Siouxsie and the Banshees were among the longest-lived and most successful acts to emerge from the London
punk community; over the course of a career that lasted two decades, they evolved from an abrasive, primitive art
punk band into a stylish, sophisticated unit that even notched a left-field Top 40 hit.
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Siouxsie and the Banshees were among the longest-lived and most successful acts to emerge from the London
punk community; over the course of a career that lasted two decades, they evolved from an abrasive, primitive art
punk band into a stylish, sophisticated unit that even notched a left-field Top 40 hit.
Throughout its numerous lineup changes and textural shifts, the group remained under the leadership of vocalist
Siouxsie Sioux, born
Susan Dallion on May 27, 1958. She and
the Banshees' initial lineup emerged from the Bromley Contingent, a notorious group of rabid
Sex Pistols fans; inspired by the growing
punk movement,
Dallion adopted the name
Siouxsie and formed
the Banshees in September 1976.
In addition to bassist Steven Severin and guitarist Marco Perroni, the band included drummer John Simon Ritchie, who assumed the name Sid Vicious; they debuted later that year at the legendary Punk Festival held at London's 100 Club, where their entire set consisted of a savage, 20-minute rendition of "The Lords Prayer."
Soon after, Vicious joined
the Sex Pistols, while Perroni went on to join
Adam & the Ants. The core duo of
Sioux and Severin, along with new guitarist John McKay and drummer Kenny Morris, reached the U.K. Top Ten with their 1978 debut single, "Hong Kong Garden"; their grim, dissonant first LP,
The Scream, followed later in the year. Two days into a tour for their 1979 follow-up, Join Hands, both McKay and Morris abruptly departed, and guitarist Robert Smith of
the Cure (the tour's opening act) and ex-
Slits and Big in Japan drummer Budgie were enlisted to fill the void; although Smith returned to
the Cure soon after, Budgie became a permanent member of the group, and remained with
the Banshees throughout the duration of their career.
With ex-
Magazine guitarist John McGeoch on board, the band returned to the studio for 1980's
Kaleidoscope, a subtler and more melodic effort than their prior records; on the strength of the U.K. Top 20 smash "Happy House," the album reached the Top Five. A year later,
the Banshees released the psychedelic
Juju, along with
Once Upon a Time, a collection of singles; at the same time,
Sioux and Budgie formed
the Creatures, an ongoing side project. Following 1982's experimental A Kiss in the Dreamhouse, McGeoch fell ill, and Smith temporarily rejoined for the group's planned tour; a pair of 1983 performances at London's Royal Albert Hall were recorded and later issued as Nocturne. Also in 1983, Severin and Smith teamed as the one-off project the Glove for the LP
Blue Sunshine.
After his recovery, McGeoch opted not to return, so
the Banshees recruited former
Clock DVA guitarist John Carruthers after Smith exited following the sessions for 1984's dark, atmospheric
Hyaena. With 1986's
Tinderbox,
Siouxsie and the Banshees finally reached the U.S. Top 100 album charts, largely on the strength of the excellent single "Cities in Dust." After 1987's all-covers collection
Through the Looking Glass, Carruthers took his leave and was replaced by ex-Specimen guitarist Jon Klein and keyboardist Martin McCarrick for 1988's
Peepshow, a
techno-inspired outing that gave the group its first U.S. chart single with "Peek-a-Boo."
In 1991 -- the year in which
Sioux and Budgie married --
the Banshees performed on the inaugural Lollapalooza tour; their concurrent LP, Superstition was their most commercially successful, spawning their lone U.S. Top 40 hit, "Kiss Them for Me." Another singles collection, Twice Upon a Time, followed in 1992 before the group returned after a long absence with 1995's stylish
The Rapture, produced in part by
John Cale. A year later, the nostalgia surrounding the reunion of their former heroes
the Sex Pistols prompted
Siouxsie and the Banshees to finally call it quits;
Siouxsie and Budgie turned to
the Creatures as their primary project, while Severin composed the score for the controversial film Visions of Ecstasy. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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