The Cult
Originally known as first Southern Death Cult then Death Cult,
the band were formed by lead singer Ian Astbury (b. 14 May 1962,
Heswell, Merseyside, England) in 1981. After a youth spent in
Scotland and Canada (where he gained early exposure to the
culture of native Indians on the Six Nations Reservation,
informing the early stages of the band's career), Astbury moved
into a Bradford, Yorkshire, house and discovered a group in
rehearsal in the basement. The group's personnel included Haq
Quereshi (drums), David 'Buzz' Burrows (guitar) and Barry Jepson
(bass). As their vocalist, Astbury oversaw a rapid rise in
fortunes, their fifth gig and London debut at the Heaven club
attracting a near 2,000-strong audience. Southern Death Cult made
their recording debut in December 1982 with the double a-side,
Moya/Fatman, and supported Bauhaus on tour in early 1983. However,
by March the group had folded, Astbury reeling from his perceived
image of positive punk spokesman, and the fact that
his native Indian concept was being diluted by the group's format.
His new band, operating under the truncated name Death Cult,
would, he vowed, not become a victim of hype in the same way
again (Quereshi, Jepson and Burrows would go on to join Getting
The Fear, subsequently becoming Into A Circle before Quereshi re-emerged
as the centrepiece of Fun-Da-Mental's world dance
ethos under the name Propa-Ghandi). A combination of the single,
demo and live tracks was posthumously issued as the sole SDC
album. Death Cult comprised the rhythm section of recently
deceased gothic band Ritual, namely Ray The Reverend Mondo (drums)
and Jamie Stewart (bass), plus ex- Ed Banger And The Nosebleeds
and Theatre Of Hate guitarist Billy Duffy (b. 12 May 1959,
Manchester, England). They made their debut in July 1983 with an
eponymous four-track 12-inch, at which time Astbury also changed
his own name (he had previously been using Ian Lindsay, which, it
later transpired, was his mother's maiden name). After an
appearance at the Futurama festival Mondo swapped drumming
positions with Sex Gang Children's Nigel Preston (d. 7 May 1992),
a former colleague of Duffy's in Theatre Of Hate. However, 1984
brought about a second and final name changewith the band
feeling that the Death prefix typecast them as a Gothic act, they
became simply the Cult. They recorded their first album together,
DREAMTIME, for release in September 1984, its sales boosted by a
number 1 single in the indepedent charts with the typcially
anthemic Spiritwalker. Another strong effort followed early the
next year, She Sells Sanctuary, but this was to prove Preston's
swansong. Mark Brzezicki of Big Country helped out on sessions
for the forthcoming album until the permanent arrival of Les
Warner (b. 13 February 1961), who had previously worked with
Johnny Thunders, Julian Lennon and Randy California. The band's
major commercial break came with LOVE in 1985, which comprised
fully-fledged hard rock song structures and pushed Duffy's guitar
lines to the fore. It spawned two UK Top 20 hit singles in the
aforementioned She Sells Sanctuary and Rain. ELECTRIC saw the
band's transition to heavy rock completed. There was no
disguising the group's source of inspiration, with Led Zeppelin
being mentioned in nearly every review. Part-produced by Rick
Rubin, ELECTRIC was a bold and brash statement of intent, if not
quite the finished item. It became a success on both sides of the
Atlantic, peaking at number 4 and 38 in the UK and US charts
respectively. The gigs to promote it saw the band add bass player
Kid Haggis Chaos (b. Mark Manning; ex- Zodiac Mindwarp And The
Love Reaction), with Stewart switching to rhythm guitar. Both he
and Warner were dispensed with in March 1988, the former joining
4 Horsemen. Reduced to a three-piece of Astbury, Stewart and
Duffy, the sessions for SONIC TEMPLE saw them temporarily recruit
the services of drummer Mickey Curry. It was an album which
combined the atmospheric passion of LOVE with the unbridled
energy of ELECTRIC. A 1989 world tour saw the band augmented by
Matt Sorum (drums) and Mark Taylor (keyboards; ex- Alarm, Armoury
Show). Stewart quit in 1990, while Sorum would go on to a tenure
with Guns N' Roses. CEREMONY was released in 1991, with the help
of Charley Drayton (bass) and the returning Mickey Curry. This
was a retrogressive collection of songs, that had more in common
with LOVE than their previous two albums. Nevertheless, having
already established an enormous fan-base, success was virtually
guaranteed. 1994's THE CULT saw them reunited with producer Bob
Rock once more, on a set which included the rather clumsy Kurt
Cobain tribute, Sacred Life.
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