Cockney Rejects
Cockney Rejects are an English Oi! punk rock band formed in the East End of London in the late 1970s by brothers Micky Geggus on guitar and vocals and Jeff "Stinky" Geggus on lead vocals, initially with Chris Murrell on bass and Paul Harvey on drums.[1][2] The band emerged as a working-class antidote to the prevailing art-school punk scene, channeling themes of inner-city hardship, police encounters, and fervent support for West Ham United football club into aggressive, chant-like anthems that resonated with terrace culture.[1] After just four local gigs, they secured a deal with EMI Records, releasing their debut albums Greatest Hits Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 in 1980, both of which charted and spawned the track "Oi, Oi, Oi!" that lent its name to the Oi! subgenre.[1][3] Their rapid rise included sell-out UK tours and a recording of West Ham's "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" for the 1980 FA Cup Final, but was marred by notoriety for gig violence stemming from clashes with rival football supporters, culminating in the "Battle of Birmingham" incident that led to criminal charges and a hiatus from touring.[1] Banned from BBC's Top of the Pops for disruptive behavior, the Rejects nonetheless influenced later acts like Rancid and Green Day through their unpolished energy and DIY ethos.[1] The band denied any fascist affiliations despite Oi!'s occasional associations with skinhead elements, contemptuously dismissing groups like the British Movement, and returned to the live circuit in 2000 for global performances, releasing further albums such as The Power and the Glory (1981), *Unforgiven* (2007, and East End Babylon (2012), accompanied by a documentary of the same name detailing their history.[4][1] Their enduring legacy lies in pioneering terrace punk that captured authentic proletarian defiance, though often overshadowed by the hooliganism linked to their fanbase's football loyalties.[1]History
Formation and early years (1978–1979)
The Cockney Rejects were formed in March 1979 in London's East End by brothers Jeff Turner (vocals) and Mick Geggus (guitar), drawing from their working-class background and the raw energy of punk acts like the Sex Pistols and Ramones.[5] The initial lineup featured bassist Chris Murrell, a relative of the Geggus brothers, alongside varying drummers as the group coalesced.[5] In their early months, the band focused on developing a direct, aggressive sound rooted in street-level realism, playing approximately three to four support gigs at small venues.[5] Their debut performance, with the stabilizing lineup, supported The Little Roosters to an audience of around 30 people.[5] Subsequent shows included slots opening for acts such as The Tickets, The Damned, and Angelic Upstarts, helping to build a local following amid the post-punk scene.[5] By mid-1979, the Rejects recorded and released their debut EP, Flares and Slippers, in June or July, marking their first commercial output with an independent label.[5] Bassist Vince Riordan soon replaced Murrell, solidifying the core group.[5] In October 1979, at age 15, Turner signed a four-album deal with EMI on behalf of the underage band, facilitated by Geggus, signaling early industry recognition despite their nascent status.[5]Breakthrough in the Oi! scene (1980–1982)
The Cockney Rejects achieved prominence in the emerging Oi! subgenre with the release of their debut album, Greatest Hits Vol. 1, on March 7, 1980, via EMI Records. Recorded between November and December 1979 at Polydor and Rock City Studios, the album featured 14 tracks of raw, aggressive punk rock emphasizing working-class East London experiences, including songs like "I'm Not a Fool" and "Fighting in the Street." Despite its ironic title suggesting prior hits—none of which existed—it sold over 60,000 copies and reached the UK Top 30, signaling a resurgence of street-level punk amid the post-1977 dilution of the original movement.[6][7] This success propelled the band into sell-out UK tours and positioned them as pioneers of Oi!, a term derived from their chant-heavy track "Oi! Oi! Oi!" on the follow-up Greatest Hits Vol. II, also released in 1980 by EMI. The song, included on the influential EMI compilation Oi! The Album (November 1980)—which opened with it and featured emerging acts like the 4-Skins and Exploited—crystallized the genre's name and aesthetic, focusing on boisterous, anthemic calls to working-class unity. Journalist Garry Bushell, who managed the band and championed Oi! in Sounds magazine, credits their Bridge House pub gigs in Canning Town as the epicenter of the scene's formation, drawing skinheads and punks for high-energy performances that rejected polished post-punk trends.