The Glove
Biography
Superstar side projects have always rattled around the music scene, one-off outings conceived for any reason you like -- to scratch a creative itch, to fulfill a personal vanity, or simply just to confuse and confound an audience that has been growing far too complacent. Occasionally, however, it works. The art rock underground still thrills to the memory of the nights that Nick Cave, Marc Almond, Lydia Lunch, and Foetus came together as the Immaculate Consumptives in 1983; and the gothic crowd still trembles at the memory of the Glove, the similarly short-lived but superbly styled union of the Cure's Robert Smith and Siouxsie and the Banshees' Steven Severin.
The Glove wasn't that great a stretch of the imagination. The pair had been friends since they first met in the late '70s; the Cure undertook their first ever British tour as special guests of the Banshees, in late 1979, and when the headliners' guitarist went unexpectedly AWOL, half a dozen concerts into the itinerary, Smith was quick to fill the gap, playing two full sets every night.
The tour over, the Banshees ushered in a full-time replacement and Smith returned to the Cure. But when that band apparently broke up in June 1982, Smith's first move was to record a single for Flexipop magazine, alongside Severin ("Lament"), and when the Banshees once again required a guitarist, Smith stepped into the breach.
Selected Discography

Blue Sunshine - Deluxe Edition
2006

Blue Sunshine
1983
