STORMCLOUDS BIOGRAPHY

Something In The Air

The mid 80's saw a renaissance of guitar music, which echoed throughout the world. Bands such as Rain Parade, Green On Red and The Dream Syndicate in the U.S.A. to The Hoodoo Gurus, Lime Spiders and Scientist in Australia plus many more from all points in between. But the new energy wasn't limited to the well known examples by any means. There was a whole resurgence in towns and cities all over the globe. In Calne, for instance, '85 was the most productive year for music in over a decade. Steve Lines was the creative force behind much of what happened in Calne through '85 and '86. He gave the local music scene a focal point and a sense of identity when he began publishing The Mardenbeat, a local music magazine (along with Paul Ricketts and Rod Goodway) and through the magazine he also gave bands a chance to play live when he organised a series of parties and events (which sometimes included up to eight local acts on the bill). He was in several bands himself, including THE TRYP (a recording project only) THE DOCTOR'S POND (a psychedelic 'swamp rock' band who went through several line-up changes) and THE CHAOS BROTHERS (a 70's inspired punk band playing mostly cover versions). All through '85 and into '86 the sleepy country town of Calne buzzed with, as Thunderclap Newman once put it, "Something In The Air". Calne had a thriving music scene with bands playing somewhere in town every weekend. Calne, of course, soon went back to sleep again but not without leaving pockets of "Something in the Air" such as STORMCLOUDS.

Stormclouds on the horizon

STORMCLOUDS were formed in March '86 from the ashes of THE NEW MEXICANS, a band put together by Steve Lines and Mark Angell just to entice two nubile backing singers (Louise Allen and Diane Doddington) away from another local band. Steve: We decided to form a band called THE NEW MEXICANS as a cover up just so we could get near these two backing singers that we lusted after. We told them that if they joined our band they could sing lead vocals and would have creative input, blah blah blah - we just wanted to get inside their pants. It worked but THE NEW MEXICANS didn't last long as Mark and Diane soon lost interest in anything musical (being much more concerned in things physical). We did record a few demos, but I managed to erase them by accident and no recordings remain of this short-lived (sex-crazed) project. I liked the idea of putting a band together with a female vocalist though, so Louise and I decided to continue as a duo. I had two or three songs which I had written in an earlier band, including "It's Raining Still" and "When The Dream Fades" which we decided to keep and STORMCLOUDS was born. This was March '86." Steve began writing songs right away, having at last found a band which suited his material and by the time the Calne Music and Arts Festival came around in June they were ready for their first gig, which was at The King George pub, Calne on 9th June. Steve: "Basically it was up to STORMCLOUDS and PAUL RICKETTS to keep the evening going, we took it in turns to play three songs each until somebody else felt like playing. A couple of members of a local band called 8 MILE HIKE did a few songs and I did some DOCTOR'S POND stuff with Dave Seal and Mike Humphries and also a few CHAOS BROTHERS songs, also with Mike, under the name THE CHAOS TWINS. Lou did a version of The Bangles "Manic Monday" with Diane Doddington on guitar and vocals. A few days later on the 13th we were all playing again at Priestly School, where Rod Goodway's new band JELLYMONSTERS, was also on the bill."

It's Raining Still

In September '86 STORMCLOUDS began recording sessions for what would become their first cassette album "It's Raining Still". Steve: "Rod was planning to record an album's worth of JELLYMONSTERS songs and he asked Lou and I if we'd help him out and at the same time we could lay down songs for our own tape. So this is what happened, we'd meet at my place every Sunday afternoon and write and record. I'd put bass on one of Rod's songs, then he'd put some lead guitar on one of mine, and so things progressed. A lot of STORMCLOUDS songs were actually written as we went along. I didn't know if we'd ever get the chance to record again, so we tried a bit of everything from country & western through garage, folk, and psych, so the tape doesn't really hang together as an album." "It's Raining Still" by STORMCLOUDS and "Two True Believers" by THE JELLYMONSTERS were completed in February '87 and saw release a month later on Steve's 'Mardentapes' label.

Try Acid!

