The Sweets of Sin

The Sweets of Sin
Also known as Ship of Fools
Origin Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Genres Crossover, pop, classical, jazz
Years active 1985 (1985)–1994 (1994), 2002 (2002)–present
Labels Jarra Hill, Larrikin, Kip
Associated acts Del Webb Explosion, Empty Vessels
Website www.the-sweets-of-sin.com
Members Frank Mankyboddle
Engel Musehold
Andreas Peters
Past members Steve Z
Daniel O'Shea Clements
Dirk Lang
Helge Krause
Mirko Breder
Thomas Pertzel

The Sweets of Sin are an Australian experimental crossover pop band with strong modern classical, jazz and performance influences. The group formed in Adelaide in 1985 by Frank Mankyboddle (aka Frank Möller) on vocals, guitar and percussion; and Steve Z (Stephen Lock) on soprano and tenor saxophones, French horn, flute, clarinet, keyboards, vocals and keyboard programming. The band's name was from Ulysses by James Joyce on the instigation of Steve Z. They relocated to Sydney in 1986 and issued a self-titled debut album in 1987 on Jarra Hill Records. The group moved to Berlin in 1989 and disbanded there in 1994. Mankyboddle reformed the group in 2002 and they issued Me-ism in 2004.

History

Adelaide: 1985–86

In 1985 The Sweets of Sin were formed in Adelaide by Frank Mankyboddle (vocals, percussion, guitar, songwriting)[1] who had been the lead-singer of an 8-piece new soul band, Del Webb Explosion (1980–83), and Steve Z (French horn, saxophones, keyboard, composition)[1] previously playing with Empty Vessels.

In 1984 Mankyboddle, known as Frank Möller, had formed Ship of Fools immediately after leaving Del Web Explosion.[2] He was joined by Z (aka Stephen Lock) who provided the band's name, The Sweets of Sin, from the novel, Ulysses, by James Joyce. Both Mankyboddle and Z wanted to change their musical styles, they were influenced by modern classical (but also baroque) composers: Stravinsky, Ravel, Messiaen, Debussy, Reich, Arvo Pärt and Cage; to pop artists: Japan, Talking Heads, Kate Bush, Laurie Anderson, Dead Can Dance, Hector Zazou and King Crimson. Their sound formed around modal harmonies and intensive rhythmic patterns. They started performing as a two-piece with theatrical antics, at concert nights sometimes wedged between punk rockers, The Celibate Rifles, and power pop group, The Mad Turks from Istanbul, irritating conservative reviewers. By 1986 the duo realised that Adelaide did not support their style and moved to Sydney adding Daniel O'Shea Clements – previously the trumpeter in Del Webb Explosion – on drums, percussion and vocals.[1]

Sydney: 1986–89

The Sweets of Sin's move to Sydney resulted in their being seen by Larrikin Records' Bill O'Toole at a Balmain world music venue. Their debut self-titled album was issued in 1989 by Jarra Hill Records under the Larrikin Records label. Australian Rolling Stone's Mark Demetrious found The Sweets of Sin "boast a rich potpourri of instruments and influences, the latter including Middle Eastern, Chinese, cabaret and German electronic. But where the likes of Kraftwerk and Can were often sterile and mechanistic, this album is bursting with life and is as beautifully evocative as it is musically literate".[3] Even though uneasy with the "world music" description, they were open to its influences, which are seen in "Can Hatice" (their rendition of a Kurdish song performed by Ibrahim Tatlises)[3] and "The Gang of Four on Holiday in Sudan". They issued "Experiment with Me" as the debut single in 1987, it had been written by Stephen Lock.[4][5] Critics praised the band, however this did not translate into making a living. Their residency at the Sandringham Hotel (which they held, irregularly, for a couple of years) did not develop their artistic ambitions so they decided they would interest a larger and more experimental-minded European audience.

Berlin: 1989–94

The Sweets of Sin relocated to Berlin after living in the West German countryside for six months in early 1990. Their early time in Europe were characterised by a sharing attitude, with members varying in their joy at having communal access to money, cigarettes and living space for three was on the bedroom floor of a family's flat in the industrial, provincial Ruhr region.

The Sweets of Sin developed musically by venturing into jazz, playing standards and some originals by Steve Z, under the name Kool Skool. They added a fourth member – Dirk Lang on bass guitar – and then lived in the inner eastern Berlin suburb of Prenzlauer Berg, just as The Berlin Wall came down. There were concerts at Volksbühne, the Franz Club, and at Objekt 5 in Halle; tours to Poland, Prague, the Metz Festival in France and through Belgium; with positive reviews in Tagesspiegel and Tip.[6][7] However, personal differences led to the group's break up in 1994.

2002–present

In 2002, Mankyboddle reformed The Sweets of Sin with Lang, now on guitar. Initially they played acoustically with a new acoustic bass player, Helge Krause. In 2004 their second album, Me-ism, was released on KIP-records, which had re-released their first album as a CD in Europe. After the departure of Krause in 2004 and Lang in 2006, Mankyboddle restructured the band with Thomas Pertzel and Andreas Peters, playing electronics, drums and wind instruments.

Members

Current

Former

Discography

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Sweets of Sin [sound recording] / Sweets of Sin". Trove. National Library of Australia. Retrieved 27 October 2012. Credits: Written by Z and/or Mankyboddle, 'Can Hatice' arrangement by Z, Mankyboddle and O'Shea Clements ; produced and engineered by the Sweets of Sin, Richard Newell, Frank Kerestedshjian, Kim Webster and Thomas Tallis. Performer: Frank Mankyboddle, vocals, guitar, percussion ; Steve Z, soprano and tenor saxophones, French horn, flute, clarinet, keyboards, vocals, keyboard programming ; Daniel O'Shea Clements, drums, percussion, vocals ; with Susan Currie .... [et al.].
  2. "'Gardening as a Finer Art'". SA Memory. State Library of South Australia. Retrieved 27 October 2012. 'The Finer Art of Gardening' b/w 'Too Late the Hero' which came out on GPR in May 1983. Soon afterwards Del Webb totally fell apart with band members going their separate ways with Frank Moller going on to create the band Ship of Fools in 1984 which later became Sweets of Sin.
  3. 1 2 Demetrious, Mark. "The Sweets of Sin – The Sweets of Sin". Rolling Stone (Bauer Media Group, Frank Mankyboddle). Retrieved 29 October 2012.
  4. "'Experiment with Me' at APRA search engine". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  5. "'Experiment with Me' / Steve Lock; [performed by] The Sweets of Sin. 'The Ghosts of the Battle Cry' / Steve Lock; [performed by] The Sweets of Sin. [sound recording]". Trove. National Library of Australia. Retrieved 28 October 2012..
  6. Metzner, Jochen. "Trio der Tonmeister". Tagesspiegel (in German) (Frank Mankyboddle). Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  7. Krause, Anna-Bianca. "The Sweets of Sin: Sündhaftes Spiel Ohne Grenzen". Tip (in German) (Frank Mankyboddle). Retrieved 28 October 2012.

External links

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