First And Last And Always

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First And Last And Always album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 46:41

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Matthew Fritch

eMusic Contributor

06.16.10
An intriguing glimpse at goth going above ground for the first time
1985 | Label: Elektra Records

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 »

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Maybe the best ever

BelaVrana

Now, I say "Floodland" is one of the best albums ever, and so is this one. It may even be the very best. Sometimes, I do believe it is. No matter what, it is damn good. I have always loved Andrew Eldritch's voice- it just totally touches something deep inside. I'm just a little frustrated that I couldn't really tell you how much I've loved all permutations of SOM without writing a darn book.

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A favorite recording

Grizzabella

I heard No Time to Cry on an independent radio station and I had to find out more about this band. This album is FANTASTIC! Contains all the ripping your heart out angst that you love about goth/electronic music but the melodies are really cool and the songwriting is great as well. One of my long timd favorites for sure.

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They Say All Music Guide

With the band itself falling to bits shortly after the March 1985 debut of First and Last and Always, the album’s place in the skewed history of the rise of goth rock would, on one hand, be permanently linked with that discord but, on the other, not impacted in the slightest, leaving the fractious set’s success and structure to become a blueprint for an entire generation of up-and-comers. With static drumbeats and jangle-angled guitars backing Andrew Eldritch’s atonic, graveyard vocals, the songs on First and Last and Always paid to play alongside the ghosts of myriad forgotten post-punkers as well as the band’s own goth forebears. From the opening air-fire claustrophobia of “Black Planet” to the melancholy “No Time to Cry,” Eldritch continually assured listeners that “everything’s gonna be alright” — but, really, coming out of that mouth, did anyone actually believe him? Even on the occasional wobbly patches imbedded in the now classic “Marian” and the title track, where the song threatens to dissolve into irrelevance despite Eldritch’s chirky vocal, they pull up wonderfully on the bass-driven, bee-stung guitar gem “Possession” and the closing “Some Kind of Stranger,” an untouchable epic that, clocking in at over seven minutes, is the best of its kind from any time — period. “Some Kind of Stranger” not only became a love song for the doom and gloom crowd, but was also an anthemic, anemic declaration of intent laid bare in a haze of sonic smoke and mirrors. Copied to death, its brilliance has never been replicated. Indeed, the entire album remains unequaled in the genre, permanently granted top place on a pedestal from which it cannot be toppled. – Amy Hanson

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