Steve: "I sent the JELLYMONSTERS and STORMCLOUDS tapes to Alan Duffy thinking that maybe he'd be interested in putting them out on ACID TAPES, even though word was filtering down to Calne that he was thinking of folding the label to concentrate on putting out vinyl. About a week later I received a letter saying "Thanks for the tapes, I haven't played them yet but the covers are great, would you like to take over ACID TAPES?" Of course I wrote back and said yes! Soon after I received two parcels stacked with master tapes, labels and cassette covers. It was a complete mess. It took me a couple of months to sort everything out and I finally put out my first releases in August '87. Strangely enough the last tape that Alan Duffy put out was our album by THE TRYP ...." Amongst Steve's first releases on ACID TAPES were THE JELLYMONSTERS and STORMCLOUDS tapes. "It's Raining Still" was reviewed in Mardenbeat by Paul Ricketts: "On this release STORMCLOUDS were accompanied by Rod Goodway and Christine Cotter from THE JELLYMONSTERS. The tape is a bag of different styles as if they were casting about to find what they could do. From the garage anger of 'Don't Push Me Around' to the folksy fluff brought on by a borrowed banjo which was, thankfully, repossessed after 'Preacher Man' and 'Rubbernecked Chicken' were recorded. More promising were the psyc tracks such as 'Darkness Weaves' and 'When The Dream Fades' and the lonesome eerie acoustic songs such as 'The Darkest Hour' and 'Turn Away'. In the end it was a collection of songs that didn't hang together with the character of an album." During this time Steve had also been playing several out of town gigs with THE CHAOS BROTHERS risking life and limb in the glue encrusted, amphetamine ridden flea pits of Wiltshire. At one gig he was thrown to the floor by over enthusiastic fans and at another had his body covered in cryptic messages by fawning, nubile punkettes! Steve saw 1986 out with a Christmas gig by THE CHAOS BROTHERS which remains one of their best gigs to date!

Lost in the Jellyclouds

Having recorded a tape each STORMCLOUDS and THE JELLYMONSTERS decided to join together and play some live gigs. Simon Bewlay (from THE DOCTOR'S POND and THE CHAOS BROTHERS) was drafted in on drums and a friend of Lou's, Vikki Sinclair, came in on backing vocals. They chose the name JELLYCLOUDS, for obvious reasons, and their first gig was at Compton Bassett, on 2nd May 1987. Steve: "After this gig we were asked by a local band if we'd like to support them on their gigs and soon we were gigging all around the area on a regular basis. I didn't much like the band we were supporting and they didn't much like me either. We went down better than they did at gigs and despite the fact that they thought they were some kind of folk/punk anarchists (they weren't) they just didn't understand JELLYCLOUDS at all. We would materialise from dark dressing rooms in midnight black shades, psychedelic clothes and plastic beads; often end the gigs with instrument abuse and screaming feedback; and vanish into the night as soon as our set was over in the 'Jellymobile'. We played a lot of gigs with this band and as the months went on tensions grew. Mainly between me and their lead singer, the rest of the JELLYCLOUDS got on alright with them. The friction soon came to a head. At a gig in Calne Town Hall on November 6th after JELLYCLOUDS had finished their set (in a wall of feedback and one person actually throwing up at the front of the stage) the 'other' band (who had supported us this time), started an argument with me and all four of them (and their huge dog) confronted me in the car park and we hurled abuse at each other for a while, resulting in them going off to complain to Rod and to sack us as support band. This didn't break my heart, they were a bunch of jerks. Coincidentally STORMCLOUDS played a set at this gig (we hadn't done anything while JELLYCLOUDS were touring)." This wasn't quite the end of JELLYCLOUDS however - they continued to rehearse right up until the New Year, although half heartedly. Rod was beginning to see some interest in MAGIC MUSCLE and it looked like a vinyl release was in the offing. Fed up with the drum machine a couple of drummers were auditioned (with limited success) and new material was tried out. Steve: "This is when Rod and I began experimenting with an Eastern influence, a couple of his new songs at the time paved the way for what he would do later, with considerable success, in ETHEREAL COUNTERBALANCE. I was writing stuff like "Nightmares In The Sky" and "What Do They Say" and listening to a lot of David Roback and Rain Parade stuff - however, I was also listening to a lot of T.Rex and Jesus and Mary Chain and this is what would influence STORMCLOUDS' direction next".

French TV

Before STORMCLOUDS began work on their next tape they managed to get a gig working with a French TV crew who were making a documentary on 'ghost towns' of Europe They'd chosen Calne as a good example. After getting drunk with the director on an all night Vodka binge, Steve managed to persuade him that STORMCLOUDS should appear in the documentary playing a song he'd written about Calne. As it happened he hadn't written a song about Calne, but that didn't matter, that was a small problem. The next morning he turned up with a song he'd just written and filming began. The filming was done in the Lansdowne Strand Hotel, Calne (the same place where Julian Cope photographed the cover to his "20 Mothers" album - an album cover which Steve would have appeared on if he hadn't got bored and gone left the photo session early). The documentary eventually went out across Europe. Steve: "I've actually met somebody who has seen the documentary, so I know it was shown. There was a French au-pair living in Calne who got into STORMCLOUDS while she was here and when she went home she was stunned one night to see us appear, without warning, on her TV set!

