Danielle DAX
seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Mexico
seen from Malaysia
seen from South Africa
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from China
seen from Azerbaijan
Danielle DAX
Danielle Dax inside the Batcave on August 12th 1983 (Olli Wisdom of Specimen far right in the last pic)
📷 © Mick Mercer
Danielle Dax & Phoebe Legere
The Au Pairs, C Cat Trance, Dog Faced Hermans, Foetus, Current 93, Negativland, NON, Coil, Dirty Projectors, The Normal, Felt, Butthole Surfers, Cabaret Voltaire, Chris & Cosey,This Heat, DNA, Jim O'Rourke, Wall of Voodoo, Lemon Kittens, Nurse With Wound, Diamanda Galás, Devo, PJ Harvey, The Pop Group, Family Fodder, Stereolab, Lydia Lunch, Lou Reed, Muslimgauze, My Bloody Valentine, Nocturnal Emissions, Fire Engines, Minimal Man, Chrome, Swans, New Order, Death in June, King Crimson, SPK, Little Annie, And Also the Trees, Echo & The Bunnymen , Gang of Four, Magazine, Dead Kennedys, Wire, Depeche Mode, Swell Maps
Danielle Dax
An artist, musician, producer, designer, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist. Her sound is unique. A good description I read somewhere: "If Siouxsie Sioux and Nina Hagan had a love child, Danielle would be it." I'd have to add with a blending of Lisa Gerrard as well.
(piece by Danielle)
Danielle, formerly with the Lemon Kittens, went on with a solo career. Another artist who didn't gain commercial success but has a strong cult following. Thank goodness for music lovers and curators who don't let these amazing artists disappear.
Danielle Dax / Lemon Kittens
V Sign (issue #3) YEAR: 1980 CREATED BY: Les LOCATION: Stevenage SIZE: A4 WHAT'S INSIDE.... Issue #3 of V Sign is printed on various shades of coloured paper but the quality of the printing, the layout and the graphics all leave a lot to be desired. On the editorial page Les makes it clear that he thinks the music scene which emerged from the UK punk rock explosion that happened three years earlier is now growing stale. Nevertheless, there's a lot of great content in the third issue of his zine, including articles about Lemon Kittens and The Flowers that the bands sent in themselves, a long interview with UK Decay, shorter mentions of mainly obscure bands like The Clefts and some gig reviews. In retrospect, the most interesting of these is Les' lengthy account of going to the Lyceum in London on 29th February 1980 to see Joy Division co-headlining with Killing Joke, supported by A Certain Ratio and Section 25. He was highly unimpressed with the venue, the bouncers, the audience and the other bands - but also found that "the only interesting group left" didn't live up to his expectations. Joy Division's set that night consisted almost entirely of as yet unreleased songs, and in Les' opinion only their forthcoming single "Love Will Tear Us Apart" stood out. The complete performance is available on the "No More Ceremonies" bootleg (five of the tracks are also included on the live CD in the "Heart And Soul" box set) and with the benefit of hindsight it sounds like a truly excellent gig. However, even though Joy Division were being heavily promoted by some influential writers in the UK music press at the time, one of the nice things about fanzine culture was that it gave the likes of Les the opportunity to say "don’t believe the hype”.... His "pretty shoddy" interview with Martin Atkins of Public Image Ltd is also well worth a read. Click on the title above to see scans of all the zine's pages.... my box of 1980s fanzines flickr