The Sisters of Mercy's Biography - according to "Winamp"

Unknown songs and demos, who wrote what, who sang what, the usual biographies, discography gubbins, photos of Eldritch with no sunglasses, etc, etc, etc, yadda, yadda, yadda....
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Andy TG
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The Sisters of Mercy's Biography





A post-punk rock outfit whose flirtations with gothic imagery have dogged the public and media perception of them throughout an eclectic career. They formed in Leeds, Yorkshire, England, in 1980, when Leeds and Oxford University drop-out Andrew Eldritch (b. Andrew Taylor, 15 May 1959, England; vocals) teamed up with Gary Marx (b. Mark Pairman, England; guitar) and a drum machine. After releasing "The Damage Done" (on which Eldritch plays drums and guitar, and Marx sings) on their own Merciful Release label, the band expanded to include Ben Gunn (guitar) and Craig Adams (bass) for supports with Clash, Psychedelic Furs and the Birthday Party. A cult reputation in the north of England was augmented by excellent press, and further enhanced by the release of their third single "Alice". A magnificent gothic dance saga, together with the subsequent "Temple Of Love" (which reached number 2 on the UK singles chart), it hallmarked the band's early musical character. In-between these two landmark 45s Gunn left to be replaced by That Guitarist (b. Jerry That Guitarist, 26 May 1958, Bristol, England). WEA Records picked up the distribution for Merciful Release as the band's reputation continued to grow throughout 1983 and 1984.



Despite the release of their debut album, the following year brought a creative watershed. Continuing rivalries between Marx and Eldritch forced the former to depart.



Encyclopedia of Popular Music Copyright Muze UK Ltd. 1989 - 2002





This was only a stopgap treaty, with the band announcing a final split in July 1985 after a concert at the Royal Albert Hall (captured for posterity on the Wake video). The rest of the year witnessed extraordinary legal wrangles between Eldritch on one hand and Adams and Hussey on the other, each claiming use of the name Sisters Of Mercy. Eldritch went as far as releasing a record ( Gift ) under the title Sisterhood simply to prevent Adams and Hussey from adopting this halfway-house title. The duo eventually settled on the m****n as their new home, while Eldritch moved to Germany. Still operating under the Sisters Of Mercy title, Eldritch recruited Patricia Morrison (b. 14 January 1962; ex- Gun Club ) and fashioned a more dance-orientated sound on hit singles "This Corrosion" (UK number 7) and "Dominion" (UK number 13), and the Top 10 album Floodland.



A two-year spell of inactivity was broken in 1990 with the Top 20 single "More", showcasing another new line-up; Tony James (ex- Sigue Sigue Sputnik ; bass), Tim Bricheno (b. 6 July 1963, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England; guitar, ex- All About Eve ) and Andreas Bruhn (guitar). Vision Thing indulged Eldritch's penchant for deep-rooted, esoteric metaphor, which occasionally makes his lyrics futile and impenetrable. They undertook a loss-making, aborted tour with Public Enemy in 1991, though this did little to dampen the confidence of the self-confessed "world's greatest lyricist".



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