IT'S ALIVE! THE INMATES EXHUME THE CORPSE OF R&B
“Whether we’re a faction or not, I just don’t know,” says Inmates bassist Ben Donnelly. The Inmates are proof that in today’s world (and especially today’s London), one can be different by being, well...relatively normal. “At the time we got the band going, it (rhythm and blues) was one of the most unfashionable things that you could do,” explains Donnelly.
At the time we got the band going, it (rhythm and blues) was one of the most unfashionable things that you could do.
-Ben Donnelly
IT'S ALIVE! THE INMATES EXHUME THE CORPSE OF R&B
FEATURES
by
Rob Patterson
“Whether we’re a faction or not, I just don’t know,” says Inmates bassist Ben Donnelly.
The Inmates are proof that in today’s world (and especially today’s London), one can be different by being, well...relatively normal.
“At the time we got the band going, it (rhythm and blues) was one of the most unfashionable things that you could do,” explains Donnelly. “When we started off, all the gigs were completely different—we’d play for totally different audiences. They’d be punk, or the early mod audience,' all sorts of things.. .even heavy metal. The lot! But it always went down. You name it, we played with them.