Forty years ago tonight (Tuesday 18th June 1985), The Sisters of Mercy played their final gig of the 1980’s, the iconic “A Festival of Remembrance” show at London’s stunning Royal Albert Hall, recorded for posterity and released on the Wake video the following year.
The main facts about the gig - the early start, Gary spending the night (also his birthday) in the pub back in Wakefield rather than playing with the band one final time, the final encore which caught out the film crew and many fans, the esoteric pre-gig programme, Hussey’s wild night on the eve of the gig, Lemmy’s ‘encouragement’ backstage to Eldritch for that final encore - have all been well-documented down the years, and the gig has already featured twice in anniversary posts on this blog, one commemorating the final appearance of stalwart bass player Craig Adams whose signature sound had been such an integral part of The Sisters’ unique sonic appeal, the other drawing together reminiscences and ephemera relating to the gig.
There seemed to be little more to reveal about this legendary event in the history of alternative music until Bruno Bossier, collector extraordinaire and a fellow moderator on Phil Verne’s seminal The Sisters of Mercy 1980-1985 Facebook fan page, contacted me to reveal that he had come into possession of the contracts for the Royal Albert Hall gig, and that most generously he would be happy for me to reveal appropriate extracts from these precious items on the blog as his personal contribution to celebrating the concert’s fortieth anniversary.
The documents comprised of a standard The Sisters of Mercy gig contract rider for all 1985 shows, and further contracts relating to this specific gig. As previously discussed, Andrew Eldritch had mentioned in an interview after the Stockholm press conference in mid-May that the band would be playing two nights at the Royal Albert Hall in June, and the first of Bruno’s recently-acquired contracts indeed regards engaging The Sisters for two nights at the London venue, with a show planned for Monday 17th June as well as for the following night when the gig actually took place. This contract was drawn up on May 2nd 1985, the night The Sisters played another famous show (in Rome, but I think that we’re all aware of that!) and was signed on behalf of Merciful Release/Troubadour (another offshoot based at the band’s All Saints Rd office in London, presumably separate for accounting purposes) by manager (and former Eldritch Oxford contemporary) Boyd Steemson. Almost certainly because of slow ticket sales for the announced gig on the 18th, this contract has two diagonal lines across it and the legend “cancelled”. With the band having toured the UK just a couple of months earlier, when the £3.50 ticket price also included the additional entertainment of The Scientists as support act, the cancellation of the second night is hardly surprising, given that press announcements only alluded to the fact that it would be the final gig of one band member (and in a New York interview a fortnight earlier, Eldritch had said “We’ve got one final date in Britain and it’ll be Gary’s last. A sort of memorial day in more than one way”) rather than the final chance to see any combination of the classic line-up, which is what transpired.
One clause of interest in the contract relates to the timings of the hall hire, with the band due to pay a penalty should the gig continue after 10 p.m., which possibly explains the show’s earlier than usual start (traditionally it was only Sunday gigs that began early, for licensing reasons). This caught out some attendees who had assumed that the headliner would not be on stage before around 9 p.m., as was usually the case at gigs at that time.
There is also a clause in the contract regarding encores, with a clear instruction not to put the house lights on until the artiste has decided that there will be no (further) encores, as was standard practice. For the Royal Albert Hall gig, the house lights did indeed come on before the final encores (to quote Nigel McK of the 1980-85 FB group, “The lights were on, the roadies were on stage, people were out on the street going home, when suddenly the Doktor starts pounding out the Sister Ray beat and it was all kicking off again!"), the traditional signal that the show was over, and many fans left the venue and missed the end of the band’s final performance as a result. Clearly there was some miscommunication, or Eldritch had already given the signal before Lemmy convinced him to return to the stage one last time…
Interestingly, the contract also lists the expected costs of the evening, including the cost of the hire of the hall, posters and advertising, box office services, security staff, staging and stage crew and front of house staff. In addition, the costs of the band and crew riders (£500 - more of which later) and the fifty strong guest list were also to be deducted from the ticket revenue, as well as the band’s own fee and the promoter’s standard fee, before the surplus was split between the promoter and the band, largely in the latter’s favour, as their fee had to cover all their own additional expenses (transport/crew/equipment hire etc). Even The Sisters’ parking requirements are listed, indicating the scale of the band’s performance by this stage.
The band also reserved the right of final approval of any support band engaged by the promoter for the show, a clause which Eldritch has invoked on several occasions over the years (usually if he felt that the act proposed was too goth!).
Huge thanks to Bruno for generously sharing these unique items from his expensively-assembled collection, which provides interesting background detail for a gig which for some was the end of an era following the band, whilst for others its abridged video recording (released by Polygram in August of 1986 after WEA passed up the chance to release it ) was their introduction to the mysteries of The Sisters of Mercy.