Ian Astbury
Ian Astbury was born in Heswall, England, United Kingdom on May 14th, 1962 and is the Rock Singer. At the age of 62, Ian Astbury biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 62 years old, Ian Astbury has this physical status:
Ian Robert Astbury (born 14 May 1962) is an English singer and songwriter.
He is best known as a founding member and lead vocalist for the Cult's rock band.
Early life
Ian Astbury was born in Heswall, Cheshire, and is of Scottish and English descent. When he was 11 years old, he and his family immigrated to Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, from England. He attended Glendale Secondary School. Astbury's early musical influences harrassed Hamilton, where he became a fan of David Bowie, Iggy Pop, and The New York Dolls. He did not start performing until after returning to England.
Astbury was influenced by the Doors' song "The End" in 1979, which he described later as "a spiritual experience."
Personal life
Astbury lives in Los Angeles. Billy Duffy and Steve Jones of The Sex Pistols have played on Hollywood United's football team. He is a supporter of Everton FC, an English Premier League club. In May 1992, he married Heatherlyn Astbury; the couple has two sons. Astbury married Aimee Nash, a guitarist and singer, in Las Vegas on May 26.
Career
In 1980, Astbury was in Liverpool, where he was active on the punk scene based around Eric's Club. He moved to Bradford in late 1980, and by 1981 he helped found the post-punk band Southern Death Cult, which lasted until March 1983. Along with guitarist Billy Duffy, bassist Jamie Stewart and drummer Raymond Taylor Smith, Astbury formed a new band, Death Cult, and released the Death Cult EP. To help broaden their appeal, the band changed its name to "The Cult" in January 1984 before appearing on the Channel 4 television show, The Tube.
The Cult's first album, Dreamtime, was released in 1984, followed by Love in 1985. Love featured the single "She Sells Sanctuary", which introduced the band to an international audience. Many songs of these early albums focus on Native American themes, a preoccupation of Astbury's. On their third album, Electric, The Cult made a transformation to a hard rock sound with the help of producer Rick Rubin.
After the release of the 1989 album Sonic Temple and the single "Fire Woman", Astbury relocated to Los Angeles, California, US.
In 1994, The Cult returned with an untitled album and a musical change of pace. Their hard rock sound was gone, as a result of Astbury's growing interest in alternative music, fashion and introspective lyrics. Although the album produced two singles ("Coming Down" and "Star"), it was not a commercial success. They toured to support the album, but in Brazil creative differences with guitarist Duffy reached their nadir, which resulted in him leaving the band.
Astbury soon assembled another group of musicians and began writing new songs. He called the group The Holy Barbarians, and in 1996 the band released the album Cream, which was not a commercial success. The band appeared at the small Tunbridge Wells Forum, where Vic Reeves joined the band onstage for a rendition of "Wildflower".
Personal difficulties and a drive for further introspection drove Astbury away from his new group, and he began working on a solo album (eventually released as Spirit\Light\Speed).
In 1999, Astbury and Duffy reformed The Cult. The band signed a new contract with Atlantic Records, and in 2001 Beyond Good and Evil was released. The band initially enjoyed radio success with the single "Rise", until a falling out with Atlantic, which ended all commercial promotions and radio play for the album. Astbury described the fight with the record label as "soul destroying"; disillusioned, he brought The Cult to another hiatus in 2002.
Astbury became lead singer of The Doors of the 21st Century in 2002. The group featured original Doors members Robby Krieger and Ray Manzarek.
In 2003, Astbury performed with the surviving members of MC5 at the 100 Club in London.
He re-formed The Cult with Duffy in 2006, for a series of live shows. In October 2007, The Cult released Born into This, including the single was "Dirty Little Rockstar". In 2009, The Cult announced a series of shows across Canada, the US, and various countries in Europe. It was billed as "'Love' Live", where the band performed the album, Love, in its entirety.
On 29 May 2010, the Japanese band Boris performed "The End" with Ian Astbury at Vivid Festival in Sydney. Boris and Astbury released a four-song EP in September 2010 on Southern Lord and Daymare Records, containing four tracks entitled "Teeth and Claws," "We are Witches," "Rain" and "Magickal Child."
Astbury is featured on the UNKLE tracks "Burn My Shadow", "When Things Explode" and "Forever." He also sings "Flame On" on Black Sabbath lead guitarist Tony Iommi's solo album Iommi, and recorded a duet with Debbie Harry on her 1989 album Def, Dumb and Blonde, called "Lovelight".
In 2010, he provided the vocals for the song "Ghost" on guitarist Slash's self-titled solo album. The track also featured former Guns N' Roses guitarist Izzy Stradlin on rhythm guitar. Astbury is also credited for playing the drums on a track called "Gasp" by Japanese Cartoon.