INXS

INXS started with the Farris Brothers (guitarist Tim, keyboardist Andrew and drummer Jon) in ’79. School friends, bassist Gary Beers, guitarist/sax player Kirk Pengilly and vocalist Michael Hutchence soon came on board. Interestingly, this line-up remained intact through the band’s lengthy history (’79 to ’97).

The Swing

Honing their act, INXS (in excess) set out on a rigorous tour of their native Australia. They began recording the following year and signed a deal with Warner Records in ’83.

It was their second Warner recording “The Swing” that brought them to the forefront.

It contained “Original Sin,” (with the video showing Hutchence perched on a motorcycle), that established INXS. Hutchence came dangerously close to being “the new” Jim Morrison.

Original Sin

This Time

Kick

“Listen Like Thieves,” containing the title track, “What You Need” and “This Time” built the band’s following. But it was their next effort that made INXS huge.

“Kick,” which sold six-million copies worldwide would have been a “Greatest Hits” album for most bands it featured “New Sensation,” “Devil Inside,” “Need You Tonight,” “Never Tear Us Apart” and “Mystify.”

The ’87 set peaked at #3 on the Billboard 200.

Never Tear Us Apart

Mystify

INXS continued strong with albums “X” (’90), “Live Baby Live” (’91), “Welcome To Wherever You Are,” with “Heaven Sent” and “Not Enough Time.”

Albums “Full Moon, Dirty Hearts” (’93) and “Elegantly Wasted” (’97) followed. 

By ’95 Hutchence and his girlfriend Paula Yates were regular paparazzi targets. Hutchence’s annoyance surfaced when he punched a photographer. The singer was dragged into court and paid a fine.

Welcome To Wherever You Are

In late ‘ 97, Hutchence returned to Australia to begin rehearsing for the band’s twentieth anniversary tour. He seemed consumed by Yates’ child-custody battles with her ex-husband, Boomtown Rat humanitarian, Bob Geldof.

On November 22nd, Hutchence was found dead in his hotel room. Cause of death: suicide by hanging – after consuming a mixture of alcohol and drugs. The story should have ended there but didn’t.

Rock groups have a tendency to keep going (whether there is public demand or not) replacing deceased or departed members, as if the chemistry can be easily replicated. It can’t.

But INXS attempted a new low. They launched “Rock Star INXS” on NBC. The singing competition was similar to the vacuously popular American Idol. The winner got to record an album with the group.

The show sunk in the ratings and was moved to cable. Somebody should have pulled the plug at that point. But there’s no stopping musicians bent on humiliating themselves. With the winner, J.D. Fortune, INXS issued “Switch.”

If “Rock Star INXS” wasn’t bad enough… the band, determined to destroy its own legacy, re-recorded their hits “reimagined” with Rob Thomas (Matchbox Twenty) singing “Original Sin” (the title track) and “Never Tear Us Apart,” Brandon Flowers (The Killers) took a swing at “Beautiful Girls” with Ben Harper providing vocals for “The Devil Inside.”

Didn’t anybody realize that Hutchence was irreplaceable?

###

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Get Weekly Rock News Directly to Your Inbox

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Similar Posts

  • Tool

    Bassist Paul D’ Amour and guitarist Adam Jones came to Hollywood, the land of eternal promise, to get jobs in the movie biz. But they ended up forming Tool in the early 90’s with the addition of Danny Carney on drums and vocalist Maynard James Keenan. Undertow First out of the box was the EP…

  • Stone Sour

    Countless groups have come and gone without making a dent. Usually, the most talented or driven members join other groups. Others drift into day jobs and real lives. Rarely does an unsuccessful group revive itself and finally achieve success. With a few twists and turns, that’s the Stone Sour story. Though it might be tempting…

  • Rob Zombie/White Zombie

    Rob Zombie’s music and lyrics are notable for their horror and sci-fi themes, and his live shows have been praised for their elaborate Shock Rock theatricality. So it’s not surprising that he has sold an estimated 15 million albums worldwide.  Here’s the story… 2026: Rob Zombie’s eighth full-length studio effort held the single “Punks And Demons,” accompanied by a…

  • Jet

    With a touch of AC/DC, a dose of The Ramones and a shot of classic Stones, Jet is closest to The Pretenders. But they are far more than the collective sum of their influences. Guitarist/vocalist Nic Cester and his younger brother, drummer Chris, ceaselessly listened to their parent’s Rock records. Reacting negatively to early ’90s…

  • The Go-Go’s

    Not since the Beach Boys, nearly two decades earlier, had a band been more consistently happy and upbeat. It shouldn’t be surprising since The Go-Go’s lead singer Belinda Carlisle was a high school cheerleader – in Hollywood, no less. Ironically though, The Go-Go’s began as an L.A. Punk group. Carlisle, Jane Wieldin (guitar), Charlotte Caffey…

  • The Who

    It’s nothing short of ironic that a group that first got noticed for the line “I hope I die before I get old” (from “My Generation”) lasted over fifty years. The Who was one of the few bands not dominated by their lead singer. Roger Daltrey had to compete with the guitar antics of Pete…