"Raindrops keep falling..."

In January 1988 JELLYCLOUDS finally decided to call it a day. Steve: "MAGIC MUSCLE was beginning to happen for Rod and although he said that JELLYCLOUDS we're "on ice" we knew it was the and began gigging as STORMCLOUDS again." Rod went on to re-form MAGIC MUSCLE and Steve and Lou reverted back to STORMCLOUDS and immediately started studio work again. Steve: "I had access to a Tascam Porta Studio through Mark Angell. I borrowed it from him under the pretence that I would record some demos for him to put vocals onto, then we'd reform a new line-up of THE NEW MEXICANS. (As it turned out we did put down a couple of demos, using mutated STORMCLOUDS backing tracks but we couldn't find a drummer or guitarist to play live so we wrote a set of acoustic country and western songs inspired by our favourite movies and did a one off gig as a two-piece at Compton Bassett on 2nd September 1988. STORMCLOUDS also played)" So, in March '88 STORMCLOUDS began recording material for their second cassette album release. Steve: "It took us just four months to record our second tape, the songs were coming thick and fast. The first tape was a mixed bag of styles and we wanted this tape to sound like a coherent album. I'd heard stuff by The Primitives and other bands who were stealing from The Ramones and I thought I could do it better". 'Raindrops' was released on Acid Tapes in May 1988. This is what Paul Ricketts had to say about it in Unhinged magazine: "This is a million miles from the angst etc of all modern rock's singer songwriter types from James Taylor to Henry Rollins. The trick is that pop doesn't attempt to be meaningful, it aims to be important for three minutes. If STORMCLOUDS lack the Chinnichap sense of theatre, they have the humour and sense of fun (the droogish swaggering "The Ungrateful Dead" is funny) rather than the too conscious humour of "Rubberneck Chicken" on the first tape.) And long before such bands as the Pooh Sticks, STORMCLOUDS were inhabiting their songs like cartoon characters in a cartoon world - the B movie live thrust of "The Creature From Galaxy X", "He's Trash" and "The 2 Dimensional Man". At live gigs from around this time they usually looked like they'd stepped out of a TV show such as "Scooby Doo, Where Are You", though if Louise looked like one of the mini-skirted heroines, Steve's sardonic scowling, even if prompted by equipment malfunctions, made him out more like on of the villains of the show. The acoustic side is limited to "Look At Her Eyes", otherwise all the songs that would be folkier, such as "Down To The Sea", (which surfaced on a later compilation tape in an acoustic version), "To Tuesday" (a mind dislocated song from the first tape) and "Hideaway", (the closest Mary Chain cop) are all given the fuzzed-up treatment. Even the psyche song "It's Raining Still" gets the fuzz. For all the blackness of the cover, this album is just too sneering and feisty to be depressed and down." Following the release of "Raindrops" the band did quite a few gigs to promote it, playing as a duo with a backing tape of bass and drums.

"Flex that Magic Muscle"

Meanwhile Rod Goodway had been successful in re-forming MAGIC MUSCLE and they'd released an album of archive material titled "The Pipe, The Roar and the Grid" and decided to embark on a short tour to promote it. They asked STORMCLOUDS along as support. To coincide with this, (more chance than planning), Paul Ricketts had put out a STORMCLOUDS flexi with his "Unhinged" magazine: "The Creature From Galaxy X"/"He's Trash". Steve: "We went on tour with MAGIC MUSCLE and had a lot of fun, meeting lots of great people. I wasn't pleased with our gigs though, we had a lot of trouble with the backing tape. At the Birmingham gig we walked off stage because it was so bad.". This is what Clive Jones had to say on the Thekla gig in Unhinged: "First to take the stage on the night were STORMCLOUDS, celebrating the release of their great new tape "Raindrops". They're in their electric incarnation for this show, so we have Louise Allen on vocals and Steve Lines playing electric guitar over taped bass and drums. Problems with the monitors mean they can't deliver their best performance, much to the duo's disappointment. Instead of dwelling on what went wrong, I'd prefer to concentrate on what's right with these two, an irresistible combination of ace songs and stellar vocals must surely bring them to a wider audience soon."

