Big Flame (often stylised as bIG*fLAME) were a fiercely uncompromising and sonically abrasive post-punk trio from Manchester, active between 1983 and 1986. Comprised of Alan Brown (vocals, bass), Greg Keeffe (guitar), and Dil Green (drums), the band took their name from a 1969 British socialist TV drama—an early signal of their politically charged ethos and radical artistic intent. Emerging from the vibrant UK DIY scene and associated with the C86 movement (despite standing in stark contrast to its jangly pop sound), Big Flame developed a confrontational, rhythmically jagged style that combined Marxist lyrics with explosive instrumentation. Their music was often compared to the likes of The Fire Engines, The Pop Group, and Gang of Four, but pushed even further into dissonance and deconstruction. With releases on Ron Johnson Records—such as the EP Rigour (1985) and mini-album Two Kan Guru (1986)—Big Flame left behind a small but potent catalog that continues to influence underground and experimental bands. Their legacy lives on as a cult favorite among fans of no wave, post-punk, and agitprop art-punk, remembered for their relentless energy, intellectual intensity, and refusal to conform. In 2025, a compilation of their iconic BBC sessions for John Peel, Peel sessions 84-86 (BBC session), was released.
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