ALIEN SEX FIEND
A
product of Britain's early-1980s Batcave gothic punk movement,
the North London-based Alien Sex Fiend was led by the eccentric
Nick Wade, better known as the macabre Nik Fiend.
A staple of the London scene as a member of such relatively obscure
groups as the Earwigs
and Mr. and Mrs. Demeanour, he made his recording
debut under the name Demon Preacher; several other short-lived projects
followed before he formed Alien Sex Fiend in 1982 with wife and
synth player Christine
(a.k.a. Mrs.
Fiend), guitarist Yaxi Highrizer (born David James),
and drummer Johnny
"Ha Ha" Freshwater.
Mixing the theatrical horror-movie antics of
Alice
Cooper with the menacing synthesizer pulse of Suicide,
Alien Sex Fiend debuted with the single "Ignore the Machine,"
a favorite among Goth club denizens; the full-length Who's Been
Sleeping in My Brain? appeared in 1983. A series
of indie-chart hits followed in 1984, including "R.I.P.",
"Dead and Buried" and "E.S.T. (Trip to the Moon);
" the success of the album Acid
Bath further increased the group's visibility,
and in Japan, Alien Sex Fiend became major stars, resulting in
the 1985 live release Liquid Head
in Tokyo.
Following the departure of Johnny Ha-Ha,
the group continued as a trio to record 1985's bleak Maximum Security.
After the following year's "It"
the Album, released to coincide with Alien Sex
Fiend's opening slot on Alice
Cooper's "Nightmare Returns" tour, they recorded
1987's Here Cum Germs,
the final offer to feature Yaxi Highrazer;
now essentially a duo, the Fiends explored more synth- and sample-oriented
territory on 1988's Another Planet, a trend continued on 1990's
Curse,
which featured the minor hit "Now I'm Feeling Zombified."
With a revitalized line-up including new guitarist
Rat
Fink Jr. and keyboardist Doc Milton, Alien Sex Fiend resurfaced in 1992
with Open
Head Surgery. After a 1993 live album, Altered States
of America, they composed the music for the CD-ROM
game Inferno;
with the release of the compilation The Singles 1983-1995, the band's affiliation
with longtime label Anagram ended, and the Fiends
soon established their own 13th Moon Records imprint. With the
release of the trance-influenced 1996 EP Evolution, Alien Sex Fiend traveled even
further away from their Goth beginnings into the realm of electronica,
a move continued on 1997's Nocturnal Emissions.
.