The Sisters of Mercy
184,752 Followers
• 13 Upcoming Shows
13 Upcoming Shows
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The Sisters of Mercy's tour
Live Photos of The Sisters of Mercy
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Fan Reviews
T
October 24th 2024
I love The Sisters of Mercy of yester-year. The original band no longer exists, so it changes the dynamic of the look and sound. I left after an hour into the performance as I'd become annoyed that the stage was very foggy and dark and that the band no longer has the sound or energy of when it first came onto the new wave music scene. I prefer that when I see a live performance, I'd like to see the performer, not all the smoke and mirrors.
Chicago, IL@Byline Bank Aragon Ballroom
Tim
October 23rd 2024
Great show. They sounded great and I liked every song they played. Only drawback was that I wanted to hear Marian, Amphetamine Logic and 9 While 9 and they didn't play any of them despite them playing Marian at previous shows on this tour.
Minneapolis, MN@The Fillmore Minneapolis
Forrest
October 10th 2024
It was ok. Key songs were truncated, half the time the stage light aimed at the audience were blinding, and there just seemed a lack of energy.
I know I should not compare them to the Sisters of Mercy I saw when we were all 30 years younger, but it's hard not to.
I'm glad I went, but this will be the last time
Venue and organization was great.
San Francisco, CA@The Masonic
View More Fan Reviews
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About The Sisters of Mercy
One of England's leading goth bands of the 1980s, the Sisters of Mercy play a slow, gloomy, ponderous hybrid of rock and psychedelia, often incorporating dance beats; the one constant in the band's career has been deep-voiced singer Andrew Eldritch. The band is named after the Leonard Cohen song "Sisters of Mercy" according to Eldritch. The band originally formed in 1980 with guitarist Gary Marx and drummer-turned-vocalist Eldritch. Dr. Avalanche, the drum machine, joined them on their second single Alice. 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.
They signed to WEA in 1984 and released the [album]Body And Soul[/album] single. This featured a re-recording of [track]Body Electric[/track], Train, and Afterhours. This was followed by Walk Away towards the end of the year. The B-sides were Poison Doo and On the Wire. Early releases of this single came with the 7" flexi Long Train (ampetamix).
1985 started with the release of No Time to Cry (backed with Blood Money and Bury Me Deep) and their first album First and Last and Always. In 1985 Gary Marx chose to leave the band, leaving a few days after the recording of First And Last And Always and Marian for The Old Grey Whistle Test program.
The final concert of the tour at the Royal Albert Hall was recorded and subsequentally released as Wake on VHS.
During rehearsals for the next album, Craig Adams walked out and was followed by Wayne Hussey. The two of them formed a band and started gigging under the name The Sisterhood. For the full story on this go here.
Eldritch retired to Hamburg in Germany and started working on the new album. He enlisted the help of former The Gun Club bassist Patricia Morrison although it is still unclear to how much she contributed musically to the project. This Corrosion (originally written to be part of The Sisterhood project), was released as a single in 1987. The single was backed with Torch (apparently the song that caused Craig Adams to walk out) and Colours (re-recorded from The Sisterhood album).
This was followed by the album Floodland. The CD version of the album contained Torch and Colours as extra tracks.
Dominion was released as a single after this and the video was filmed in the ancient Jordanian city of Petra. The B-sides were Sandstorm and Untitled. Emma, a live favourite, appeared on the 12" release and Ozymandias, a mixup of Dominion being played backwards was released on the CD and the Limited Edition 12" boxset.
The final single Lucretia was released in 1988 and the video recorded in India. A video for 1959 was shot at the same time. The B-side to Lucretia was Long Train which had originally been released as a limited edition flexi 7" with the Walk Away single.
All the Floodland-era videos was released on VHS in 1989 on the "Shot" video.
