Suburban Reptiles


The Suburban Reptiles and The Scavengers, both from Auckland, were the first 1970s styled punk bands in New Zealand.

Punk came to New Zealand rather hesitantly. The global explosion which began in the US in the early to mid-1970s and then spread to the UK was completely ignored by the media and record companies in New Zealand; the likes of the Ramones and the nascent scene that surrounded them rated nary a mention in Hot Licks, New Zealand’s pop magazine of the era. When English punk arrived in late 1976 we had no real rock and roll press, as Hot Licks had shut up shop in the middle of the year.

Buster Stiggs, pop star Richard Wilde, Zero, Jimmy Joy, Colin Lum from Phonogram at the Megaton single release party at The Poenamo Hotel, Takapuna, 2 February 1978.
Photo credit: Photo by Murray Cammick
Suburban Reptiles in the Neil Roberts-directed Eyewitness - punk television special (1978)
The Suburban Reptiles in Onehunga, June 1977: Shaun Anfrayd, Jimmy Joy, Billy Planet, Sissy Spunk, Buster Stiggs, Zero. Taken before the Marcellin College which saw them featured on every weekend paper's front page that week.
Photo credit: Photo by Simon Grigg
The Suburban Reptiles play Albert Park, Auckland, 1978
Photo credit: Photo by Murray Cammick
Razorblade Rosie
Bones Hillman and Jimmy Joy, Classic Cinema, Queen Street, Auckland, December 3rd, 1977
Photo credit: Photo by Murray Cammick
State Dance, October 1978. The Suburban Reptiles were advertised but split shortly before this and were a no-show
Photo credit: Design: Philip Peacocke. Simon Grigg collection.
Suburban Reptiles with stand-in guitarist Johnny Volume at the August 1977 Students' Arts Festival at Victoria University. The band are setting up and The Scavengers' Des Truction is also seen. From left: Des Truction, Buster Stiggs, Johnny Volume and Jimmy Joy.
Photo credit: Photo by Wayne Hunter
Zero all dressed up for The Rocky Horror Show, September 1978
Megaton
Suburban Reptiles in Auckland's Jean Batten Place, October 1977. L to r: Jimmy Joy, Bones Hillman, Buster Stiggs, Zero, Billy Planet.
Zero
Photo credit: Photo by Murray Cammick
The Suburban Reptiles, Queen Street, Auckland, 21 October 1977
Photo credit: Simon Grigg collection
Buster Stiggs' handwritten original lyrics to 'Saturday Night Stay At Home'.
Photo credit: Simon Grigg collection
Saturday Night Stay At Home
Suburban Reptiles in Grafton, Auckland, April 1978. Top to bottom: Roland Morris, Buster Stiggs, Billy Planet, Jimmy Joy and Zero.
Photo credit: Photo by Jeremy Templer. Simon Grigg collection.
Buster Stiggs at the Classic Cinema, 3 December 1977
Photo credit: Photo by Jonathan Tidball
The 1978 NZ tour poster overposted with a gig with Wellington's 52 at their home base in Cuba Street
The Suburban Reptiles in Queen Street, Auckland, 21 October 1977
Photo credit: Simon Grigg collection
Trivia:

The first pressing of Megaton had the despised Roger Dean designed 'prog' Vertigo label. It had been requested by Simon Grigg to indicate irony.

Buster Stiggs passed away in January 2018, in Perth, W.A. Brian Nicholls died in a traffic accident in Wellington in the 1990s.

Zero, Jimmy and Brian Nicholls were members of the Sideshow Theatre in Sydney in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

The band's name was in part inspired by the David Bowie lyric 'he smiles like a reptile'.

Trish Scott's son, Joel Little, would, in the 21st Century co-write and produce the global smash 'Royals' with Lorde.

The guitar used by Billy Planet on the Megaton single was formerly owned by Lou Reed and used on the Rock'n'Roll Animal and Transformer albums. It was loaned to Billy by Johnny Volume.

Labels:

Vertigo

Members:

Zero - vocals

Jimmy Joy - saxophone, vocals

Billy Planet - guitar, bass

Buster Stiggs - drums, guitar

Bones Hillman - bass

Tony Baldoch - bass, guitar

Shaun Anfrayd - guitar

Johnny Volume - guitar

Sissy Spunk - guitar

Phil Judd - guitar, keyboards

Roland Morris - bass

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