Live at Clive's

Following the MAGIC MUSCLE tour STORMCLOUDS didn't play live much until they were invited by Clive Jones, (STORMCLOUDS' official archivist) to play a gig at his house. Their first gig there was on 3rd December '88 and for the next couple of years they would play occasional 'house gigs' along with special guests like Barbara Manning, Sonja Hunter, Scott Miller and Pat Thomas. Steve: The house gigs were great. You'd play to an audience of, at the most, twenty, but they'd all be listening, unlike pub gigs where you had to fight over the noise. It was good to play along side the likes of Barbara Manning and Sonja Hunter as well - Clive had quite a procession of 'names' play at his house! A lot of these gigs are on audiotape and videotape."

Christmas with the Stormclouds

Beginning with "Groovy Yule" in December '89 STORMCLOUDS began putting out a series of limited edition Christmas tapes for friends. Steve: The beginning of "Groovy Yule" was based on an old T.Rex Christmas Flexi I got when I was in the fan club. The Chipmunks Christmas album was a big influence too." Once again the band were reviewed in Unhinged: "It's a light as air, throwaway pop rush, sometimes quiet almost folky, but track by track getting more and more fuzz laden with interruptions of found sound from films to tie together the Christmasy theme. From the singalong "Groovy Yule" with its chittering leprechaun voices under it like the intrusion of the pagan ceremony that it really is. "It's Like Christmas" - "Every day's like Christmas when you're here." is the really syrupy love song. "Snowclouds" is a sleigh ride through the sky sound in the same way that "Roadrunner" is a driving song. "Christmas Kiss" is the Ramones brought to Christmas with echoes of Spector (these Christmas collections have a fine tradition there). Last track is "Santa Claws" where the usual themes of loss and heartbreak and death that haunt STORMCLOUDS songs comes out in a countryblue song. The second Christmas tape was released two years later and titled "Have A Cool Yule" followed by "Cosmic Christmas" in December '93. Steve: "Cosmic Christmas" was recorded solo by me just after Lou left the band. We'd put out a Christmas tape every two years and I wasn't going to stop now. This was a very limited run of about 5 or 6 copies (if you've heard me sing, you'll know why)" In December '95 'Music & Elsewhere' released a compilation of all these tapes, with a few extra tracks, titled "Christmas With Stormclouds".

Stormclouds In Space

Steve: "By now I had bought my own Porta Studio and STORMCLOUDS were ready to begin work on our third album "Lost In Space". I had a better understanding of recording so I decided to do another tape of fuzz songs similar to "Raindrops", but hopefully with better production." Once again Unhinged reviewed the tape: "Lost In Space" may be similar to "Raindrops", but it was no duplicate. Fuzzed for sure, but the rhythms under the fuzz are all Bolan, whose beat subtly runs through this in the same unexpected way it ran through Opal's "Happy Nightmare Baby", and for those of you asleep in your ears there was "20th Century Girl" to make the tribute obvious. This use of Bolan is surprisingly under- used in contemporary pop - I would have expected the influence to spring up mutating through the 80's just as 50's Chuck Berry resurfaced mutating through the 60's. Still this ranks as STORMCLOUDS most satisfying release, simply an exuberant parcel of pop songs from the sci-fi/trash culture of "Lost In Space", "Shadowqueen", "Satellite Baby" and "Junk"; the flaring anger of "Get Lost" and "The Last Song"; the disjointed dreaming of "Sandman" (the de-tuned TV feel of this would soon surface as the "Psychotronic" tape); the death songs like "Candy" (the country music morbidity keeps surfacing, even if the sound disappeared from STORMCLOUDS music with the banjo); the sole, sparse, acoustic muser "Heart Of Stone" to the classic pop of "Let's Talk About Love". "Lost In Space" was released on ACID TAPES February 1990.

