The band have released only one album since 1991 classic Loveless, yet their influence remains undimmed. Their frontman discusses destroying buildings with noise, losing his mojo – and preparing new music

In early 1988, My Bloody Valentine decided that they were, as their de facto leader, Kevin Shields, puts it today, “finished”. You can see how they might have come to that conclusion. They had started life in the early 80s as a Dublin post-punk band, relocated to Berlin at the suggestion of the Virgin Prunes’ Gavin Friday and become a gothy proposition inspired by the Birthday Party and the Cramps, then moved to London and transformed into what Shields calls “a conceptual band”, their childlike record sleeves concealing songs about necrophilia and incest.

The problem was, no one had got the joke; the general consensus, as Shields sighs today, was “that we were this shit Jesus and Mary Chain copyist band”. Following the departure of their lead singer, Dave Conway, they had adopted a jangly 12-string guitar style, to negligible response.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

UK again excluded from EU’s Covid-safe travel list, but US added

British tourists face continued restrictions as bloc opens up to other vaccinated…

I am desperate for the end of lockdown – but I won’t return to my old life

Before the pandemic, I crammed my schedule to the point of exhaustion.…

How did Leeds United not realise what would happen when they targeted a woman?

By going after the pundit Karen Carney the club’s official Twitter account…

Rescuers search for light aircraft with two onboard missing in Channel

P-28 plane took off from airfield in Warwickshire and was bound for…