Sleaford Mods

Sleaford Mods Artistfacts

  • 2007-
    Jason WilliamsonVocals
    Andrew FearnInstrumentation
  • Sleaford Mods are a two-man operation: Jason Williamson handles the vocals and lyrics while Andrew Fearn supplies the music. Onstage, that means Williamson pacing, ranting, and spitting lines as Fearn presses play on a laptop and dances like he's having the best night of his life.
  • The project began in 2007 in Nottingham as Williamson's solo outlet. Early releases were made with help from Simon Parfrement, who went on to become better known for his visual work, photography, and videos associated with the band. Sleaford Mods became a duo in 2012 when Williamson heard Fearn's solo material and invited him to collaborate. Once on board, Fearn's minimal laptop loops and blunt electronic beats quickly became central to the group's sound.
  • Their name comes from Sleaford, the Lincolnshire market town near where Williamson grew up. The "Mods" part is ironic; there are no parkas, scooters, or sharp tailoring involved.
  • Williamson was in his 40s when the band finally broke through. After years of working factory and warehouse jobs, success arrived late, and that perspective feeds directly into the music's fixation on labour, class resentment, boredom, and exhaustion.
  • Many Sleaford Mods songs are written quickly: Williamson often writes lyrics in a single burst and records them almost immediately, which explains their raw, confrontational edge.
  • Their songs dwell on low-paid work, dead-end jobs, benefits, petty crime, pop-culture irritations, and political anger, delivered in a thick East Midlands accent. The accent is deliberate. Williamson has resisted suggestions to soften or neutralize it, seeing voice and pronunciation as inseparable from class, identity, and politics.
  • Before wider recognition, Williamson self-released albums in runs of hundreds, selling them at gigs or online. As a result, there are dozens of early Sleaford Mods records, many now semi-mythical to collectors.
  • The band's rise came largely without radio support. Early UK airplay was minimal; momentum built through word of mouth, press coverage, and relentless touring.
  • Williamson is known for public feuds with other artists, journalists, and institutions, conflicts that frequently reappear in the lyrics, including on the 2025 single "The Good Life," where he turns that habit inward and questions why he keeps doing it.

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