[6][8][9] By 1981, the Rejects solidified their Oi! leadership with The Power & the Glory, another EMI release that maintained their formula of direct, football-chant-infused tracks like "The Greatest Cockney Rip-Off" (a 1980 single that hit the UK Top 30). Regular appearances, including summer 1980 benefit shows for the Prisoners Rights Organisation at Bridge House and the February 1981 New Punk Convention, fostered a dedicated subculture, though marred by clashes such as fights with British Movement-affiliated groups at venues like the Electric Ballroom.[6][10] In 1982, The Wild Ones—produced by UFO's Pete Way and issued on A.K.A. Records—marked a slight evolution toward harder rock edges while retaining Oi! core elements, amid ongoing tours that reinforced their influence on bands emulating their unpretentious aggression. This period's output and live presence directly catalyzed Oi!'s expansion as a distinct, anti-elitist punk variant, distinct from mainstream media portrayals of it as mere hooliganism.[6][11]Challenges and evolution (1983–1990s)
Following the release of The Wild Ones in 1982, produced by UFO bassist Pete Way, the Cockney Rejects faced ongoing repercussions from the Oi! movement's tarnished reputation, including gig bans and difficulty securing bookings due to prior incidents of onstage violence and crowd disturbances.[10] The band's shift toward heavy metal elements in The Wild Ones—incorporating denser riffs and a harder rock edge—drew mixed reception, with critics noting it as a strained departure from their punk roots that failed to resonate broadly.[12] Bassist Vince Riordan departed shortly after the album, leading to Ian Campbell joining for subsequent efforts, which compounded internal instability amid label transitions to independents like NEMS and Heavy Metal Records.[10] A 1984 U.S. tour attempt exacerbated challenges, as audiences booed the band offstage expecting strict Oi! punk, resulting in promoters paying them to depart early and abandon further dates.[10] This period saw sporadic output, including the 1984 album Quiet Storm, which experimented with bluesy hard rock influences but achieved limited commercial traction.[10] Vocalist Jeff Turner later attributed fan resistance to newer material, emphasizing a preference for early albums while acknowledging the band's roots in classic rock acts like Nazareth and Aerosmith as driving a natural evolution away from pure punk aggression.[5] By 1985, activity dwindled, with the core lineup effectively pausing amid these setbacks, though compilations like Unheard Rejects (1985) and We Are the Firm (1986) kept some catalog material in circulation.[13] The band reformed in 1990 with Riordan's return alongside drummer Keith Warrington, releasing Lethal on Neat Records—a full pivot to heavy metal and hard rock, featuring tracks like "Bad Man Down" and "Penitentiary" that leaned into riff-heavy structures over Oi! anthems.[10] [14] Despite this sonic reinvention, Lethal garnered minimal impact, underscoring persistent hurdles in escaping the Oi! stigma and adapting to shifting audience expectations in the post-punk landscape.[3]Reunions and persistence (2000s–2010s)
The Cockney Rejects resumed live performances in the early 2000s following a period of reduced activity, including a set at the Holidays in the Sun festival in San Francisco from August 24–26, 2001.[15] This resurgence aligned with the release of the album Back on the Street in 2000, marking their return to recording after nearly a decade.[16] The band maintained sporadic touring, emphasizing their Oi! roots with high-energy sets that drew on original material and East End anthems, though documentation of full tours remains limited to festival and club appearances.[17] In 2007, the group issued Unforgiven, an album that reflected continuity in their raw punk sound amid lineup stability led by brothers Mick Geggus and Jeff Turner.[16] Persistence through the late 2000s was evident in Jeff Turner's 2005 autobiography Cockney Reject, co-authored with Garry Bushell, which chronicled the band's history and reinforced their cultural endurance without signaling a full disbandment.[18] Live activity continued into the 2010s, with a documented performance at The Garage in London on October 15, 2010, featuring staples like "Oi! Oi! Oi!" and "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles."[19] The 2010s saw heightened visibility with the 2012 documentary East End Babylon, directed by Richard England, which used interviews, archival footage, and live clips to detail the band's origins and ties to working-class London life, garnering a 7.7/10 rating on IMDb from limited reviews.[20] This coincided with album releases including East End Babylon (2012), Lethal (2013), and Nathan's Pies and Eels (2013), demonstrating creative output despite Oi! genre's niche status.[16] Further gigs, such as at Riot Fest in Chicago on September 15–17, 2017, underscored ongoing commitment, with the band playing to international punk audiences without major lineup overhauls until later changes.[15]Recent developments (2020s)
