Nikolas Vitus Lagartija wrote:Most HLers will have experienced frustration at having to explain who TSOM are to friends and acquaintances. Why did the Girls never make it as big as they deserved ? What was Von's biggest
faux pas along the way ?
Not being able to keep a settled line-up for more than five minutes ?
Forgetting to release any new product for two decades ?
Allowing the "Cure - ification" of FALAA ?
A weakness for female sidekicks/duettists who do little to advance the cause ?
Allowing Hussey/James into the fold ?
Or are you one of the dwindling few who believe that
has papal infallibility ?
To start the ball rolling, IMHO the most damaging decision was that to release Body and Soul as the first single on WEA in June 84. At that time, the Sisters were one of the coollest names to drop and tipped as the Next Big Thing. A decent song choice would have ensured a top forty chart slot, "Top of the Pops", capturing the zeitgeist and joining contemporaries REM/U2 etc on the path to stardom. In the end, pluggers were faced with a half-paced dirge with no real ending and "yesterday, today, tomorrow" lyrics more at home on an advert for TV sets. OK, the other three tracks, the re-recording of BE, the generic (Short) Train and the fantastically atmospheric Afterhours, revealed the true genius of AE, but many key observers summarily dismissed tha band as irrelevant and a cursory listen to the lead track. No wonder it didn't make it on to FALAA ...
Yes, Body And Soul was a mistake. It was released but nothing really happened. Bringing in Wayne - some hardcore fans is constantly saying bad things about him. But I remember it all well,
I was a Sistersfan right before he joined. He brought something to the band, with him, Andy, Craig and Gary Marx it felt that The Sisters Of Mercy was completed.
(And remember, he was in the band for about a year and that is now 26 years ago. What an impact he made, after all. Anyone remember Chris Starling? or Varjak? Varjak, after all, wrote a few nice songs, among them We Are The Same, Susannne.)
They grew bigger than before and First And Last Always is a classic album from that time and without the release of that album the band wouldn´t get that cult status which gave Andrew the opportunity to release the very odd album Gift and later the more succesfull Floodland and then Vision Thing with a comeback tour that felt very magic at that time.
The Sisters Of Mercy was considered a magic band for a long time, and of course he knew that That Guitarist was part of responsible for that and the "nasty fight" they both played made Andrew an icon of sort, every newspaper wanted to know more. This was a completely different time with no internet, twitter, facebook etc etc etc. There was a more magical feel to The Sisters Of Mercy.
IMO Andrews biggest mistake is to still touring as The Sisters Of Mercy. The magic is lost and to be honest, even the band is long gone.
Nothing of what the band used to stand for remains. Nothing that Andrew stood for remains.
And the Sisters in the past was always one step ahead all others. They run the audience down for every tour and never repeated themselves. I remember when he said "this is last time we´re gonna play this song" right before 1969. That is how you make statements and looking forward and letting the past be a cult-thing like "oh, I wish I saw that tour, it will never be the same again".
But that was a looooooooong time ago. The past ten years or whatever has been a constant repetetion and the same versions of songs like Anaconda, Temple, First + Last has been played too many times now. Nowadays you know what you will get.
"In illusion comfort lies
the safest way - the straight and narrow
No confusion no surprise"