In 1989, Morrison was dropped from the band and Eldritch started working with young Hamburg musician Andreas Bruhn. Between them, they wrote Vision Thing. Recorded in Denmark, the band was expanded to include ex-Sigue Sigue Sputnik bassist Tony James and ex-All About Eve guitarist Tim Bricheno. The album was much more rock-orientated than anything The Sisters had done before.
A single, More was released in 1990 (B-Side You Could Be The One) followed by the album, Vision Thing. A tour of Europe commenced, the first Sisters tour since 1985 followed by a disastrous tour with Public Enemy in the US, which was cancelled before all the dates were completed.
Doctor Jeep was released later in 1990 (B-Sides live bootleg recordings from 1985) and a German only release of When You Don't See Me followed in 1991 (with bootleg recordings from 1990 on the b-side). The Sisters toured throughout 1991. After this period, Tony James leaves the band.
It was decided to release all the early EPs on CD for the first time and Temple of Love was re-recorded with Ofra Haza supplying the backing vocals. Temple Of Love (1992) was released and was the highest placed single The Sisters had had in the UK charts, peaking at no. 3. This featured an extended version of Vision Thing, the german release of When You Don't See Me and the remix of Detonation Boulevard on the b-sides. They headline major European music festivals. Tim Bricheno and Andreas Bruhn both officially leave, but Bruhn continued to play live with The Sisters in 1993 along with newcomer Adam Pearson.
1993 brought us a "greatest hits' compilation. A Slight Case Of Overbombing with all the A-sides from the beginning of their major label involvement in 1984 to 1993. Notable exceptions are Vision Thing (Canadian Club Mix) which featured on the Temple Of Love 1992 single and Detonation Boulevard (remix) which appeared on a promo CD on Elektra records to promote the album in the US.
The single, Under The Gun, a re-working of "Two Worlds Apart" by Billie Hughes and featured Berlin vocalist Terri Nunn, was released in support of the album. The B-Side was a re-recording of Alice. The video complilation, Shot Rev2.0, was released which featured the Floodland, Vision Thing promos as well as Temple Of Love (1992) and Under The Gun.
After this release, Eldritch effectively went on strike refusing to work with East West, their record label.
The live incarnation of the band reappeared in 1996 playing several European concert dates with The Sex Pistols. Chris Sheenan joined as second guitar. New songs start to pepper the setlist.
Chris leaves the band in 1997 and [bandmember from=1997 to=]Mike Varjak[/bandmember] takes his place.
Eldritch sends East West an album which they accept without listening to and The Sisters are finally free. The album (known as SSV) is third rate techno, with the drums removed and Eldritch talking nonsense. Although adverts appeared in the music press around that time, the album never saw an official release.
More touring in 1998 was followed up by not releasing any product as was expected. A North American tour commenced in 1999.
2000 saw the return of Chris Sheenan and European halls and festivals were played for the next two years.
Chris Sheenan started compiling video footage shot at the 2002 festivals for a future DVD release. A video of (We Are The Same) Suzanne is released on the bands website and swiftly removed due to heavy leeching. The audio is still available.
2003 brought more European gigs, but 2004 was a year off.
Another European tour in 2005 saw the departure of Chris Sheenan and Leeds own Robochrist, Chris Catalyst takes his place. Adam Pearson has more important things to do so Ben Christo joins and the rejuvenated band start 2006 with the biggest world tour they have undertaken so far, starting in Las Vegas in February and finishing in December in Moscow.
2007 brought 3 European festival gigs in June and July.
The Sisters Of Mercy are currently:
Andrew Eldritch - vocals
Doktor Avalanche - drum machine
Nurse - nurse to the Doktor
Chris Catalyst - guitar and backing vocals
Ben Christo - guitar and backing vocals
http://www.the-sisters-of-mercy.com
They signed to WEA in 1984 and released the [album]Body And Soul[/album] single. This featured a re-recording of [track]Body Electric[/track], Train, and Afterhours. This was followed by Walk Away towards the end of the year. The B-sides were Poison Doo and On the Wire. Early releases of this single came with the 7" flexi Long Train (ampetamix).
