THE MISSION
Derided by critics as pompous, melodramatic, and bombastic, the
Mission, as they were known in their native U.K. (their name had
to be changed in America owing to a Philadelphia R&B band
with the same moniker), nonetheless attracted a core audience
of goth-rock fans and continues to record today.
The Mission was formed in 1986 by guitarist/singer Wayne Hussey
and bassist Craig Adams, who both left the Sisters of Mercy to
do so. (Hussey had also played with the Walkie Talkies and Dead
or Alive.) The two recruited Artery guitarist Simon Hinkler and
former Red Lorry Yellow Lorry drummer Mick Brown and called themselves
the Sisterhood, to which Sisters of Mercy leader Andrew Eldritch
objected strenuously.
The Mission released two successful independent singles in the
U.K. and signed to Mercury in 1986. The group soon completed its
debut album, God's Own Medicine, which critics lambasted as ponderous
and derivative of Led Zeppelin and Yes, but the album produced
several U.K. hits anyway. The band toured extensively in the U.K.
and America; Adams had to return home from the latter after suffering
from exhaustion.
Produced by Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones, Children widened
the band's audience, reaching number two on the U.K. album charts.
1990's Carved in Sand shed some of the Mission's Zep fascination
for more refined songwriting. Hinkler left the band midway through
the supporting tour and was eventually replaced permanently by
Paul Etchells. Meanwhile, several Mission members backed Slade
members Noddy Holder and Jim Lea on the Christmas charity single
"Merry Xmas Everybody." By 1992, Hussey was the only
original member left; following the 1994 Sum and Substance retrospective,
he recorded the album Neverland with a new Mission lineup.