In March 2024, the band underwent a significant lineup change when guitarist Mick Geggus and drummer Andrew "Ducko" Laing departed, leaving vocalist Jeff "Stinky" Turner as the sole original member; Turner recruited Olga (from Toy Dolls) on guitar, JJ Pearce (formerly of Major Accident) on bass, and Ray Barnes on drums to continue operations.[21][22] The reformed ensemble debuted at the Rebellion Punk Festival in Blackpool in August 2024, maintaining the band's high-energy Oi! performances amid ongoing international touring.[22] In 2025, they conducted a U.S. tour including dates at Punk Rock Bowling in Las Vegas and the Regent Theatre in Los Angeles on May 16, where reviews noted the new members' integration and Turner's commanding stage presence despite the lineup shift.[23][24] Additional 2025 appearances encompassed the Pod Parou Festival in the Czech Republic in July and sold-out shows in Berlin on September 20 and Dublin on September 27, with further dates scheduled such as Dingwalls in London on December 20 and a Brazilian tour in April.[25][22] The band announced plans to record and release a new studio album in 2025, aiming to recapture the raw energy of their early hits like those on Greatest Hits Vol. 1, 2 and The Power and the Glory.[22] In October 2025, Turner launched a revamped YouTube channel, "Stinky Turner Rough and Ready," featuring podcasts on music, boxing, football, and related topics to engage fans beyond live shows.[22]Musical style and themes
Core sound and influences
The Cockney Rejects' core sound is defined by aggressive, high-tempo punk rock featuring straightforward guitar riffs, relentless drumming, and shouted, chant-style vocals in a thick East End Cockney accent, evoking raw street energy and group sing-alongs.[26] This unpolished aesthetic, emphasizing simplicity and spontaneity over technical complexity, aligned with second-wave punk's DIY ethos while incorporating Oi!-style anthems designed for boisterous live crowds.[27] Tracks like those on their 1980 debut Greatest Hits Vol. 1 typically clock in under three minutes, prioritizing punchy hooks and direct aggression over elaborate arrangements.[28] Band members drew from diverse pre-punk sources, including glam rock acts such as Slade, Sweet, T. Rex, and Mott the Hoople, which informed their melodic choruses and rock 'n' roll swagger.[28] Pub rock influences from groups like Dr. Feelgood and Eddie and the Hot Rods contributed a gritty, venue-honed edge, bridging to the punk explosion.[28] Guitarist Micky Geggus highlighted early hard rock bands including Led Zeppelin, Queen, Deep Purple, Nazareth, and Aerosmith as key childhood inspirations, describing them as foundational to the band's rock underpinnings beneath punk vocals.[28] Punk contemporaries like the Sex Pistols—particularly their "God Save the Queen" era—and The Clash further shaped their sound, blending provocative energy with working-class realism, though the Rejects maintained a more unrefined, territorial bite.[27] Their 1980 track "Oi! Oi! Oi!" from Greatest Hits Vol. 2 crystallized this hybrid, directly inspiring the Oi! genre's name and its focus on proletarian, football-chant-like camaraderie.[29] This synthesis distinguished them from artier punk peers, rooting their music in East London pub culture and hard rock durability.[28]Lyrics: Working-class realism and street life
The lyrics of the Cockney Rejects capture the gritty, unfiltered aspects of East End working-class life, focusing on personal hardships, local pride, and confrontations with authority rather than abstract ideology. Band members, hailing from the area themselves, drew from direct experiences of unemployment, poverty, and social friction in songs that eschew punk's earlier political posturing for straightforward depictions of daily survival.[30][31] Central to their realism is the portrayal of street battles and territorial loyalties, often intertwined with football fandom, as in "War on the Terraces," which references terrace violence among supporters. Police antagonism features prominently, exemplified by "Police Bastard," where verses decry aggressive policing in working-class neighborhoods, reflecting real encounters with law enforcement amid economic decline in late 1970s Britain.[32][33] In "East End," the band asserts defiance against external judgments, singing: "Tell you about the place / I've lived all my life / I'll tell you all the truth about / The struggle and strife / All the toffs say it's a bit of a dive / It's the only place left / Where anyone is alive." This evokes a sense of rooted identity in locales like Bethnal Green and Canning Town, embracing "working class yobs" who reject snobbery while highlighting communal resilience amid decay.[34][35] Such themes underscore Oi!'s emphasis on authentic street choruses and class-specific narratives, prioritizing lived locality over broader manifestos.[36]Cultural associations
Ties to football and hooligan subculture
The Cockney Rejects' core members, originating from East London's Canning Town area, were dedicated supporters of West Ham United Football Club, a connection that permeated their music and public image.[1] This allegiance manifested prominently in their 1980 recording of "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles," a high-energy punk rendition of the club's longstanding supporter anthem, released to commemorate West Ham's FA Cup final appearance against Arsenal on May 10, 1980.[1] [37] The track's aggressive style amplified the song's terrace chant origins, blending punk rawness with football fandom, though it drew BBC scrutiny for glamorizing hooligan-associated culture.[38] Their breakthrough single "Oi! Oi! Oi!" (1980) further entrenched ties to football subculture, evolving from a simple crowd call into a widespread chant among English match-going fans, particularly West Ham's Inter City Firm (ICF), the club's infamous hooligan group active from the mid-1970s through the early 1990s.[6] [39] Band guitarist Mick Geggus and others maintained personal links to the ICF, with the firm's members routinely attending Rejects gigs, which often doubled as flashpoints for inter-firm rivalries due to the band's territorial East End identity.[6] Lyrics across albums like Greatest Hits Vol. 1 (1980) evoked the physicality of street fights and match-day aggro, resonating with hooligans who viewed such violence as an extension of working-class defiance rather than mere delinquency.[33] A pivotal incident underscoring these ties occurred on July 4, 1980, at Birmingham's Cedar Club, where the band's performance sparked a massive brawl involving approximately 100 ICF members clashing with National Front-aligned Brummie skins, Aston Villa hooligans, and Birmingham City supporters; the melee, lasting over an hour, resulted in severe injuries, including stabbings, and solidified the Rejects' reputation as inadvertent catalysts for hooligan confrontations.[36] [40] Such events highlighted how the band's unfiltered Oi! sound—prioritizing authenticity over commercial polish—attracted firm loyalists seeking communal outlets for rivalry-fueled aggression, though the Rejects themselves emphasized self-defense amid outnumbered odds rather than instigation.[41] This interplay between music and hooliganism amplified Oi!'s street credibility but also perpetuated cycles of gig disruptions, with West Ham away matches frequently providing the backdrop for pre- or post-concert skirmishes involving up to dozens from rival crews.[6]Interactions with skinhead and Oi! communities
The Cockney Rejects emerged as a pivotal influence in the Oi! movement, a punk subgenre that sought to unite working-class youth, including skinheads, through raw, chant-like anthems reflecting East End life. Formed in Canning Town in 1977 and solidifying in 1979, the band's initial audience consisted primarily of football supporters from the West Ham United Inter City Firm rather than skinheads, who initially resisted their sound despite shared territorial and class affinities. http://www.garry-bushell.co.uk/storyoioi.htm By 1980, however, skinheads in East London, including groups like the Glory Boys, adopted the Rejects, drawn to tracks like "I'm Not a Fool" and the football terrace-style call-and-response vocals led by singer Jeff "Stinky" Turner's signature "Oi!" shouts, which Garry Bushell credited with defining the genre's rallying cry. http://www.garry-bushell.co.uk/storyoioi.htm This adoption positioned the Rejects as trailblazers in Oi!, inspiring bands such as the 4-Skins and Red Alert, and contributing to the seminal compilation Oi! The Album released by EMI in November 1980. http://www.garry-bushell.co.uk/storyoioi.htm Interactions with skinhead communities often involved both