1985 started with the release of No Time to Cry (backed with Blood Money and Bury Me Deep) and their first album First and Last and Always. In 1985 Gary Marx chose to leave the band, leaving a few days after the recording of First And Last And Always and Marian for The Old Grey Whistle Test program.
The final concert of the tour at the Royal Albert Hall was recorded and subsequentally released as Wake on VHS.
During rehearsals for the next album, Craig Adams walked out and was followed by Wayne Hussey. The two of them formed a band and started gigging under the name The Sisterhood. For the full story on this go here.
Eldritch retired to Hamburg in Germany and started working on the new album. He enlisted the help of former The Gun Club bassist Patricia Morrison although it is still unclear to how much she contributed musically to the project. This Corrosion (originally written to be part of The Sisterhood project), was released as a single in 1987. The single was backed with Torch (apparently the song that caused Craig Adams to walk out) and Colours (re-recorded from The Sisterhood album).
This was followed by the album Floodland. The CD version of the album contained Torch and Colours as extra tracks.
Dominion was released as a single after this and the video was filmed in the ancient Jordanian city of Petra. The B-sides were Sandstorm and Untitled. Emma, a live favourite, appeared on the 12" release and Ozymandias, a mixup of Dominion being played backwards was released on the CD and the Limited Edition 12" boxset.
The final single Lucretia was released in 1988 and the video recorded in India. A video for 1959 was shot at the same time. The B-side to Lucretia was Long Train which had originally been released as a limited edition flexi 7" with the Walk Away single.
All the Floodland-era videos was released on VHS in 1989 on the "Shot" video.
In 1989, Morrison was dropped from the band and Eldritch started working with young Hamburg musician Andreas Bruhn. Between them, they wrote Vision Thing. Recorded in Denmark, the band was expanded to include ex-Sigue Sigue Sputnik bassist Tony James and ex-All About Eve guitarist Tim Bricheno. The album was much more rock-orientated than anything The Sisters had done before.
A single, More was released in 1990 (B-Side You Could Be The One) followed by the album, Vision Thing. A tour of Europe commenced, the first Sisters tour since 1985 followed by a disastrous tour with Public Enemy in the US, which was cancelled before all the dates were completed.
Doctor Jeep was released later in 1990 (B-Sides live bootleg recordings from 1985) and a German only release of When You Don't See Me followed in 1991 (with bootleg recordings from 1990 on the b-side). The Sisters toured throughout 1991. After this period, Tony James leaves the band.
It was decided to release all the early EPs on CD for the first time and Temple of Love was re-recorded with Ofra Haza supplying the backing vocals. Temple Of Love (1992) was released and was the highest placed single The Sisters had had in the UK charts, peaking at no. 3. This featured an extended version of Vision Thing, the german release of When You Don't See Me and the remix of Detonation Boulevard on the b-sides. They headline major European music festivals. Tim Bricheno and Andreas Bruhn both officially leave, but Bruhn continued to play live with The Sisters in 1993 along with newcomer Adam Pearson.
1993 brought us a "greatest hits' compilation. A Slight Case Of Overbombing with all the A-sides from the beginning of their major label involvement in 1984 to 1993. Notable exceptions are Vision Thing (Canadian Club Mix) which featured on the Temple Of Love 1992 single and Detonation Boulevard (remix) which appeared on a promo CD on Elektra records to promote the album in the US.
The single, Under The Gun, a re-working of "Two Worlds Apart" by Billie Hughes and featured Berlin vocalist Terri Nunn, was released in support of the album. The B-Side was a re-recording of Alice. The video complilation, Shot Rev2.0, was released which featured the Floodland, Vision Thing promos as well as Temple Of Love (1992) and Under The Gun.
After this release, Eldritch effectively went on strike refusing to work with East West, their record label.