"When I'm not watching TV, I read comics"

A year later (February '91) STORMCLOUDS were back with another release, "Psychotronic", (again on ACID TAPES). Steve: "This was a tribute to all my favourite movies and TV shows. Also I wanted to do an album that was keyboard dominated rather than heavy with fuzz guitars. I also wanted a slightly more otherworldly/ psychedelic feel to the whole thing." Reviews of "Psychotronic" were mixed. Hairy Hi-fi: "Tacky Sci-Fi and psych beat in the best 'Clouds tape yet. Several spacy 'Clouds classics and some newies are fed into, a continuous programme of cute galactic distortion." Midnight In Hell: "A collection of lightweight songs intended as a tribute to the group's favourite SF TV and movies. The fact that the songs all sound the same becomes very irritating after a while." Unhinged: "Initially this sounded a weaker release than their normal standard because the roar of fuzz is gone. The whole project developed from them acquiring a keyboard with a rhythm box and writing to fit its constrictions. The songs mostly come from Sci-Fi films, titles like "Galaxina", "The Boy With The X-Ray Eyes", "The Day The Earth Stood Still" or the obvious Star Trek reference in "He's Dead Jim". If anything the heavy use of echo and the softly bubbling keyboards makes this more underwater, like something out of Stingray than something out of space. The songs are all cut about with sound steals from the relevant films - like being hit by a kaleidoscope of ear camera angles. The keyboards strangeness makes this more like a fairground, listeners riding in a daze on a carousel, Louise singing in subdued tones like she's not sure whose dream she's in. Where this scores over other 'out of your senses' releases of the last few years is that STORMCLOUDS never belabour the point, allowing the inbuilt dislocation of the structure to make this queasy listening rather then the heavy psyc tack of as good as shouting "HEY THIS IS WEIRD!" in your face all the time. And, as you can trust by now, the songs all fall inside the three minute limit, totally safe from the rock opera/concept album elongation." Following this Unhinged magazine put out "Junk" a collection of demos and outtakes from earlier tapes. Henry Race reviewed it in Unhinged: "It provides a worthy insight into the peculiar world of a band whose songs are as much influenced by Rupert Bear, Rip Van Winkle, The Space Family Robinson and Mick Farren as they are by the Ramones, Jesus And Mary Chain. T.Rex and The Archies. - a combination that I'll settle for any day. Almost all of the ten tracks on this tape demonstrate a frighteningly well developed pop sensibility, you know the stuff, a handful of chords, chilling harmonies and hook lines in the chorus that you'd kill to have written yourself. Paul Ricketts had this to say: This collected together a bunch of unreleased songs such as "Metropolis", "The New Gods", where Steve shows flashes of lead guitar, almost the first time he's stepped outside the Johnny Ramone guitar ethos of 'chord only and buzz', "Jellyclouds" a fond memory of their days in the JELLYCLOUDS with the strange claim in the lyrics that they were jumping up and down: as far as I recall they barely moved on stage, "Remember" a tribute to the long forgotten Michael Stipe, "Winter's Frozen Hand" and "Santa Is A Spaceman" and alternative takes of "Down To The Sea", "To Sleep, Perchance To Dream", with its keyline in STORMCLOUDS philosophy that "Life is just a dream", "When Worlds Collide", and "Let's Talk About Love".

Pubcrawling with The Kids

As well as all this activity with STORMCLOUDS Steve was also involved in a few side projects. THE PUBCRAWLERS, a duo with Steve and Dave Scott recorded a bunch of drinking songs. Meeting every Friday night and getting stuck into bourbon and beer they finally produced a tape of five drinking songs with such unlikely titles as "Lost In Woolworths", "The Home Brew Song", "Get It Down Yer" and "CAMRA Men". Another tape features Steve working with his nephew, Danny and his son, Matthew as THE KIDS. They were 11 and 12 respectively at the time and sang, while Steve played instruments. They wrote such songs as "I Hate School", "I Don't Wanna Go To Bed", "I'm Bored", and "Video Kids" together. Steve also contributed a couple of songs to various ACID TAPES' compilations under various disguises such as THE YOUTHFUL WARDS and PROFESSOR X. These were all recording projects, but he was also involved in live side projects as well such as THE WICKED MESSENGERS who played every year at a local gig organised to celebrate Bob Dylan's birthday; THE CLAMPETTS, whom Steve would occasionally join in bass and JOHN BOY AND THE JIM BOBS, a country & western cover band.

"I don't know much about art but I know what I like"

Steve has also co-written a couple of songs with Swedish spacrock band DARXTAR. Contributing the lyrics to "The Fireclown" (based on the Moorcock book and released on the "Darker" album), and "10,000 Light Years From Home" which remains un-recorded, although it has been played live apparently. He also painted the impressive Bruce Pennington inspired cover to their third album "Daybreak". Other album covers Steve has produced include "Wake Up Sometime!" by THE CHEMISTRY SET, "So Far...So What! by THE BOYS FROM COUNTY HELL, "Mellifluous Confluence" by ETHEREAL COUNTER BALANCE and "Lonely Teardrops" by THE UNHEARD OF (as well as the various STORMCLOUDS releases of course). Steve is also the resident artist for influential Belgian psychedelic magazine Crohinga Well and has been producing artwork for countless music/ horror/fantasy & science fiction mags for over twenty years as well as producing his own fanzines and comic books.