camaraderie and conflict, particularly at venues like the Bridge House pub in Canning Town, where the band debuted in 1979 and hosted benefit gigs for the Prisoners Rights Organisation in summer 1980, fostering an early Oi! scene amid a mix of punks, herberts, and emerging skinhead attendees. http://www.garry-bushell.co.uk/storyoioi.htm http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/legends-of-the-bridge-house-the-venue-everyone-loved-769508.html The Rejects actively rejected far-right infiltration, clashing with British Movement-affiliated skinheads at the Electric Ballroom in Camden in 1979 and Barking station in February 1980 to protect their fans from Nazi elements. http://www.garry-bushell.co.uk/storyoioi.htm Guitarist Mickey Geggus later emphasized this stance, stating that Nazi skinheads were ejected from gigs, underscoring the band's apolitical focus on street-level realism over ideology. https://www.tandfonline.com/[doi](/page/DOI)/full/10.1080/01639625.2024.2380738 Gig violence, while frequent, stemmed more from football rivalries than skinhead politics; the band's 1980 show at Birmingham's Cedar Club devolved into chaos involving local skinheads, Aston Villa hooligans, and Inter City Firm members, resulting in injuries to Geggus and the theft of equipment, an incident described as one of punk's most violent. https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/night-birmingham-city-aston-villa-12092107 Despite such disruptions, the Rejects' working-class authenticity resonated with non-ideological skinheads, helping Oi! evolve as a broader subcultural soundtrack for disaffected youth rather than a politicized fringe, though media portrayals often conflated the scenes. http://www.garry-bushell.co.uk/storyoioi.htm https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01639625.2024.2380738Controversies and criticisms
On-stage violence and gig disruptions
The Cockney Rejects' concerts in the late 1970s and early 1980s were often characterized by outbreaks of violence, reflecting the band's ties to West Ham United's Inter City Firm (ICF) and the broader skinhead and football hooligan subcultures that attended their shows. Early performances frequently devolved into brawls between supporters of rival football clubs, with the Geggus brothers—Jeff (vocals) and Mick (guitar), both former boxers—personally intervening to defend themselves and the band against aggressors.[42][33] A pivotal incident occurred on June 7, 1980, at Birmingham's Cedar Club, where the gig erupted into chaos involving the Rejects' ICF entourage clashing with over 200 local Birmingham City skinheads, Aston Villa hooligans, and National Front members. Abuse from the crowd began immediately upon the band's stage entry, escalating during their second song into full-scale fighting that spilled onstage and damaged or destroyed equipment.[40][36] Guitarist Mick Geggus sustained injuries requiring hospitalization, marking the event as one of the most violent in British punk history according to contemporaneous accounts.[40] Such disruptions were not isolated; the band's autobiography details additional confrontations, including a large-scale fight against British Movement far-right activists, where members and supporters repelled attacks amid ongoing gig hostilities.[33] These incidents often stemmed from perceived incursions into hostile territories by the East London outfit, with violence mirroring the aggressive themes in their lyrics about street fights and firm loyalties, though the band maintained they responded defensively rather than initiating.[36][43]Alleged far-right links and band rebuttals
The Cockney Rejects have been accused of far-right affiliations primarily due to their association with the Oi! genre and skinhead subculture, which attracted elements of racist violence in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Mainstream media outlets, including The Guardian, linked Oi! bands like the Rejects to arson, racism, and football hooliganism, portraying the movement as "punk's idiot half-brother" tainted by fascist undertones following incidents such as the 1981 Southall riot, where a gig involving similar bands escalated into clashes amid heightened racial tensions.[36] [36] These allegations often stemmed from the presence of neo-Nazi or far-right individuals at their concerts, such as a 2012 incident where a swastika-wearing attendee appeared outside a gig, and more recent events like the May 17, 2025, show in Murrieta, California, where white supremacist-shirted men disrupted the event by groping women.