Artist Name
The Birthday Party

heart icon off (0 users)

artist logo
Artist Image
artist thumb

Functions

transparent
Data Complete
percent bar 50%

Members
members icon 4 Male

Origin
flag Melbourne, Victoria, AU

Genre
genre icon Post-Punk

Style
---

Mood
---

Born

born icon 1976

Active
calendar icon 1980 to dead icon 1983

Cutout
transparent

Alternate Name
Boys Next Door

heart icon Most Loved Tracks
4 users heart off The Birthday Party - Release the Bats
4 users heart off The Birthday Party - Release the Bats
4 users heart off The Birthday Party - Release the Bats
4 users heart off The Birthday Party - Nick the Stripper
4 users heart off The Birthday Party - Nick the Stripper


youtube icon Music Video Links
No Music Videos Found...



Artist Biography
Available in: gb icon
The Birthday Party were one of the darkest and most challenging post-punk groups to emerge in the early '80s, creating bleak and noisy soundscapes that provided the perfect setting for vocalist Nick Cave's difficult, disturbing stories of religion, violence, and perversity. Under the direction of Cave and guitarist Rowland S. Howard, the band tore through reams of blues and rockabilly licks, spitting out hellacious feedback and noise at an unrelenting pace. As The Birthday Party's career progressed, Cave's vision got darker and the band's songs alternated between dirges to blistering sonic assaults.

Originally, the Australian band was called the Boys Next Door, comprising Cave, Howard, Mick Harvey (guitar, drums, organ, piano), bassist Tracy Pew, and drummer Phill Calvert. After the Door Door album and Hee Haw EP under that name, the band moved to London and switched its name to the deceptively benign Birthday Party. Once they arrived in Britain, their demented, knotty post-punk began to gel. They released their first international album, Prayers on Fire, in 1981, earning critical praise in the U.K. and U.S. While the band was preparing to record the follow-up, Pew was jailed for drunk driving; former Magazine member Barry Adamson, Harry Howard, and Chris Walsh filled in for the absent Pew on 1982's Junkyard.

After the release of Junkyard, The Birthday Party fired Calvert and moved to Germany, where they began collaborating with such experimental post-punk acts like Lydia Lunch and Einstürzende Neubauten. Harvey left in the summer of 1983. The group briefly continued with drummer Des Heffner, but it soon disbanded after a final concert in Melbourne, Australia. Cave had the most successful solo career, recording a series of albums in the '80s and '90s that maintained his status as a popular cult figure; Harvey joined Cave's backing band, the Bad Seeds. Howard joined Crime & the City Solution, which also featured his brother Harry and Harvey.
wiki icon

Wide Thumb
transparent

Clearart
transparent

Fanart

transparent icon

Banner
transparent icon

User Comments

transparent iconNo comments yet..


Status
unlocked icon Unlocked
Last Edit by laurent94jbl1
30th Sep 2021

Socials


Streaming


External Links
fanart.tv icon musicbrainz icon last.fm icon website icon website icon amazon icon