Lost in the House on the Borderland

December '92 saw the release of "The House On The Borderland" album, again on ACID TAPES. Unhinged: "A collection of acoustic demos, which catches the sound that STORMCLOUDS most often produce when they do play gigs. They seem to have got tired of making the backing tracks necessary to play songs as recorded and the backwater area they live in has yet to reveal anything approaching a drummer and lead guitarist to make live gigs likely. Gigs more often that not now are at parties. Steve strumming, Louise's voice ringing and soaring, with a cool purity of tone. This is a 10 song journey into the myth seas of dreams and dreaming with its starting harbour the same that Tyrannosaurus Rex sailed from to reach "Once Upon The Seas Of Abyssinia", the wind in the sails like the furry edged zephyrs that blew Clay Allison towards camp fires and star skies on the seeming shores of the Sargasso Sea. Songs of the sea and the edges of the world, like the title track, "Ocean Jewel" and "Sailors On The Seas", or songs about the edge of reality like "Looking Glass World". The only known song is a re-recording of "Look At Her Eyes" from "Raindrops", though "Baby Moonlight" has been around even longer un-recorded. On these songs the joking mask is dropped and what comes across is a sense of wonder in living in such a magic world, Steve writing like he's already followed Coleridge halfway down the road to Xanadu, Louise singing that some romance in a more personal way, on "We Believe" confirming the passion, but especially on the closing tracks "Midnight Sun" and "Shooting Star" you get the feeling she most definitely has love on her mind rather than just being a singer going through the words."

First Nightmare

Steve: "Following "The House On The Borderland" tape things slowed down a lot. Gigs were infrequent and when we played live I didn't enjoy it at all. Problems with the backing tape and audiences that just wanted 'pub rock' made them dismal affairs for me. Also recording was minimal - Lou and I would argue a lot. My songwriting had nearly dried up and in the space of a year we recorded perhaps five or six songs. I think I had taken STORMCLOUDS as far as I could go like this. I decided it was time to record more of the folk/psyc material that I'd always been writing and playing at gigs but never recorded. So we enlisted Ken Flynn (as engineer and musician) and began recording material for a projected album to be titled "Nightmares In The Sky". Slowly work began on what was to be STORMCLOUDS debut album. Recording sessions were at weekends at Ken Flynn's 8 Track Thunderhead Studios in Calne and slowly the songs began coming together. The band had put aside their fuzz/trash/sci-fi pop to concentrate on a more psychedelic/folk approach. But fate was to take a hand and this album remains unfinished.

After The Storm

Steve and Lou split up in October '93 for "personal reasons", which actually involved Lou running off with a local drummer. However she did complete a few remaining songs at recording sessions after this date.. "When Lou and I split up I'd decided that there was no way I could work with her again, (even though, incredibly, she still wanted to stay in the band). I think she thought she was indispensable, but I made the decision to find a new vocalist, which took a lot of courage as I had no one in mind when I sacked Lou. She completed a couple of vocal tracks which appeared on the "Not Of This Earth" album and went on to join a local soul cover band for a while before quitting the music scene for the joys of motherhood."

November Rain

While Lou was in the studio completing those final songs Steve was auditioning her replacement, Melanie Townsend. Steve: "Christine Cotter rang me up because she knew that I was looking for a singer and she said she knew somebody who might be interested., somebody called Melanie. Rod then played Mel tapes of STORMCLOUDS stuff plus various songs by Mazzy Star, Jesus and Mary Chain, Kendra Smith etc to give her an idea what the band was all about. Then, I got in touch with Mel to arrange an audition. I'd never auditioned anyone before and I never thought I'd have to find a new STORMCLOUDS vocalist so I wasn't sure what to do but when I rang Mel the first thing she said was she wanted to sing "Halah" by Mazzy Star at the audition. As far as I was concerned that was it, she was in! So, on November 10th we did the audition, both as nervous as hell, and that was it, STORMCLOUDS were up and running with only a two week gap between singers. Still having the band together helped me get through a lot of other shit that was going down at the time." Steve began writing songs straight away (the first being "November Rain") and they began putting down rough demos of new songs as well as re-recording older material with Mel's vocals. "When Lou was sacked we were halfway through our long awaited "Nightmares in the Sky" album. Of the 12 songs we were working on six were finished, and Lou completed the vocals on the remaining six. These songs will probably be released in some form or another in the future." Mel's first recording work included a cover version of "Ride A White Swan" for the Old School Records Bolan tribute album The Resurrection Of The Warlock which was released in December 1985. Tony Visconti had this to say about the song in his liner notes: "I had the most eerie feeling listening to "Ride A White Swan" as rendered by STORMCLOUDS. The backing is uncannily like the original recording with the only difference being a synth string patch playing the original string part played by four violins (no it wasn't a mellotron, just a bad recording). The shock was the angelic voice of Melanie Townsend singing the song. It's as if Marc graciously stepped aside and let an angel sing lead." Another early studio recording was Galaxie 500's "Hearing Voices" for Elefant Records forthcoming tribute album.

