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Eldritch decided to secure the rights to the Sisterhood name as quickly as possible. He registered a company under the name [18] and prepared a record to be released on his own label. In only five days Eldritch recorded a song called "Giving Ground," which he co-wrote with Merciful Release manager Boyd Steemson and co-produced with Lucas Fox.
Andrew Eldritch (born Andrew William Harvey Taylor, 15 May 1959) is an English singer, songwriter and musician. He is the lead vocalist and only remaining original member of the Sisters of Mercy , a band that emerged from the British post-punk scene, transformed into a gothic rock band, and, in later years, flirted with hard rock .
Eldritch and Avalanche were also involved in the Sisterhood, a side project linked to Eldritch's disputes with former members. The Sisters of Mercy ceased recording activity in the early 1990s when they went on strike against East West Records , whom they accused of incompetence and withholding royalties, while pressuring the group to release ...
Band frontman Andrew Eldritch (pictured in 2000) had formed the Sisterhood following the break-up of the Sisters of Mercy.. After the release of the Sisters of Mercy debut studio album First and Last and Always in March 1985, frontman Andrew Eldritch intended for them to record an ABBA cover as a single, and tried to hire Jim Steinman as a producer. [2]
Read sister quotes from famous sisters like Serena and Venus Williams as well as fictional sisters to put words to your deeply meaningful bond and relationship.
The band was founded in 1980 by Andrew Eldritch and Gary Marx in Leeds.Up to 1983, they had produced five singles and two EPs, which were released on the band's own indie label Merciful Release and were distributed independently as well.
"This Corrosion" was written by Andrew Eldritch and produced by Jim Steinman, and is one of the band's most well-known songs.It uses a 40-piece choir, and the LP version of the song lasts for nearly 11 minutes (with the myriad of single versions all substantially shorter.)
The song was written by Andrew Eldritch as a "welcome" to the Sisters of Mercy bassist, Patricia Morrison, who, he said, "always strikes me as a Lucrezia [Borgia]-type person". [1] Its lyrics concern the fall of an empire, war and the consequent destruction of other aspects of life.