|
|
The Cure
The Cure were one of the most pivotal and musically diverse
post-punk bands to emerge from England.
Reincarnated continually
throughout their history by main man Robert Smith they have
recorded in a distinct array of musical styles which include pop, Goth, punk, but are most remembered for the dark and gloomy music
that helped define Goth music of the time.
Formed in Crawley,
Sussex in 1976, initially as The Easy Cure, Robert Smith, Lawrence
Tolhurst and Michael Dempsey were the founding members. In 1978
the band recorded Killing An Arab for a small indie label called
Small Wonder. The track met with controversy upon it's 1979
release, while a subsequent debut album, Three Imaginary Boys
(1979) remains among The Cure's finest work.
The record almost
scraped into the Top 40, while the pop brilliance of accompanying
single Boys Don't Cry saw The Cure lauded as one of the UK's
most promising young bands. A pseudonymous single, I'm A Cult
Hero - under the name The Cult Heroes - passed unnoticed and, soon
after its release, Dempsey was replaced on bass by Simon Gallup.
Amid the shake-up, keyboard player Matthieu Hartley was added to
the line-up.
By the spring of 1980, The Cure was developing less
as a pop outfit than a guitar-laden rock band. The atmospheric
12-inch single A Forest gave them their first UK Top 40 hit, while
a stronger second album, 17 Seconds , reached the Top 20.
Thereafter, The Cure's cult following ensured that their work
regularly appeared in the lower regions of the charts.
After
consolidating their position during 1981 with Primary , Charlotte
Sometimes and Faith the band looked to the new year for a new
direction. Their fourth album, Pornography , was their first to
make the UK Top 10 in May 1982.
Unfortunately, while on tour in
France, pallid front man Robert Smith quarrelled with bass player
Simon Gallup and the band ostensibly broke up. Smith briefly joined
Siouxsie & The Banshees as a temporary replacement for John
McGeogh. As well as contributing the excellent psychedelic-tinged
guitar work to their hit Dear Prudence , Smith subsequently teamed
up with Banshee Steve Severin and Jeanette Landray in The Glove.
The Cure, meanwhile, continued to record and during the summer
enjoyed their first UK Top 20 single appearance with the
electronics-based The Walk . Four months later, they were in the
Top 10 with the radically contrasting pop single The Love Cats.
Smith subsequently attempted to distance himself from this song,
which was initially intended more as a parody.
Further success
followed with The Caterpillar , another unusual single,
highlighted by Smith's eccentric violin playing. This chart
success confirmed The Cure as not only one of the most eclectic
and eccentric ensembles working in British pop, but one of the
very few to make such innovations accessible to a wider audience.
Smith's heavy eye make-up, smudged crimson lipstick and
shock-spiked hair was equally as striking, while the band's
videos, directed by Tim Pope, became increasingly wondrous. In
1985, the band released their most commercially successful album
yet, The Head On The Door .
The following year, they re-recorded
their second single, Boys Don't Cry , which this time became a
minor UK hit. By now, the band was effectively Smith and Tolhurst,
with members such as Gallup and others flitting through the
line-up from year to year.
With the retrospective Standing On A
Beach singles collection The Cure underlined their longevity
during an otherwise quiet year. During 1987, they undertook a tour
of South America and enjoyed several more minor UK hits with Why
Can't I Be You? , Catch and Just Like Heaven . The latter also
reached the US Top 40, as did their double album, Kiss Me, Kiss
Me, Kiss Me .
Robert Smith suffered from a chronic fear of flying
throughout the 1980s but still insisted that the band travelled in
style. They went to the US on the QEII and travelled to Venice on
the Orient Express, racking up a £2000 bar bill in a single
evening.
A two-year hiatus followed before the release of the
follow-up, Disintegration . A fiendishly downbeat affair, with
some of Smith's most moribund lyrics, it nevertheless climbed
into the UK Top 3. During the same period, the band continued to
register regular hits with such singles as Lullaby (promoted by a
memorable video), Lovesong , Pictures Of You and the fiery
Never
Enough .
The Cure were no strangers to fisticuffs, with Robert
Smith lamping Simon Gallup in Strasbourg in 1982 and drummer Andy
Anderson battering the others in 1984, but the late 80s saw
founding member Lol Tolhurst demoted to one-fingered keyboards and
transformed into the band's drunken punch-bag.
In the wake of his
ultimate sacking, Smith said, "The only way we could
communicate that he was turning into a complete parody of himself
was by beating him up". This left Smith as the sole original
member.
Although it was assumed that The Cure would attempt to
consolidate their promising sales in the USA, Smith announced that
he would not be undertaking any further tours of America. Mixed Up
, a double album compiling re-recordings and remixes of their
singles, was released at the end of 1990.
By 1992, The Cure
line-up comprised Smith, a reinstated Gallup, Perry Bamonte
(keyboards and guitar), Porl Thompson (guitar) and Boris Williams
(drums), and with the critically acclaimed Wish , The Cure
consolidated their position as one of the world's most
consistently successful bands.
Thompson left the group in June
1993, at which time former member Tolhurst sued Smith, the band
and its record label, for alleged unpaid royalties. The ensuing
court transcripts made for colourful reading, and confirmed The
Cure's reputation for drinking excess.
Tolhurst was summarily
defeated in the action and left with a huge legal debt. Following
a successful bill-topping gig at the 1995 Glastonbury Festival the
band started work on what was to become Wild Mood Swings , issued
in May 1996. The line-up on this album was Smith, Bamonte, Gallup,
Jason Cooper (drums) and Roger O'Donnell (keyboards).
The
revealing lyrics hinted at Smith's personal insecurities. Galore
, a useful follow-up to the earlier compilations, preceded the
excellent Bloodflowers which Smith claimed was to be the final
Cure album.
The claim was not taken seriously, and sure enough the
singer later announced that The Cure would be ending their long
association with Fiction Records and signing a new recording
contract with Ross Robinson's I Am imprint.
|
|
Search
|
|
|
|
site search by freefind
|
| The
Band |
Robert Smith
Vocals, guitar
Lawrence 'Lol' Tolhurst
Drums, keyboards
Michael
Dempsey
Bass
Simon Gallup
Bass, keyboards
Mathieu Hartley
Keyboards
Steve Goulding
Bass
Phil Thornalley
Bass
Andy
Anderson
Drums
Porl Thompson
Guitar, saxophone, keyboards
Boris
Williams
Drums
Robert O'Connell
Keyboards
Perry Bamonte
Keyboards
|
|