History
Formation
Ritual was formed out of the remnants of theDemo and John Peel
The group began writing songs which were, according to Bond, "written together as a band, although most of the music comes from the more musical Jamie". The band compiled a four-track demo (consisting of "Human Sacrifice", "Mind Disease", "Playtime" and "Brides") to shop around to independent labels in London. As part of their self-promotion of the demo, the band described themselves as a cross between the Birthday Party and Theatre of Hate. The band distributed approximately 60 copies of the tape and received positive responses from two labels ( Situation Two and''Songs for a Dead King''
While shopping their demo around, the band compiled a cassette tape of live tracks and demo recordings to sell to fans. Titled ''Songs for a Dead King'', it was structured with the material in the format the band wished to record its first album. The majority of the material was never fully developed and only two of the songs made it to the band's two subsequently released singles. A prophetically-named track (for (Stewart), which appeared on the A-side, was simply titled "Nine".Touring and "Mind Disease"
After receiving national exposure via the Peel session, the band spent the majority of 1982 gigging around London, playing some of the more infamous punk and post-punk venues in support of groups like Sex Gang Children.Gimarc: 1997 By mid-year the band had signed with Dave Kitson's independent Red Flame Records, and on 6 October 1982, released the " Mind Disease" 7" single. More London touring followed in support of the release and the band found themselves headlining gigs as well as supporting groups like''Kangaroo Court'' and dissolution
In February 1983, the band released the ''Kangaroo Court'' EP on Red Flame, followed by a few more gigs. By March 1983, the band had dissolved. Mondo was the first to leave, being recruited by Ian Astbury and Billy Duffy to form Death Cult. Stewart was later suggested by Ray Mondo for the bass slot (after the band had auditioned some 30 hopefuls) even though Stewart was a guitarist. Stewart accepted the position and remained with the band after the name change (to the Cult). Blyth and Bond, along with drummer Colin Rocks and ex-UK Decay guitarist Steve Spon, formed in Excelsis in 1983. The band released a number of singles and an album before breaking up in 1984. Bond later former the short-lived band Famous. After the split of Ritual, Pankhurst dropped out of the music business.Personnel
*Errol Blyth - vocals *Mark Bond - bass guitar *Steve Pankhurst - saxophone * Ray Mondo - drums * Jamie Stewart - guitarsDiscography
Studio albums
*''Songs for a Dead King'' cassette (1981, self-released)Singles and EPs
*" Mind Disease" 7" single (1982, Red Flame Records) *''Kangaroo Court'' 12" EP (1982, Red Flame Records)Compilation appearances
*"Mind Disease" on ''In Goth Daze'' (1994, Anagram Records/ Cleopatra Records) *"Mind Disease" on ''Flesh, Fangs & Filigree'' (1994, Dressed to Kill) *"Questioning the Shadow" on ''Gothic Rock 3 - Black on Black - Best of 80's Collection'' (1998, Jungle Records) *"Mind Disease" on ''Night Creatures - The Best of Gothic Rock'' (1999, Music Club)Footnotes
References
* * *External links