* En anglais uniquement
Following the breakup of the seminal British post-punk outfit
Swell Maps, frontman
Nikki Sudden embarked on a solo career, then concurrently formed a new band called
the Jacobites. Far more classicist than
Swell Maps had been,
the Jacobites gave
Sudden a chance to exercise his penchant for straightforward, elegantly wasted rock & roll, drawing chiefly from
the Stones and
the Faces while adding elements of singer/songwriter rock (
Neil Young,
Bob Dylan) and crunchy British glam (
T. Rex,
Mott the Hoople,
David Bowie). Having issued his solo debut in 1982,
Sudden formed
the Jacobites in 1984 with his brother, ex-
Swell Maps drummer
Epic Soundtracks, and guitarist
Dave Kusworth. Bassist Mark Lemon rounded out the charter lineup, and the group made their LP debut with a self-titled effort on the indie label Glass in 1984; they also released an EP, Shame for the Angels, that year. A second album,
Robespierre's Velvet Basement, appeared in 1985 and was something of a critical and underground success. Originally slated to be a double LP, it spawned another album's worth of outtakes from the sessions, which were released on a German label as Lost in a Sea of Scarves.
Soundtracks left later in 1985 to join
Crime & the City Solution, an offshoot of
the Birthday Party. Two more
Jacobites EPs -- Pin Your Heart to Me and When the Rain Comes -- appeared before guitarist
Kusworth left the group in early 1986 to pursue a solo career. Although
Sudden kept the
Jacobites name for his shifting backing group for several years afterward, for all intents and purposes they were no longer
the Jacobites in spirit. Nonetheless, the 1986 compilation The Ragged School introduced their music to American audiences when it was released on Twin/Tone at the urging of
Paul Westerberg, and another compilation, 1988's Fortune of Fame, further enhanced their reputation.
In 1993, with plenty more solo releases under his belt,
Nikki Sudden reunited with
Dave Kusworth in a new version of
the Jacobites proper, which also included guitarist Glenn Tranter, bassist Carl Eugene Picôt, and drummer Mark Williams. A flurry of releases on small labels followed -- 1994's Howling Good Times, 1995's Old Scarlett and Heart of Hearts, 1996's Kiss of Life -- which were scarcely available in the U.S. and more popular with mainland Europe than the band's native U.K. The garage rock label Bomp issued the reunited
Jacobites' fifth album, God Save Us Poor Sinners, in the U.S. in 1998, and in 2002, the Secretly Canadian indie label began to reissue
the Jacobites' early output as well. ~ Steve Huey