Indians in Moscow


Indians in Moscow are a synth-pop band formed in Hull in 1981 who later moved into the techno and house music genres.

History

The band was formed in 1981 by keyboard players Pete Riches and Stuart Walton, and singer Adele Nozedar. The band later expanded to five members with the addition of a guitarist and a drummer. The band's first release was a contribution to the various artists compilation Your Secret's Safe with Us in 1982. They came to fame on the cult 1980s Channel 4 music TV show The Tube as part of the show's Hull music special, and had three hits on the UK Indie Chart with "Naughty Miranda", "I Wish I Had" and "Jack Pelter & His Sex Change Chicken". After the release of the Big Wheel EP, the band's only album was released in 1985. The band split up shortly afterwards, with Nozedar forming a new band, The Fever Tree. Guitarist Nik Corfield released one solo single, "The Pixie Shop", late in 1985.
Riches and Walton reformed the band in 1998 with singer Chris Guard, releasing the singles "Wrong Love" and "Babylon", and the album Ten Days to Live, which they self-financed. After Guard left, Riches and Walton recruited house and garage DJ Simon Le Vans, releasing the Something Wonderful EP. The band has continued since, with two albums released in 2004. Walton and Guard worked together again in the band Gregoryz Girl.
In 2011, their self-titled debut album was reissued on CD via Other Voices Records.

Discography

Albums

Chart placings shown are from the UK Indie Chart