The live incarnation of the band reappeared in 1996 playing several European concert dates with The Sex Pistols. Chris Sheenan joined as second guitar. New songs start to pepper the setlist.
Chris leaves the band in 1997 and [bandmember from=1997 to=]Mike Varjak[/bandmember] takes his place.
Eldritch sends East West an album which they accept without listening to and The Sisters are finally free. The album (known as SSV) is third rate techno, with the drums removed and Eldritch talking nonsense. Although adverts appeared in the music press around that time, the album never saw an official release.
More touring in 1998 was followed up by not releasing any product as was expected. A North American tour commenced in 1999.
2000 saw the return of Chris Sheenan and European halls and festivals were played for the next two years.
Chris Sheenan started compiling video footage shot at the 2002 festivals for a future DVD release. A video of (We Are The Same) Suzanne is released on the bands website and swiftly removed due to heavy leeching. The audio is still available.
2003 brought more European gigs, but 2004 was a year off.
Another European tour in 2005 saw the departure of Chris Sheenan and Leeds own Robochrist, Chris Catalyst takes his place. Adam Pearson has more important things to do so Ben Christo joins and the rejuvenated band start 2006 with the biggest world tour they have undertaken so far, starting in Las Vegas in February and finishing in December in Moscow.
2007 brought 3 European festival gigs in June and July.
The Sisters Of Mercy are currently:
Andrew Eldritch - vocals
Doktor Avalanche - drum machine
Nurse - nurse to the Doktor
Chris Catalyst - guitar and backing vocals
Ben Christo - guitar and backing vocals
http://www.the-sisters-of-mercy.com
Show More
No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to The Sisters of Mercy to play in your city
Request a Show
concerts and tour dates
Upcoming
Past
all concerts & live streams
Show More Dates (13)
Live Photos of The Sisters of Mercy
View All Photos
Merch (ad)
Cool T-Shirt - Music Star T-Shirt
$16.99
The World's End - The Sisters Of Merc...
$18.99
The Sisters of Mercy T Shirt Men's Fa...
$16.99
Bau haus Goth Vampire Band Vintage T-...
$15.99
The Rock Sisters of Music Mercy Band ...
$14.96
The World's End - The Sisters Of Merc...
$21.99
The Sisters of Mercy Shirt for Man So...
$16.65
The Rock Sisters of Music Mercy Band ...
$23.99
DaihAnle The Sisters of Mercy Men's S...
$16.85
The World's End - The Sisters Of Merc...
$18.99
The Sisters of Mercy's tour
Fan Reviews
T
October 24th 2024
I love The Sisters of Mercy of yester-year. The original band no longer exists, so it changes the dynamic of the look and sound. I left after an hour into the performance as I'd become annoyed that the stage was very foggy and dark and that the band no longer has the sound or energy of when it first came onto the new wave music scene. I prefer that when I see a live performance, I'd like to see the performer, not all the smoke and mirrors.
Chicago, IL@Byline Bank Aragon Ballroom
Tim
October 23rd 2024
Great show. They sounded great and I liked every song they played. Only drawback was that I wanted to hear Marian, Amphetamine Logic and 9 While 9 and they didn't play any of them despite them playing Marian at previous shows on this tour.
Minneapolis, MN@The Fillmore Minneapolis
Forrest
October 10th 2024
It was ok. Key songs were truncated, half the time the stage light aimed at the audience were blinding, and there just seemed a lack of energy.
I know I should not compare them to the Sisters of Mercy I saw when we were all 30 years younger, but it's hard not to.
I'm glad I went, but this will be the last time
Venue and organization was great.
San Francisco, CA@The Masonic
View More Fan Reviews
About The Sisters of Mercy
One of England's leading goth bands of the 1980s, the Sisters of Mercy play a slow, gloomy, ponderous hybrid of rock and psychedelia, often incorporating dance beats; the one constant in the band's career has been deep-voiced singer Andrew Eldritch. The band is named after the Leonard Cohen song "Sisters of Mercy" according to Eldritch. The band originally formed in 1980 with guitarist Gary Marx and drummer-turned-vocalist Eldritch. Dr. Avalanche, the drum machine, joined them on their second single Alice. 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.
