If memory serves, once Von had secured the rights to the name, the Mish's next radio session they didn't have a name at all.

million voices wrote:He went to the their gig out of curiosity
He told them the songs sounded good because he really thought they were crap and the new band would soon disappear
Just a guess
Some of the SOM fans had called themselves the Sisterhood from the very early days. One of them, Ramone (who I think used to post here and certainly used to post on MWIS, but I haven't seen anything from him in ages) claims Wayne phoned him on the night of the split and asked if it would be okay to use the Sisterhood name.centurionofprix wrote:Hm. Then, did Wayne and friends actually call themselves The Sisterhood from the beginning? Could Andrew have seen a gig of theirs not called by that name?
I thought preventing Wayne from using the name was part of The Sisterhood's story since very early on, at least. Maybe Wayne's Sisterhood were still allowed to play concerts, but not to release anything under that name?
They were the Wayne Hussey and Craig Adams Band apparently. Catchy.Pista wrote:That's right.
If memory serves, once Von had secured the rights to the name, the Mish's next radio session they didn't have a name at all.
Yeah. I remember listening to it when it was on at an ex-GF's house that evening.stufarq wrote:They were the Wayne Hussy and Craig Adams Band apparently. Catchy.Pista wrote:That's right.
If memory serves, once Von had secured the rights to the name, the Mish's next radio session they didn't have a name at all.
Also And The Dance Goes On.Pista wrote:I believe it was Like A Hurricane, Sacrilege & Severina.
Recorded in the January & broadcast on 10th February.
You can get all the sessions on the Live at the BBC box set they released
Aye. Forgot that one.Mav787 wrote:Also And The Dance Goes On.Pista wrote:I believe it was Like A Hurricane, Sacrilege & Severina.
Recorded in the January & broadcast on 10th February.
You can get all the sessions on the Live at the BBC box set they released
Nikolas Vitus Lagartija wrote:I thought the m*****n forum had closed down - looks like you're restarting it here !
Could be. Apparently the next gig, advertised for 1st March in Leeds, was cancelled, presumed to be because of the legal problems, although they went ahead with one in Birmingham the next night.Pista wrote:I'm going on the logic that the WH & CA Band's session was early February, after they had got back from the Cult's European dates.
The next show they played was the Electric Ballroom one where they announced they wouldn't be the Sisterhood anymore & the residual "Sisterhood" gigs were so called, as that's what had been printed on tickets & advertised prior to the name change.
When? I've never heard that claimed before.paint it black wrote:they called themselves The Sisters of Mercy for a week or so
Same thing. There's no copyright on names but you can trademark them, which prevents anyone else using the same or an obviously similar name for the same purpose. So in this case, Von securing the rights to the name The Sisterhood would prevent anyone else from using it in a musical context - for performing, recording or naming their band. But they could use it for, say, a theatre company or a car manufacturer or anything else where there would be no confusion or possibility of implied association.paint it black wrote:knowing he couldn't stop them using the name Sisterhood until they chose to, Eldrtich started his media war
and to ensure recording rights, rather than naming rights..
Oh wonderful, spiggymr7 ...spiggymr7 wrote:
Lots of "well known" things turn out to be completely untrue. The whole point of my original question was to get evidence for the release date, which has now been provided. Is there any evidence at all that Wayne & co called themselves SOM at any point?paint it black wrote:
when? is well known
They could perform and record before Von registered the name, but once he'd done so they were infringing a trademark. It's a matter of law.paint it black wrote: samething? no, the sisterhood could perform and had potential to record. AE rushed to get the name out first, as it would be fairly pointless having 2 sisterhood about the place.
Where? I must've missed it?Being645 wrote:Still, it were nice to see some evidence for those apostates calling themselves The Sisters of Mercy ......
The Sounds issue you mentioned? Do you have a link or a scan so we can actually see it?paint it black wrote:AE said so. I quoted a source
The publishing deal with RCA was a completely separate issue and had no bearing whatsoever on the ownership of the name or the release of Giving Ground. It was the Gift album that was released (in July, long after the name dispute was over) to try and claim the advance royalty meant for the second SOM album. (It failed: RCA dropped Von and kept the Mish.)paint it black wrote:No RCA were the problem.