[44] [45] Critics, including left-leaning antifascist groups, have cited unverified "documented links" between gig attendees and organizations like National Action, a proscribed neo-Nazi group, to argue the band fosters such elements despite not endorsing them explicitly.[46] Academic analyses have echoed these claims by framing Oi! as providing a foundation for white power music, though recent scholarship critiques this as overstated, attributing racist co-optation to parasitic far-right infiltration rather than inherent genre ideology.[47] [47] In response, the Cockney Rejects have repeatedly rejected accusations of racism or fascism, emphasizing their working-class East End roots and contempt for extremist groups. The band derided the British Movement—a neo-Nazi organization—as the "German Movement" and denied any ideological alignment, arguing that far-right elements misrepresented their apolitical, street-level punk ethos.[4] They have cited direct opposition to such groups, including physical confrontations by the band's Inter-City Firm (ICF) supporters against National Front and British Movement members at events, positioning themselves as defenders against fascist intrusion into the skinhead scene.[39] [47] In 2017, following the use of their music in the Channel 4 documentary Young, Angry and White to exemplify supposed far-right culture, the Rejects threatened legal action, contending it falsely equated their output with extremism.[48] Band statements and interviews underscore that while acknowledging violent crowds at early gigs, they attribute this to broader hooligan subculture dynamics rather than endorsement, with members like singer Jeff Turner highlighting pride in British identity without racial animus.[4][49] These rebuttals align with Oi! bands' broader participation in anti-racist actions, countering media narratives that, per some analyses, amplified guilt-by-association to discredit proletarian expressions of discontent.[50][47]Band members
Core and former members
The Cockney Rejects were founded in 1978 in London's East End by brothers Jeff "Stinky" Turner (vocals) and Mick Geggus (guitar), along with their brother-in-law Chris Murrell (bass) and Paul Harvey (drums).[51][52] This original lineup recorded the band's debut EP Flares 'n' Slippers in 1979 before Murrell and Harvey departed shortly thereafter.[51] Subsequent lineups featured frequent changes on bass and drums, with Vince Riordan joining on bass in 1979 (serving multiple stints until 1991) and Andy Scott on drums from 1979 to 1980, both drawn from fellow East End band The Tickets.[51] Other notable former members included Nigel Woolf (bass, 1980–1983), Ian Campbell (bass, 1983–1985), Les Cobb (bass, 1985–1987), Keith Warrington (drums, 1991–present in prior iterations), and Andrew Laing (drums, 1999–2017).[53] Turner and Geggus remained the consistent creative core through the band's active periods until a split in 2024 prompted Turner to reform the group with new personnel.[21]| Member | Role | Tenure |
|---|---|---|
| Jeff "Stinky" Turner | Vocals | 1978–present |
| Mick Geggus | Guitar | 1978–2024 |
| Chris Murrell | Bass | 1978–1979 |
| Paul Harvey | Drums | 1978–1979 |
| Vince Riordan | Bass | 1979–1983, 1987–1991 |
| Andy Scott | Drums | 1979–1980 |
| Nigel Woolf | Bass | 1980–1983 |
| Ian Campbell | Bass | 1983–1985 |
| Les Cobb | Bass | 1985–1987 |
| Keith Warrington | Drums | 1991–2024 (pre-split) |
| Andrew Laing | Drums | 1999–2017 |
Lineup timeline
The Cockney Rejects formed in 1978 with brothers Jeff Turner on vocals and Mick Geggus on guitar, alongside Chris Murrell on bass and Paul Harvey on drums.[51] In 1979, Murrell and Harvey departed shortly after the band's debut performance at the Bridge House in Canning Town on June 29, and were replaced by Vince Riordan on bass and Andy Scott on drums, forming the lineup that recorded the debut EP Rejects.[51] Andy Scott left in 1980 and was succeeded by Nigel Woolf on drums, who in turn was replaced later that year by Keith Warrington, stabilizing the rhythm section through the recording of the debut album Greatest Hits Vol. 1 (1980) and subsequent releases up to 1983.[51] The band disbanded temporarily after 1983 but reformed in 1984–1985 with Ian Campbell replacing Riordan on bass while Turner and the Geggus brother remained.[51] By 1987–1991, the lineup reverted to Turner (vocals), Geggus (guitar), Riordan (bass), and Warrington (drums) for reunion activity and the album The Power & the Glory.[51] In 1999, Riordan was succeeded by Tony Van Frater on bass and Warrington by Andrew Laing on drums.[51] Laing departed from 2000 to 2006, during which Les Cobb filled in on drums, before Laing rejoined in 2007, maintaining the configuration of Turner, Geggus, Van Frater, and Laing through extensive touring and releases into 2023.[51] In January 2024, Geggus, Van Frater, and Laing ceased touring, prompting Turner to continue the band with new members: Michael "Olga" Algar replacing Geggus on guitar, JJ Pearce on bass, and Ray Bussey on drums.[22][54] This iteration debuted publicly amid announcements on the band's official channels, emphasizing continuity of the Rejects' sound despite the personnel shift.[55]| Period | Vocals | Guitar | Bass | Drums |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1978–1979 | Jeff Turner | Mick Geggus | Chris Murrell | Paul Harvey |
| 1979–1980 | Jeff Turner | Mick Geggus | Vince Riordan | Andy Scott |
| 1980–1983 | Jeff Turner | Mick Geggus | Vince Riordan | Keith Warrington |
| 1984–1985 | Jeff Turner | Mick Geggus | Ian Campbell | Keith Warrington |
| 1987–1991 | Jeff Turner | Mick Geggus | Vince Riordan | Keith Warrington |
| 1999–2000, 2007–2023 | Jeff Turner | Mick Geggus | Tony Van Frater | Andrew Laing |
| 2000–2006 | Jeff Turner | Mick Geggus | Tony Van Frater | Les Cobb |
| 2024–present | Jeff Turner | Michael Algar | JJ Pearce | Ray Bussey |
Discography
Studio albums
The Cockney Rejects released their first proper studio album, The Power & the Glory, in July 1981 through EMI, marking a shift from earlier singles compilations to original full-length material featuring Oi! punk anthems like the title track.[56][57] The Wild Ones, issued in April 1982 on A.K.A. Records, incorporated heavier rock influences while retaining punk roots, recorded between November 1981 and February 1982.[58][59] Quiet Storm appeared in 1984 via Heavy Metal Records, exploring hard rock and metal elements amid the band's evolving sound.[60][61] Lethal, their 1990 outing on Neat Records, leaned further into heavy metal, with recording spanning August 1988 to November 1989.[62][14] Out of the Gutter emerged in 2002 on Captain Oi! Records, reviving the band's Oi! style after a hiatus.[63][64] Unforgiven followed in May 2007 through G&R Records, with sessions from July 2005 to February 2007 emphasizing raw punk energy.[65][66] East End Babylon was released on October 15, 2012, by Cadiz Music, blending punk with reflections on the band's East London origins.[67][68] The most recent, Power Grab, came out on September 16, 2022, via Cadiz Music, featuring tracks like "We Were Never Bothered" and signaling a continued active presence.[69][70]| Title | Release date | Label |
|---|---|---|
| The Power & the Glory | July 1981 | EMI |
| The Wild Ones | April 1982 | A.K.A. Records |
| Quiet Storm | 1984 | Heavy Metal Records |
| Lethal | 1990 | Neat Records |
| Out of the Gutter | 2002 | Captain Oi! Records |
| Unforgiven | May 2007 | G&R Records |
| East End Babylon | October 2012 | Cadiz Music |
| Power Grab | September 2022 | Cadiz Music |
Singles and EPs
The Cockney Rejects released a series of singles and EPs primarily between 1979 and 1982, with additional output in later years, often on labels linked to the punk and Oi! movements such as Small Wonder, EMI, and Zonophone.[71] Two singles achieved modest chart success: "The Greatest Cockney Rip Off" reached number 21 on the UK Singles Chart in 1980, and "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" peaked at number 35 later that year.[72]| Year | Title | Label | Catalog | Format/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1979 | Flares 'N' Slippers / Police Car / I Wanna Be A Star | Small Wonder | SMALL 19 | 7" single (three tracks)[71] |
| 1979 | I'm Not A Fool / East End | EMI | EMI 5008 | 7" single[71] |
| 1980 | Bad Man! / The New Song | EMI | EMI 5035 | 7" single[71] |
| 1980 | The Greatest Cockney Rip-Off / Hate Of The City | Zonophone | Z 2 | 7" single (UK #21)[71][72] |
| 1980 | I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles / West Side Boys | Zonophone | Z 4 | 7" single (UK #35)[71][72] |
| 1980 | We Can Do Anything / 15 Nights | Zonophone | Z 6 | 7" single[71] |
| 1980 | We Are The Firm / War On The Terraces | Zonophone | Z 10 | 7" single[71] |
| 1981 | Live At Abbey Road 25th Jan 1981 | Zonophone | Z 20 | 7" EP (live recordings)[71] |
| 1981 | On The Streets Again / Lomdob | Zonophone | Z 21 | 7" single[71] |
| 1982 | Till The End Of The Day / Rock 'N' Roll Dream | A.K.A. | AKS 102 | 7" single (Kinks cover as A-side)[71] |
| 2016 | Goodbye Upton Park / Bubbles | Cadiz Music | CADIZ7147 | 7" single (West Ham tribute)[71] |
| 2016 | It's Gonna Kick Off! / No Way Out / East End Babylon | Cadiz Music | CADIZ7143 | EP[71] |
| 2018 | Chapecoense / Boss Of Bosses | Cadiz Music | CADIZ7154 | 7" single (tribute to Chapecoense FC)[71] |