DEAD CAN DANCE
Dead Can Dance combines elements of European folk music - particularly
music from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance - with ambient
pop and worldbeat flourishes. Their songs are of lost beauty,
regret and sorrow, inspiration and nobility, and of the everlasting
human goal of attaining a meaningful existence.
Over the course of their career, Dead Can Dance has featured a
multitude of members, but two musicians have remained at the core
of the band -- guitarist Brendan Perry and vocalist Lisa Gerrard.
Perry had previously been the lead vocalist and bassist for the
Australian-based punk band the Scavengers, a group who were never
able to land a recording contract. In 1979, the band changed their
name to the Marching Girls, but they still weren't able to sign
a contract. The following year, Perry left the group and began
experimenting with electronic music, particularly tape loops and
rhythms. In 1981, Perry formed Dead Can Dance with Lisa Gerrard,
Paul Erikson, and Simon Monroe. By 1982, Perry and Gerrard decided
to relocate to London; Erikson and Monroe decided to stay in Australia.
Within a year, Dead Can Dance had signed a record deal with 4AD.
In the spring of 1984, they released their eponymous debut album,
comprised of songs the pair had written in the previous four years.
By the end of the year, the group had contributed two tracks to
It'll End in Tears, the first album by This Mortal Coil, and had
released an EP called Garden of the Arcane Delights. In 1985,
Dead Can Dance released their second album, Spleen and Ideal.
The album helped build their European cult following, peaking
at number two on the U.K. indie charts.
For the next two years, Dead Can Dance were relatively quiet,
releasing only two new songs in 1986, both which appeared on the
4AD compilation Lonely Is an Eyesore. Within the Realm of a Dying
Sun, the group's third album, appeared in 1986. In 1988, the band
released their fourth album, The Serpent's Egg and wrote the score
for the Agustin Villarongas film, El Nino de La Luna, which also
featured Lisa Gerrard in her acting debut.
Aion, Dead Can Dance's fifth album, was released in 1990. Also
in 1990, the group toured America for the first time, earning
rave reviews. The following year, the group was involved in various
festivals and theatrical productions. In 1992, the compilation
A Passage in Time was released on Rykodisc, making it the first
American release of Dead Can Dance music. Early in 1993, the group
provided the score to Baraka and contributed songs to Sahara Blue.
In the fall of 1993, the group released Into the Labyrinth, which
became their first proper studio album to receive an American
release. Into the Labyrinth was a cult success throughout the
U.S. and Europe. It was followed by another American and European
tour, which was documented on the 1994 album and film, Toward
the Within. In 1995, Lisa Gerrard released her debut solo album,
The Mirror Pool. In the summer of 1996, Dead Can Dance released
Spiritchaser and embarked on an international tour.