They signed to WEA in 1984 and released the [album]Body And Soul[/album] single. This featured a re-recording of [track]Body Electric[/track], Train, and Afterhours. This was followed by Walk Away towards the end of the year. The B-sides were Poison Doo and On the Wire. Early releases of this single came with the 7" flexi Long Train (ampetamix).
1985 started with the release of No Time to Cry (backed with Blood Money and Bury Me Deep) and their first album First and Last and Always. In 1985 Gary Marx chose to leave the band, leaving a few days after the recording of First And Last And Always and Marian for The Old Grey Whistle Test program.
The final concert of the tour at the Royal Albert Hall was recorded and subsequentally released as Wake on VHS.
During rehearsals for the next album, Craig Adams walked out and was followed by Wayne Hussey. The two of them formed a band and started gigging under the name The Sisterhood. For the full story on this go here.
Eldritch retired to Hamburg in Germany and started working on the new album. He enlisted the help of former The Gun Club bassist Patricia Morrison although it is still unclear to how much she contributed musically to the project. This Corrosion (originally written to be part of The Sisterhood project), was released as a single in 1987. The single was backed with Torch (apparently the song that caused Craig Adams to walk out) and Colours (re-recorded from The Sisterhood album).
This was followed by the album Floodland. The CD version of the album contained Torch and Colours as extra tracks.
Dominion was released as a single after this and the video was filmed in the ancient Jordanian city of Petra. The B-sides were Sandstorm and Untitled. Emma, a live favourite, appeared on the 12" release and Ozymandias, a mixup of Dominion being played backwards was released on the CD and the Limited Edition 12" boxset.
The final single Lucretia was released in 1988 and the video recorded in India. A video for 1959 was shot at the same time. The B-side to Lucretia was Long Train which had originally been released as a limited edition flexi 7" with the Walk Away single.
All the Floodland-era videos was released on VHS in 1989 on the "Shot" video.
In 1989, Morrison was dropped from the band and Eldritch started working with young Hamburg musician Andreas Bruhn. Between them, they wrote Vision Thing. Recorded in Denmark, the band was expanded to include ex-Sigue Sigue Sputnik bassist Tony James and ex-All About Eve guitarist Tim Bricheno. The album was much more rock-orientated than anything The Sisters had done before.
A single, More was released in 1990 (B-Side You Could Be The One) followed by the album, Vision Thing. A tour of Europe commenced, the first Sisters tour since 1985 followed by a disastrous tour with Public Enemy in the US, which was cancelled before all the dates were completed.
Doctor Jeep was released later in 1990 (B-Sides live bootleg recordings from 1985) and a German only release of When You Don't See Me followed in 1991 (with bootleg recordings from 1990 on the b-side). The Sisters toured throughout 1991. After this period, Tony James leaves the band.
It was decided to release all the early EPs on CD for the first time and Temple of Love was re-recorded with Ofra Haza supplying the backing vocals. Temple Of Love (1992) was released and was the highest placed single The Sisters had had in the UK charts, peaking at no. 3. This featured an extended version of Vision Thing, the german release of When You Don't See Me and the remix of Detonation Boulevard on the b-sides. They headline major European music festivals. Tim Bricheno and Andreas Bruhn both officially leave, but Bruhn continued to play live with The Sisters in 1993 along with newcomer Adam Pearson.
1993 brought us a "greatest hits' compilation. A Slight Case Of Overbombing with all the A-sides from the beginning of their major label involvement in 1984 to 1993. Notable exceptions are Vision Thing (Canadian Club Mix) which featured on the Temple Of Love 1992 single and Detonation Boulevard (remix) which appeared on a promo CD on Elektra records to promote the album in the US.
The single, Under The Gun, a re-working of "Two Worlds Apart" by Billie Hughes and featured Berlin vocalist Terri Nunn, was released in support of the album. The B-Side was a re-recording of Alice. The video complilation, Shot Rev2.0, was released which featured the Floodland, Vision Thing promos as well as Temple Of Love (1992) and Under The Gun.
After this release, Eldritch effectively went on strike refusing to work with East West, their record label.
The live incarnation of the band reappeared in 1996 playing several European concert dates with The Sex Pistols. Chris Sheenan joined as second guitar. New songs start to pepper the setlist.
Chris leaves the band in 1997 and [bandmember from=1997 to=]Mike Varjak[/bandmember] takes his place.
Eldritch sends East West an album which they accept without listening to and The Sisters are finally free. The album (known as SSV) is third rate techno, with the drums removed and Eldritch talking nonsense. Although adverts appeared in the music press around that time, the album never saw an official release.
More touring in 1998 was followed up by not releasing any product as was expected. A North American tour commenced in 1999.
2000 saw the return of Chris Sheenan and European halls and festivals were played for the next two years.
Chris Sheenan started compiling video footage shot at the 2002 festivals for a future DVD release. A video of (We Are The Same) Suzanne is released on the bands website and swiftly removed due to heavy leeching. The audio is still available.
2003 brought more European gigs, but 2004 was a year off.
Another European tour in 2005 saw the departure of Chris Sheenan and Leeds own Robochrist, Chris Catalyst takes his place. Adam Pearson has more important things to do so Ben Christo joins and the rejuvenated band start 2006 with the biggest world tour they have undertaken so far, starting in Las Vegas in February and finishing in December in Moscow.
2007 brought 3 European festival gigs in June and July.
The Sisters Of Mercy are currently:
Andrew Eldritch - vocals
Doktor Avalanche - drum machine
Nurse - nurse to the Doktor
Chris Catalyst - guitar and backing vocals
Ben Christo - guitar and backing vocals
http://www.the-sisters-of-mercy.com
They signed to WEA in 1984 and released the [album]Body And Soul[/album] single. This featured a re-recording of [track]Body Electric[/track], Train, and Afterhours. This was followed by Walk Away towards the end of the year. The B-sides were Poison Doo and On the Wire. Early releases of this single came with the 7" flexi Long Train (ampetamix).
1985 started with the release of No Time to Cry (backed with Blood Money and Bury Me Deep) and their first album First and Last and Always. In 1985 Gary Marx chose to leave the band, leaving a few days after the recording of First And Last And Always and Marian for The Old Grey Whistle Test program.
The final concert of the tour at the Royal Albert Hall was recorded and subsequentally released as Wake on VHS.
During rehearsals for the next album, Craig Adams walked out and was followed by Wayne Hussey. The two of them formed a band and started gigging under the name The Sisterhood. For the full story on this go here.
Eldritch retired to Hamburg in Germany and started working on the new album. He enlisted the help of former The Gun Club bassist Patricia Morrison although it is still unclear to how much she contributed musically to the project. This Corrosion (originally written to be part of The Sisterhood project), was released as a single in 1987. The single was backed with Torch (apparently the song that caused Craig Adams to walk out) and Colours (re-recorded from The Sisterhood album).
This was followed by the album Floodland. The CD version of the album contained Torch and Colours as extra tracks.
Dominion was released as a single after this and the video was filmed in the ancient Jordanian city of Petra. The B-sides were Sandstorm and Untitled. Emma, a live favourite, appeared on the 12" release and Ozymandias, a mixup of Dominion being played backwards was released on the CD and the Limited Edition 12" boxset.
The final single Lucretia was released in 1988 and the video recorded in India. A video for 1959 was shot at the same time. The B-side to Lucretia was Long Train which had originally been released as a limited edition flexi 7" with the Walk Away single.
