eMusic Review 0
In the beginning, there was goth as a musical descriptor — applied to spooky new-wave and industrial outfits such as Bauhaus and Killing Joke — but the 1985 debut album by the Sisters of Mercy gave us gothic rock. The series of singles and EPs that arrived under the Sisters name in the predawn (of the dead) were more the product of a post-punk art project than a band, often consisting of Suicide-like drone beats and singular, hypnotic guitar riffs. Those murky, simply-structured early releases hardly seemed to require the involvement of three people — singer Andrew Eldritch, guitarist Gary Marx and bassist Craig Adams, plus a drum machine nicknamed Doktor Avalanche — but, with the addition of guitarist Wayne Hussey (formerly of Dead Or Alive), the Leeds, England, outfit became a rock unit in a nearly classic fashion.
Hussey brought the soft chime of 12-string guitars and snaking leads to the Sisters' otherwise austere sound; think of him as secretly stashing away his Led Zeppelin and Kinks albums so as not to incur the wrath of his black-clad bandmates. At the center of it all, however, are Eldritch's vocals — a 40-fathoms-deep baritone — that conveys… read more »