SISTERS OF MERCY
One of England's leading "goth" bands of the 1980s,
the Sisters of Mercy play a slow, gloomy, ponderous hybrid of
metal and psychedelia, often incorporating dance beats; the one
constant in the band's career has been deep-voiced singer Andrew
Eldritch. (There is some disagreement as to whether the group
took its name from an order of Catholic nuns or from the Leonard
Cohen song of the same name.)
Eldritch originally formed the band in 1980 with guitarist Gary
Marx and recorded its first single with a drum machine dubbed
Doktor Avalanche. Guitarist Ben Gunn and bassist Craig Adams were
added to make live gigs feasible, and the Sisters built a reputation
through several singles and EPs.
Gunn left the band in 1983 and was replaced by Wayne Hussey. The
Sisters of Mercy recorded their first full-length album, First
and Last and Always, in 1985, but two years later, internal dissent
had split them apart; Marx left to form Ghost Dance, and Adams
and Hussey departed shortly thereafter. A legal dispute ensued
over the rights to the name Sisters of Mercy; Adams and Hussey
attempted to use the name Sisterhood, but Eldritch released an
EP under the name to prevent its usage, and the two finally settled
on the Mission.
Eldritch chiefly utilized a corps of temporary sidemen from this
point on (although former Gun Club bassist Patricia Morrison was
an official member of the group for a short time) and rebounded
with his two biggest-selling American LPs, Floodland and Vision
Thing. He is currently the group's only member.