The Combo took a purposefully low-key approach to their work, touring in a battered van with their own small PA system and deliberately playing small and unfashionable venues, developing a cult following along the way. Turning down offers from major labels, Goulden and company opted to record their debut album (The Len Bright Combo Present the Len Bright Combo by the Len Bright Combo) on their own dime and released it through their own Empire Records label. The album, recorded in just two days at the Upchurch Village Hall using a portable recording rig, cost a mere 86 pounds to make, but while its raw sound would become fashionable a few years down the line, a lack of airplay and no record company push prevented it from making a dent in the marketplace. (According to Goulden, the debut moved less than 2,000 copies.)
A second album, It's Combo Time, appeared later the same year, but didn't fare much better, and in September 1986, the group's spirit was broken when, while driving home from a show in Bristol, their van was in an accident that claimed the life of a pedestrian. Brand soon left the group, and while Goulden and Wilkins played a few shows with a substitute drummer, in 1987 the Len Bright Combo announced their breakup. In 1991, Goulden, Wilkins and Brand played a handful of gigs backing Phil May and Dick Taylor of the Pretty Things, but Goulden soon resumed his solo career as Wreckless Eric, and after relocating to the United States, began an ongoing collaboration with his wife, Amy Rigby. Wilkins played with the bands the Prisoners and the Wildebeests, and Brand would back up Holly Golightly and collaborate with Billy Childish. In 2013, Fire Records reissued the two Len Bright Combo albums, and the original lineup reunited for a single show in London. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi