ZTT Records had a reputation in the mid-1980s for signing acts that sat somewhere between art-pop, experimental electronics and media spectacle, and Das Psych-Oh! Rangers fit neatly into that strange corner of the label’s roster. The group arrived during the period when ZTT was riding high on the success of Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Propaganda and other ambitious studio-heavy projects, though Das Psych-Oh! Rangers always seemed rougher around the edges and less willing to play the label’s elaborate game.
The original line-up revolved around vocalist Be Deckard, real name Umberto Rozzo, alongside guitarist Troy Tempest and bassist/pianist Jules Von Vleet, the stage name of Julian Wright. During 1986 the group also featured Steve Honest on bass and keyboards, Che Atlas on drums and Kathy-Anne Joseph providing backing vocals. Later drummer Darren Edwards joined during the 1987-1988 period, by which time the band’s relationship with ZTT had already fallen apart. Their sound mixed theatrical new wave, art-rock and a slightly chaotic post-punk energy, with enough attitude to make them stand out from the cleaner electronic productions dominating British pop at the time.
Their brief spell on ZTT produced just one official single, but the band gained wider attention after appearing live on the Channel 4 music programme The Tube in 1986. They performed two songs taken from that lone ZTT release, giving viewers a taste of their dramatic, confrontational style. At a time when many chart acts relied heavily on backing tracks and polished presentation, Das Psych-Oh! Rangers came across as unpredictable and slightly dangerous, which suited the atmosphere of alternative music television perfectly.
Behind the scenes, though, tensions with the label were growing fast. The band became increasingly frustrated with the expensive remix culture surrounding ZTT productions. In-house producer and engineer Steve Lipson was creating multiple elaborate remixes for the proposed follow-up single “Power Station”, and the mounting studio costs were recoupable from the artists themselves. Das Psych-Oh! Rangers saw the process as excessive and pointless, especially for a band that preferred immediacy over endless studio experimentation. Their complaints echoed frustrations already felt by Frankie Goes To Hollywood during the making of their second album, while Propaganda and several other ZTT acts also struggled with the label’s controlling and expensive production methods.
The situation reached breaking point shortly before the famous legal battle involving Holly Johnson against Trevor Horn and Jill Sinclair. Johnson’s successful court case became one of the defining music industry disputes of the decade, exposing many of the contractual problems surrounding ZTT. Das Psych-Oh! Rangers were released from the label just before the case exploded publicly, and the planned “Power Station” single was quietly shelved and never officially issued.
After leaving ZTT, the group altered their name slightly to Das Psycho Rangers for later releases connected to their manager’s Stress label. Although they never achieved major commercial success, their story captures a fascinating moment in British independent music when adventurous bands collided with ambitious production-heavy labels that often promised creative freedom while tightly controlling the final product.
One of the more intriguing pieces of the group’s history is their BBC Radio One session recorded for Janice Long on 3 December 1986. The session included the songs “Homage To The Blessed”, “Power Station”, “Intellectual Gangsters” and “Medea Tearorists”. Despite interest from collectors and fans of obscure ZTT-related material, the session still remains officially unreleased, adding another layer of mystery to a band whose recorded legacy ended up far smaller than their chaotic reputation suggested.