Nightmares In The Sky

Work began again on "Nightmares In The Sky", starting from scratch. Some of the old songs were re-recorded and new songs were included as well. The album was completed in August '95. Steve also managed to achieve a small ambition and get some violin playing on a couple of the songs. "Paul Ricketts put me in touch with Emily Drake who he thought might be interested in playing violin on some songs, so I wrote to her, sent a tape of STORMCLOUDS songs and some stuff by Mazzy Star. Emily was interested and studio time was arranged. When me and Ken went to pick Emily up, we had a bit of trouble finding the right house, but there was one with music playing loud, which as I got nearer I recognised as "Halah" by Mazzy Star. Then I knew that Emily was going to be fine, which indeed she was. She put some beautiful violin on "November Rain" and some wonderfully strange violin on "Hearing Voices" (our cover of the GALAXIE 500 song.) Since these sessions her own band PAGAN FRINGE has been doing very well and she hasn't been able to contribute to any more of our recordings, which is a shame". "Nightmares In The Sky" was released on 3rd March 1996 on STORMCLOUDS' own label Rainfall Records, (run by Steve, Paul Ricketts and Clive Jones). This was a limited vinyl pressing of 500 (released on STORMCLOUDS' tenth anniversary) and was almost sold out by June. A CD version of the album was released on 15th November 1996 with extra songs and different versions of several other songs which appeared on the vinyl release. In March '96 Maljugin Music released "Nightmares & Daydreams" a collection of outtakes, demos and rough mixes from "Nightmares In The Sky" and in July '96 ACID TAPES put out the cassette version of "Nightmares In The Sky" with two extra tracks that don't appear on the vinyl.

Stormclouds at Spiros' Bar

To celebrate the completion of their album STORMCLOUDS played at a private party in Calne at "Spiros' Bar" on 22nd July 1995. This has been their only live gig to date, with no more planned at the moment. Steve: "Playing live is a lot of effort for very little reward. We haven't got a drummer, a PA or a practice place - I prefer to get on with recording and put out records (despite the amount of time it seems to take). We may do gigs in the future - it depends on the demand."

Sleep No More

STORMCLOUDS’ "difficult third album" Sleep No More was finally released by Rainfall Records on September 18th, 2000. Just before the release of the album, Paul Ricketts (a third of the Rainfall Records crew) pulled out of the label; Rainfall Records now consists of the partnership of Steve Lines and Clive Jones. Sleep No More is available on vinyl and CD (with the CD having three extra tracks). Track listing for the album is as follows: The Sleepy Tree, The House on the Borderland, Nightwinds, The Strange Inventor, Gray, White Horse, Sandman, The Midnight Sister, Eqyptian Queen, Shadowqueen, A SingleTear (electric), Sacrifice, A Single Tear (acoustic), The Sleepy Tree (Sleepy Version) and The Nine Million Names of God. Guests on the album include Childe Roland who contributes his excellent guitar work to most of the tracks on the album and also has a song of his, "Sacrifice" included as well. The ever elusive Reefus Moons plays almost all of the instruments on his arrangement of "The Sleepy Tree (Sleepy Version)" and Mark Angell provides guest vocals on "The Strange Inventor". and "Gray". The vinyl album comes with a free 16 page A4 lyric book which is lavishly illustrated. The album cover has been designed and painted by Lorretta Mansell and Steve Lines. The vinyl is a limited edition, numbered release of 1,000 copies and will not be re-presssed on vinyl. Sleep No More is available from Rainfall Records at £10.00 which includes postage and packing. Buy it today.

