end
of the musical spectrum and having kept quite a number of former
Labrats tunes in their repertoire were on the whole a somewhat
more melodic songwriter driven band that could possibly be described
in style to Arizona band the Meat Puppets, or perhaps even to
the Canadian heavy rock trio Rush.
Full Moon Radio recorded a self titled mini album on the Mighty
Boy AMO records label in 1991 which despite having gained some
local radio airplay unfortunately wasn't quite enough to keep
guitarist Botica's interest. Botica left Full Moon Radio later
that year to take over lead guitar duties for the ex Masters Apprentices
band His Majesty. Drummer Brendon Venner went on to play with
a succession of Sydney cover bands and in 1995 once again found
himself in a band with Botica called the 'Sunshine Crowd' a band
produced by Jim Hilbun of the 'Angels' (USA - Angel City) and
featuring the vocal and song writing talents of Marvin Druid former
violinist for popular 80's art-rock band Widowed Isis.
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