|
::: tabulatury
::: wywiady
::: kapitan von
::: interpretacje
::: ozymandias
::: marian
::: postindustry.org
::: www.monstergod.com MonsterGod
::: www.rockmetal.pl
|
|
The Sisters Of Mercy - Różności - Wywiady
This is an interview from the UNofficial TSOM scrapbook...
WITH GROUPS like The Gun Club and The Birthday Party kicking the cataleptic
body of music around, perhaps it was inevitable that the search for
something new would be on.
Enter The Sisters Of Mercy.
The Sisters of Mercy are five human units: Ben Gunn, Gary Marx, Lerch
Adams and Endrew Eldritch - and an all important drum machine.
"We are probably the first people in this country to take the sound
of the drum machine and actually do something different with it. If
you could know how to use them, these things can be immensely powerful."
The Sisters pull out the full verbal swagger, partly through a conviction
of their own power and direction, and partly through simple perversity.
Fashion is there to be flaunted, they argue, and they do so delightedly.
When I arrive to talk to them they're running through an old Jimi Hendrix
video. Listen little Sisters, I thought rock was dead.
"That's the trouble with the press," they sulk, "they
will not recognise that the rock format sill has an enormous amount
to contribute - as long as it's approached with the right attitude and
an awareness that certain things just can't be take seriously."
"People are ready to recognise a smartness and a humour in pop
but not rock, which is just as suitable a vehicle."
The Sisters of Mercy are an intersection of the compelling sex-beat
simplicity of DAF and the sparkling spirit (not the junky fascination)
of the New York Dolls. They describe
themselves as a heavy metal band, but what's important is that they
operate on more than one level.
"Some people like us because we make a powerful noise, some people
see us as the thinking man's guide to the apocalypse, " they say
with derision. "And some actually see the tremendous black humour
with which the whole thing's done."
Black humour but not black magic?
"We could go in for all that imagery, but it's just the easy way
out. It's a way of covering up the inability of making any intelligent
comment. Like the reference to Tarot on the new
single says: 'In illusion comfort lies' which means black magic is just
another illusion that people use to wrap themselves up in and hide from
the real world"
The double A-side single 'Alice'/'Floorshow' is a devastating scream.
A follow up to the highly acclaimed 'Body Electric' and their best forgotten
debut, it's the purest expression of the Sisters' promise so far. They
insist, though, that this is only one side of them.
"We regard records and live performances as being two different
aspects of the whole thing. Each can be taken on their own, to really
understand what the band is trying to do, you have to see both sides."
At London's Imperial College, in front of an unsuspecting crowd of students,
they expose the live wire. Where the records restrain the power, the
live sound tkaes it to almost ridiculous levels, as the band teeters
on the edge of parody.
Andrew, starved and spindly, coils around the mike, Craig affects disinterest
and rolls out an ominous wash of bass, and Ben looks bemused. The drum
machine cuts through the top of your head.
The audience becomes a mix of bouncing psychobillies, restrained consideration
and open antagonism.
"We always do that to audiences, there's always the three distinct
groups. We always get cut and dried reactions."
My reaction? The Sisters of Mercy are not the answer but they make an
invigorating antidote.
My advice to you? See them!
DON WATSON
Picture text: Sisters of Mercy (no relation to New Order) cast a gothic
shadow for the lens of Kevin Cummins. (L-R: Gary Marx, Lerch Adams,
Andrew Eldritch, Ben Gunn.) (Wrong
order in picture text: should be Marx, Gunn, Eldritch, Adams.)
Thanks to Jonas Olsen for typing this in.
top
|