Strange Aeons

Strange Aeons is the latest release from Rainfall Records and is out now. (Release date was August 6th 2001). It is a double CD album of music and poetry inspired by the works of H. P. Lovecraft and the ever expanding ‘Cthulhu Mythos’. It is a various artists compilation and bands featured include STORMCLOUDS, CHILDE ROLAND, ROD GOODWAY, THE PETALS, ASTRAL WEEKS, FIREAXE, THE ZOOGS, THE GUGS, and THE SPAWN OF CHAOS. The album also features a number of Lovecraftian poets and authors reading their own work, including Brian Lumley, Ramsey Campbell, Simon Clark, Robert M. Price, Joseph S. Pulver, Sr., John B. Ford, Tim Lebon, Joel Lane, Susan McAdam, Michael Cisco, Kevin Broxton, Lorretta Mansell and many more. It also includes the works of Thomas Ligotti, Richard L. Tierney and Ann K. Schwader. The second CD is a bonus collection of outtakes, alternate versions, demos and extra tracks and overall there is more than two hours of music. The album is available from Rainfall Records for £12.00 which includes postage and packing. Buy it now before it sells out!!

The King In Yellow

The King in Yellow will be a limited edition (CD only) album based on Robert Chambers’ King in Yellow and the mythos which has grown around it. We are working on this in conjunction with author Joe Pulver who inspired the project and has contributed countless ideas as well as selections of his poetry and suggestions on running order, song arrangements etc. We already have THE PETALS (The Paiild Mask) and ASTRAL WEEKS Hali (The Lake of Lost Souls) working on material and there will be music from STORMCLOUDS, CHILDE ROLAND and BLACK ABYSS as well. There will also be poetry and prose from Richard L. Tirrney, Ann K. Schwader, Joe Pulver, Robert Chambers, Robert M. Price, Steve Lines and many more. Keep watching this space for more news.

Tales of Devilry & Doom

Rainfall Records is branching out into publishing in 2001 with the publication of a collection of macabre short stories by John B. Ford. The book, Tales of Devilry and Doom has cover art by Steve Lines and is published in a signed and numbered limited edition of 250. It is the first of what will hopefully be many Rainfall Books. We have exciting plans for future publications, which all depend on the sales of this first book. It is sure to become a collector’s item immediately, so support independent publishers and buy a copy today, before it’s too late!

The Derelict of Death & Other Stories

Work on our second publication is already underway. It is to be an anthology of dark and macabre fiction titled The Derelict of Death & Other Stories and, as well as the title story by Simon Clark and John B. Ford will include work by Eddie M. Angerhuber, Oaul Finch, Paul Kane, William Hope Hodgeson, Micharl Pendragon, Sue Phillips, Joseph S. Pulver Sr, Ann K. Schwader and Mark Samuels. Again in a limited and signed hardback edition with cover painting by Steve Lines. The book should be published in late December. Look out too for some Rainfall paperbacks coming early in the new year! As well as the cover painting for Derelict Steve is also working on a b/w cover painting for the next issue of the British Fantasy Society’s magazine Dark Horizons, due in the Spring.

The King In Yellow

Steve has now begun work on his next major project - an album based on the "King in Yellow" mythos. The King in Yellow will be a limited edition (CD only) album based on Robert Chambers’ King in Yellow and the mythos which has grown around it. We are working on this in conjunction with author Joe Pulver who inspired the project and has contributed countless ideas as well as selections of his poetry and suggestions on running order, song arrangements etc. We already have THE PETALS (The Pallid Mask) and ASTRAL WEEKS Hali (The Lake of Lost Souls) working on material and there will be music from STORMCLOUDS, CHILDE ROLAND and BLACK ABYSS as well. There will also be poetry and prose from Richard L. Tirrney, Ann K. Schwader, Joe Pulver, Robert Chambers, Robert M. Price, Steve Lines and many more. Jane Murphy has written The Waltz of the Veiled King which will be recorded by Swindon based Karda Estra. Proposed release date for this project is November 2002.

Lost Worlds of Space & Time.

Lost Worlds of Space & Time is the planned follow up to Strange Aeons. I am looking for interested writers, authors, artists and musicians to collaborate on material for this. As well as Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos I’m widing the scope to include other "Weird Tales" authors such as Clark Ashton Smith, Robert Bloch, Robert E. Howard, August Derleth and also more recent authors who have written in the same style such as Lin Carter, Richard L. Tierney, Brian Lumley, Karl Wagner and others. If anybody out there is interested in helping out with Lost Worlds of Space & Time please get in touch with Steve Lines at the Rainfall Records & Books contacts.

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