Led by vocalist/guitarist
Dave Fenton,
the Vapors were a short-lived new wave guitar group that is best known for the spiky pop single "Turning Japanese."
Fenton formed the first version of
the Vapors in 1978, yet he was the only member to survive that lineup; in 1979, former Ellery Bops members
Ed Bazalgette (lead guitar) and
Howard Smith (drums) joined the band, and bassist
Steve Smith came aboard shortly afterward. One of the band's first concerts was seen by
the Jam's
Bruce Foxton, who asked them to perform on his group's
Setting Sons tour. Before long,
the Vapors were managed by
Foxton and
John Weller, the manager of
the Jam, as well as the father of the group's leader, Paul Weller.
The Vapors signed to United Artists, releasing their first single, "Prisoners," at the end of 1979; it failed to chart. "Turning Japanese," the band's second single, became a major hit, reaching number three on the U.K. charts in March of 1980.
New Clear Days, the band's debut album, was released two months later, which didn't sell as well as the single. In 1981,
the Vapors released the more ambitious
Magnets, yet it received lukewarm reviews and poor sales; the group disbanded shortly after its release. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide