Gene Loves Jezebel Explained

Gene Loves Jezebel
Background:group_or_band
Origin:London, England
Years Active:1980 - present
Label:Blessmomma Records/Track. Plastichead/Westworld Recordings
Associated Acts:All About Eve
Current Members:Jay Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel
Jay Aston
James Stevenson
Peter Rizzo
Robert Adam
Chris Bell
Michael Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel
Michael Aston
Michael Ciravolo
Pando
Switch
Chad MacDonald
Stephen Jude Mills
Nick Rozz
Troy Patrick Farrell
Past Members:James Chater
Steve Radmall
Richard Hawkins
John Murphy
Joel Patterson
Francois Perez
Ian Hudson
Julianne Regan
Albi DeLuca
Jean-Marc Lederman
Stephen Marshall
Marcus Gilvear

Gene Loves Jezebel are a British rock band formed in the early 1980s by twin brothers Michael Aston and Jay Aston. Initially associated with gothic rock and post-punk, their 1983 debut album Promise reached no.8 on the UK Indie Chart. The band's popularity peaked a few years later with their 1986 album Discover reaching the top 40 on the UK Albums Chart and five singles entering the UK Singles Chart in 1986-1987, including "Heartache", "Desire (Come and Get It)" and "The Motion of Love", and also gaining success in the US. The Aston brothers later parted ways and formed two different band versions of Gene Loves Jezebel.

Early years: 1980–1989

Originally named Slavaryan by Michael, Gene Loves Jezebel was formed in 1980 with the Aston brothers, guitarist Ian Hudson, bassist Stephen Davis, and drummer Steve Snowy Evans. Essentially, Gene (Michael Aston) and Jezebel (Jay Aston) were a duo with a never-ending revolving door of back up players. The Astons grew up in Cornelly, and Michael later in Porthcawl, in Wales, and moved to London in 1981. With a new home, and shortly afterwards, the new name, the trio with bassist Julianne Regan and drummer James Chater (later replaced by John Murphy (the Associates) and then Richard Hawkins) played several live shows and were signed by Situation Two. Gene Loves Jezebel underwent numerous lineup changes between 1981 and 1985. In May 1982, Situation Two released Gene Loves Jezebel's demo and single, "Shaving My Neck". Regan exited within a year to form All About Eve. This left Ian Hudson briefly playing bass and Albie DeLuca as the guitar player until Stephen Marshall joined. "Desire", was the bands most successful single, with Michael producing and writing the crucial chorus and come and get it refrains. (Goldmine)

In 1983, Albi Deluca moved to guitar and Ian Hudson to bass, the band released two more singles, "Screaming (For Emmalene)" and "Bruises", and then their first album, Promise, which peaked at number 8 in the UK Indie Chart.[1] In 1984, the group recorded a John Peel radio session for the BBC and toured the UK with fellow Welsh artist John Cale. and recorded in New York with Cale. The second Album, Stephen Marshall was hired as bass guitar and John Murphy played drums with Richard Hawkins appearing on a few tunes too.

The band's second album, Immigrant, was released in mid-1985. However, at the start of a long American tour for Immigrant, founding member Ian Hudson had a nervous breakdown and was replaced by former Chelsea and Generation X guitarist James Stevenson (who later also played rhythm guitar on tour with the Cult).[2]

During 1986, the group moved to Situation Two's parent company, Beggar's Banquet Records, and distribution rights in the U.S. were given to Geffen Records. The subsequent promotion increased pop-chart success for the group. The single "Sweetest Thing" briefly hit the top 75 in the U.K., and the album Discover reached number 32 in the UK Albums Chart. At this time, the group also found heavy rotation on college and counterculture radio stations across America. The band had slowly turned their attention to dance music. The singles "Desire" and "Heartache" reached #6 and #72, respectively, on Los Angeles' new wave station, KROQ-FM. Later that year, former Spear of Destiny and Thompson Twins member Chris Bell became the band's fifth drummer.

Gene Loves Jezebel's fourth album, The House of Dolls, was released in 1987 and yielded the singles "20 Killer Hurts" and "The Motion of Love". "The Motion of Love", marked the band's first appearance on the US Billboard Hot 100.

Split and brief reunion: 1990–1997

While Michael Aston went solo, the rest of the band continued as Gene Loves Jezebel[3] and recorded two albums, Kiss of Life (1990) and Heavenly Bodies (1992). The band's label Savage Records went bust shortly after the release of Heavenly Bodies while the band were on tour in the USA forcing the band to briefly split. In 1993, the brothers reformed the band with a new lineup; Francois Perez replaced James Stevenson and drummer Robert Adam was retained. James Stevenson was asked to join The Cult on their world tour as rhythm guitarist.

While Jay Aston performed occasional acoustic shows under his own name, Michael Aston formed a new band called the Immigrants (renamed Edith Grove) and later released a primarily acoustic solo album, Why Me, Why This, Why Now.[4] The brothers began working together again that same year and recorded two songs with Stevenson, Bell, and Rizzo for a compilation album, The Best Of, released in September 1995. Jay Aston also recorded a solo album, Unpopular Songs, produced by Stevenson.

The brothers reconciled in the mid-1990s, wrote some new songs together, and shared a house in Los Angeles. They initially used Michael Aston's band from the Why Me album era. In 1997, the band embarked on the Pre-Raphaelite Brothers tour, in which Gene Loves Jezebel material and songs from the brothers' solo careers would be performed.

Two Genes Loving Jezebel: 1997–present

After the Pre-Raphaelite Brothers tour, Jay Aston refused to work with his brother unless Stevenson and Rizzo were brought back. Michael Aston agreed, and the album VII was recorded in England. A reunion tour was undertaken in the U.S. during which a rift developed between the brothers. Michael Aston, who missed the final dates of the tour, launched his own band, also called Gene Loves Jezebel, with musicians from the Pre-Raphaelite tour. His vocals were removed from the VII album, which was released without any contribution from him. Later, the full album with Michael's vocals included was released as The Doghouse Sessions. In October 1997, Jay Aston, Rizzo, and Stevenson sued Michael Aston over rights to the name Gene Loves Jezebel and, after a protracted court battle, eventually dropped the lawsuit.

Michael Aston leads the US version of the band and has toured both the US and the UK, supporting releases such as Love Lies Bleeding (1999), Giving Up the Ghost (2001) and Exploding Girls (2003).[5] Jay Aston leads the UK version of the band, also featuring James Stevenson and Pete Rizzo, and has toured both the US and the UK extensively as well to support releases such as Accept No Substitute (2002), The Thornfield Sessions (2003), The Anthology, Vols. 1-2 (2006) and Dance Underwater (2017) and Love Death Sorrow (2023)

On 15 February 2008, a lawsuit was filed by Michael Aston in California's Central District Court, against "Chris Bell, James Stevenson, Jay Aston, John Aston, Libertalia Entertainment and others" for trademark infringement.[6] In a posting on their Myspace page on 25 September 2009, Jay Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel announced that an agreement had been reached with Michael Aston regarding the use of the name Gene Loves Jezebel: Jay Aston's band is now known as "Gene Loves Jezebel" in the UK and "Jay Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel" within the US; Michael Aston's band is now known as "Gene Loves Jezebel" in the US and "Michael Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel" in the UK. The settlement agreement was posted on Michael Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel website.[7]

Jay Aston, along with Julianne Regan, contributed vocals on a cover of the Rolling Stones' "Moonlight Mile" that appeared on the 2010 album Small Distortions by the Belgian music project La Femme Verte (assembled by ex-Kid Montana member Jean-Marc Lederman).

In 2011, Michael Aston contributed vocals to a new version of "Desire", titled "Desire (Come and Get It)", by guitarist and producer Gabe Treiyer's electronic music project Electronic Fair,[8] which became number one on the Electronic Dance Music (EDM) Chart in Argentina.

On 16 November 2011, Jay Aston and James Stevenson appeared on stage at the Brixton Academy in London with the Smashing Pumpkins to perform the song "Stephen" from the Immigrant album.

In December 2016, Jay Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel announced that they were recording a new album via a Pledge Music campaign. The album, entitled Dance Underwater, was completed in April 2017 and was released on 30 June 2017[9] via Westworld Recordings/Plastichead.

