On this blog we’ve revealed a number
of firsts for The Sisters of Mercy over the past couple of years : a review of the first ever gig, the re-discovery of the first Leeds gig and the amazing story of the first gig abroad to name but three.
In this post we’re going to look in
detail at the band’s first-ever interview, with the Leeds fanzine Whippings and
Apologies, which was published in September 1981. The interview first re-surfaced
in the voluminous archive of the revered collector LG, and was first shared to
the wider fan community by Phil Verne on the Heartland Forum two years ago. At
the time, it was acknowledged to be the earliest existing interview with
Eldritch, and the contents were dissected both on Heartland and then again last
year when Phil again shared the interview on his then newly-created unofficial
The Sisters of Mercy 1980-1985 Facebook fan group (which after only fifteen
months in existence already has nearly seven thousand members, demonstrating the continuing interest in this seminal phase of the band' career).
Reading through Eldritch’s confident manifesto, it’s astonishing how little has changed in the intervening thirty-six years, as his mantra will be familiar even to those who have only recently discovered the group. Given the band’s lowly status, having played only a handful of gigs, it’s perhaps understandable that many in the music press found the singer to be arrogant, given his pronouncements on the band’s place in the wider history of rock music, but his charisma, single-minded determination and detailed understanding of the inner workings of the industry are there for all to see.
In terms of the detail, Eldritch
makes it clear that he has no interest in the pub circuit (The Packhorse and
The Royal Park are both pubs in the university district of Leeds, close to
opposite corners of Woodhouse Moor), and reveals that the band has only played
the three gigs up until this point. The latest of these, supporting a fledgling
Altered Images at the city's Warehouse club, is mentioned in the context of the dreadful sound mix the band
had to suffer, and the first was the well-known York University debut show the
previous month. The “middle” gig is now known to be the Reluctant Stereotypes
support show at the Warehouse on 10th March.
This assumed chronology was confirmed
only last week, when Mark J, one of the creators of Whippings and Apologies
fanzine, commented on Phil’s thread on Heartland Forum, stating that he had
himself conducted the interview “in a little cafe on Briggate” in Leeds, adding
the statement, “It happened to be the first interview they had ever done.”
I asked Mark on the thread if he
could recall how the interview had come about, and whether the photograph which
accompanied the original interview was taken at the same time and place, and he
replied with some wonderful detail about the day. “Andy brought the photo with him to the cafe.
As I remember it was the only band picture they had at the time. At the end of
'79 and into '80, Steve [fellow creator of W+A] and I started going to the
F-Club, downstairs at Brannigans. All the same faces went there every Thursday
regardless of who was playing so we all knew each other to nod to, dance with
or snog 😝. Andy and Craig were regulars as well and Andy used to go out with
Claire the DJ. It was obvious he was a Stooges fan cause he sometimes wore
silver trousers like Iggy. Anyway, me and Steve made our first fanzine
'Primitive ' and sold it down the F-Club. Andy saw it & told us he had just
started a new band and asked if we would interview them and do a piece for
issue 2. Which we did. I saw them supporting Altered Images at the F-Club but
they were awful cos of the bad sound. We interviewed Clare [Grogan, singer of Altered Images] & co after the
gig in the dressing room then arranged to meet 'The Sisters' a day or two
later. I brought my tape recorder but Steve forgot his camera, so Andy gave us
the picture that we ended up using. The newspaper quotes were made up. It was
done in the little cafe in the arcade next to the old Virgin Megastore on
Briggate. The rest as they say is history.”
The location and date of the photo
therefore remain a mystery, but certainly predate the Altered Images gig.
However, Mark J’s detailed account confirms that the interview itself took place between
that gig on 19th March 1981 and the next gig on 22nd March, and
as he has stated, the band confirmed to him that this was their first-ever
interview.
One interesting comment sees
Eldritch stating that the band might be seen with four five or six members on
stage, although the most likely combination would be just the three of them.
This is presumably a reference to an early, embryonic version of the band
referred to in the biographical slip of paper which accompanied later, re-distributed copies of
Damage Done (see above). With Eldritch still on drums at this stage before the purchase of
the Doktor, this version featured a “Leeds face Keith Fuller” on vocals, with
Eldritch’s muse Claire Shearsby on keyboards, and a guy called Johnny on bass,
according to guitarist Gary Marx in his Glasperlenspiel interview in 2003, and
confirmed by Paul Gregory of Expelaires in Mark Andrews’ definitive account of the very early TSOM years for The Quietus.
Whippings and Apologies was started
by (Sparks fans) Mark J, Steve T and Mark C "in 1980 after leaving school..
Back in the day, there were one or two “glue and felt pen” fanzines knocking
around in Leeds so Steve and I thought that we would chance our arm and produce
our own. We didn’t expect it to last for eleven issues between ’81 and ’86.
Sorry to disappoint, but the [Eldritch interview] tape was lost in the mists of
time. At the time, there was nothing to indicate that the Sisters would go on
to be the force that they eventually became. We hadn’t even heard them
properly. It was just so early,” Mark J told me on Facebook.
The discovery of this interview and
the contextualising commentary from the man who conducted it give a fascinating
insight into Eldritch’s solid masterplan, with the silence of the other members
present a common feature of band interviews until Wayne Hussey joined some
three years later. My grateful thanks are extended to both LG and Phil Verne
for their willingness to share their TSOM treasures with the worldwide on-line
fan diaspora, and of course to Mark J for the local detail which has added some
gravitas to earlier suppositions.
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