The coolest sensation to come from an Australian pub since Foster's Lager, the guitar-driven popsters in INXS flexed their Dundee power in 1987 with Kick, the multi-million selling album that put the band on par with such giants as U2 and R.E.M. Lead singer and strutter extraordinaire Michael Hutchence was dubbed the Mick Jagger and Jim Morrison of the late '80s when his pout and growl brought the band's sleek, stylish, danceable rock to the fore with songs like "New Sensation" and "Need You Tonight." INXS achieved overwhelming success with Kick.
Drummer Jon Farriss was a high school junior when his brothers Andrew and Tim (formerly a Christian youth group leader) dreamed up the Farriss Brothers band and invited him and his pig skins to join. The band -- including Hutchence, bassist Garry Gary Beers and saxophonist Kirk Pengilly -- then sat on its hands for two years waiting for Jon to grab his diploma and run. In 1979 the newly named INXS left Perth for Sydney and began dodging beer bottles in the capital's pubs. The reward for appeasing drunk Australians came in the form of a record contract and a self-titled album in 1980.
INXS and its successor, Underneath the Colours, struck a chord with audiences at home and landed the band an American contract with Atco Records, which released the band's 1983 effort, Shabooh Shoobah. The hit single "Don't Change" spurred the band to tour and record The Swing with producer Nile Rodgers. The marriage of minds gave birth to a more Rolling Stones-esque and danceable INXS -- the proof of this fusion bore out on the hit single "Original Sin," a song about interracial love that was banned by many radio stations.
By 1985 INXS had found its niche with crisp, lively guitar work, funky saxophone accompaniment, lush rhythms and seductive vocals. Listen Like Thieves was the album to prove the band's growth and promise. The single "What You Need," with its catchy chorus and hard-edged guitar posturing, brought MTV viewers to their knees and paved the way for the band's biggest triumph yet.
Kick was, by all standards, the definition of an all-time album. The mildly political and wildly hip record went multi-platinum in 1988 and Hutchence went rock-star huge. The videos for the No. 1 single "Need YouTonight," as well as "Devil Inside," No. 3 "New Sensation" and No. 7 "Never Tear Us Apart," showed that an Australian in leather pants could rule the world.The enticing rhythms and throaty growls of INXS soon infiltrated dance floors from coast to coast and made Kick a legend in its own time.
In 1990 Hutchence found time outside his relationship with pop singer Kylie Minogue to release a little experiment called Max Q and begin his acting career in films like Dogs in Space, in which he plays a half-naked junkie crawling around a foul commune. In 1991 INXS packed Wembley Stadium and recorded the album Live Baby Live.
Hutchence continued to date supermodels, but the rest of the band's luck did not improve. The 1992 release Welcome to Wherever You Are was dubbed by critics as the most adventurous INXS venture yet with its samples, world music accents and conceptual ingenuity. The single "Beautiful Girl" became an alternative radio hit. The band's 10th album, Full Moon, Dirty Hearts, featured duets with Ray Charles and Chrissie Hynde,as well as a healthy dose of Stonesy guitar distortion, punk rock bass and U2-heavy rhythms.
In 1994 INXS switched from Atlantic to Polygram, and Hutchence started dating British TV personality Paula Yates, with whom he had a daughter, Heavenly Hiraani Tiger Lily. While Yates was divorcing her husband, Bob Geldof, Hutchence was working on a solo project that never materialized. In the spring of 1997 INXS released Elegantly Wasted and enjoyed immediate success with the single of the same name.
Tragically, in November 1997, on the eve of the band's 20th anniversary tour, Hutchence was found dead of an apparent suicide in a Sydney hotel room.
Tuesday, May 26, at The LoftDallas Observer, TXAs for the songs, Spin says they reflect "the mirror-ball gleam of primo INXS and Emotional Rescue-era Rolling Stones," which is just about right. (Too bad Emotional Rescue was one of the Stones' lamest platters, and a couple tracks of primo INXS is
INXS tribute bandWhere I Live - News Community Media, AustraliaBringing to life the sounds of this legendary Australian band is Inexcess, Queensland's dynamic INXS tribute band. The six-piece band will rock Caboolture Sports Club this Saturday with a free show at 8pm. More than 30 of INXS's biggest hits will be
Today in HistoryInternational Herald Tribune, FranceRock musician Andrew Farriss (INXS) is 50. Jazz musician Dave Koz is 46. Movie director Quentin Tarantino is 46. Rock musician Derrick McKenzie (Jamiroquai) is 45. Rock musician Johnny April (Staind) is 44. Actress Talisa Soto is 42.
Former INXS Singer Changes His Tune About FiringantiMUSIC.com, CAFormer INXS Singer Changes His Tune About Firing was a top story for this week. Here it is again: (MusicRadar) All right, let's see if we can get this straight: A couple of weeks ago, INXS vocalist JD Fortune said he was kicked to the curb by the band
INXS Responds To 'Bizarre' Fortune CommentsBillboard, NYINXS songwriter, guitarist and keyboard player Andrew Farriss and creative director/global business strategist Chris Murphy have spoken exclusively to Billboard about the apparent departure of lead singer JD Fortune. The frontman sang lead vocals with