On December 1, 2023, Jay Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel released their tenth studio album, Love Death Sorrow, on Cleopatra Records

In popular culture

The 2017 album Goths by The Mountain Goats contains the song "Abandoned Flesh," which chronicles the history of Gene Loves Jezebel, including a reference to this Wikipedia page.

Discography

Albums

YearTitleUK[10] UKI[11] US[12]
1983Promisestyle="text-align:center;" -8-
1985Immigrant-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1986Discover32style="text-align:center;" -155
1987The House of Dolls81style="text-align:center;" -108
1990Kiss of Life²-style="text-align:center;" -123
1993Heavenly Bodies²-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1995In the Afterglow (live)-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1999VII²-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1999Love Lies Bleeding¹-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2001Giving Up the Ghost¹-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2002Accept No Substitute (Greatest Hits Live)²-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2003Exploding Girls¹-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2003The Thornfield Sessions²-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2004The Dog House Sessions-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2006Anthology, Vols. 1-2²-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2009Dead Sexy¹-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2017Dance Underwater²-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2023Love Death Sorrow²-style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -

Singles

YearTitleUKUKIUS[13] Alt
1982"Shaving My Neck"style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1983"Screaming / So Young"style="text-align:center;" -18style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1983"Bruises"style="text-align:center;" -7style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1984"Influenza (relapse)"style="text-align:center;" -11style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1984"Shame (Whole Heart Howl)"style="text-align:center;" -14style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1985"The Cow"style="text-align:center;" -9style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1985"Desire"style="text-align:center;" -4style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1986"Sweetest Thing"75style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1986"Heartache"71style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1986"Desire (Come and Get It)"95style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1987"The Motion of Love"56style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1987"Gorgeous"68style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1988"Every Door" (withdrawn)style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1988"The Motion of Love"style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -87style="text-align:center;" -
1990"Jealous"²style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -681
1990"Tangled Up in You"²style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
1993"Josephina"²style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -18
1999Survive This EP (promo only)¹style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -
2017"Summertime"²style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -style="text-align:center;" -

¹ Michael Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel

² Jay Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gene Loves Jezebel. Discogs. en. 2019-11-27.
  2. Book: Strong, Martin C. . The Great Alternative & Indie Discography . registration . 1999 . Canongate . 0-86241-913-1 .
  3. Web site: Gene Loves Jezebel: From Celtic hums and Gothic drones to sibling rivalry, it's a twin thing... . 9 April 2008 . Jo-Ann Greene . January 1999 . Goldmine . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080517194524/http://www.gljonline.com/yesterday/words/articles/goldmine010199.html . 17 May 2008 . dmy .
  4. Owen, Daniel (2005) "Over The Rooftops", Zero Magazine, November 2005.
  5. Web site: Jay Aston biography . 9 April 2008 . BBC Wales . BBC . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081003131524/http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/music/sites/jay_aston/pages/biography.shtml . 3 October 2008 .
  6. Web site: Michael Aston V Jay Aston et al.. 3 July 2010.
  7. Web site: Settlement Agreement and Mutual Release . Michael Aston's Gene Loves Jezebel website . 3 July 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120305115254/http://genelovesjezebel.com/settlement.html . 5 March 2012 . dead .
  8. Web site: Electronic Fair + Gene Loves Jezebel - "Desire (Come & Get it) 2011". https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/fn-bJF0oQA0 . 2021-12-21 . live. YouTube. 12 September 2011. 5 February 2018.
  9. Web site: Dance Underwater is Out Now! . Gene Loves Jezebel . 14 April 2019 . 30 June 2017.
  10. Book: Roberts , David . 2006. British Hit Singles & Albums. 19th. Guinness World Records Limited. London. 1-904994-10-5. 224.
  11. Book: Lazell, Barry. Indie Hits 1980-1999. Cherry Red Books. 1997. 0-9517206-9-4.
  12. Gene Loves Jezebel. 2020-06-27. Billboard.
  13. Web site: Gene Loves Jezebel . Gene Loves Jezebel - Awards . AllMusic . 2012-12-27.