All the Floodland-era videos was released on VHS in 1989 on the "Shot" video.
In 1989, Morrison was dropped from the band and Eldritch started working with young Hamburg musician Andreas Bruhn. Between them, they wrote Vision Thing. Recorded in Denmark, the band was expanded to include ex-Sigue Sigue Sputnik bassist Tony James and ex-All About Eve guitarist Tim Bricheno. The album was much more rock-orientated than anything The Sisters had done before.
A single, More was released in 1990 (B-Side You Could Be The One) followed by the album, Vision Thing. A tour of Europe commenced, the first Sisters tour since 1985 followed by a disastrous tour with Public Enemy in the US, which was cancelled before all the dates were completed.
Doctor Jeep was released later in 1990 (B-Sides live bootleg recordings from 1985) and a German only release of When You Don't See Me followed in 1991 (with bootleg recordings from 1990 on the b-side). The Sisters toured throughout 1991. After this period, Tony James leaves the band.
It was decided to release all the early EPs on CD for the first time and Temple of Love was re-recorded with Ofra Haza supplying the backing vocals. Temple Of Love (1992) was released and was the highest placed single The Sisters had had in the UK charts, peaking at no. 3. This featured an extended version of Vision Thing, the german release of When You Don't See Me and the remix of Detonation Boulevard on the b-sides. They headline major European music festivals. Tim Bricheno and Andreas Bruhn both officially leave, but Bruhn continued to play live with The Sisters in 1993 along with newcomer Adam Pearson.
1993 brought us a "greatest hits' compilation. A Slight Case Of Overbombing with all the A-sides from the beginning of their major label involvement in 1984 to 1993. Notable exceptions are Vision Thing (Canadian Club Mix) which featured on the Temple Of Love 1992 single and Detonation Boulevard (remix) which appeared on a promo CD on Elektra records to promote the album in the US.
The single, Under The Gun, a re-working of "Two Worlds Apart" by Billie Hughes and featured Berlin vocalist Terri Nunn, was released in support of the album. The B-Side was a re-recording of Alice. The video complilation, Shot Rev2.0, was released which featured the Floodland, Vision Thing promos as well as Temple Of Love (1992) and Under The Gun.
After this release, Eldritch effectively went on strike refusing to work with East West, their record label.
The live incarnation of the band reappeared in 1996 playing several European concert dates with The Sex Pistols. Chris Sheenan joined as second guitar. New songs start to pepper the setlist.
Chris leaves the band in 1997 and [bandmember from=1997 to=]Mike Varjak[/bandmember] takes his place.
Eldritch sends East West an album which they accept without listening to and The Sisters are finally free. The album (known as SSV) is third rate techno, with the drums removed and Eldritch talking nonsense. Although adverts appeared in the music press around that time, the album never saw an official release.
More touring in 1998 was followed up by not releasing any product as was expected. A North American tour commenced in 1999.
2000 saw the return of Chris Sheenan and European halls and festivals were played for the next two years.
Chris Sheenan started compiling video footage shot at the 2002 festivals for a future DVD release. A video of (We Are The Same) Suzanne is released on the bands website and swiftly removed due to heavy leeching. The audio is still available.
2003 brought more European gigs, but 2004 was a year off.
Another European tour in 2005 saw the departure of Chris Sheenan and Leeds own Robochrist, Chris Catalyst takes his place. Adam Pearson has more important things to do so Ben Christo joins and the rejuvenated band start 2006 with the biggest world tour they have undertaken so far, starting in Las Vegas in February and finishing in December in Moscow.
2007 brought 3 European festival gigs in June and July.
The Sisters Of Mercy are currently:
Andrew Eldritch - vocals
Doktor Avalanche - drum machine
Nurse - nurse to the Doktor
Chris Catalyst - guitar and backing vocals
Ben Christo - guitar and backing vocals
http://www.the-sisters-of-mercy.com
Show More
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