Thursday, April 9, 2009

"Cry Little Sister" Edition

"Cry Little Sister," or the theme from The Lost Boys is an interesting intersection for obscure bands. Many oft-covered song are, but in this case even the original is shrouded in misinformation.

Due to mis-tagging and mis-attribution in early file sharing communities, "Cry Little Sister" was most often tied to The Sisters of Mercy, despite the vocalist sounding nothing like Sister's Andrew Eldritch. The original writer and performer of the song is Gerard McMahon, who has also been credited as Gerard McMann and is now releasing under the band G TOM MAC. Arguably, the use of pseudonyms hasn't served Gerard McMahon well. McMahon, though not a typical commercial success as a solo performer, has been a prolific songwriter, writing for such musicians as Roger Daltry, Kiss, and Chicago as well as contributing to many other 80s soundtracks. For the most part, McMahon is now correctly given credit for "Cry Little Sister." Indeed, 80s nostalgia has given the track new life. With the release of The Lost Boys: The Tribe in 2008, the song was covered by Aiden and remixed by G TOM MAC. The original and the remix can be heard on G TOM MAC's MySpace and can be purchased through many online outlets. Surprisingly, the single never charted in the US in its initial release.

The song went relatively uncovered until Zug Izland's "Cry" was released in 2003. Since then, covers have been produced on a nearly annual basis, mostly by goth bands (a genre where the differences between "obscure" and "niche" could be debated).

"Cry" from the album Cracked Tiles, Zug Izland, 2003:


Zug Izland is not a goth band in the traditional sense. Their first album Cracked Tiles was produced by Insane Clown Posse member Joseph Bruce and includes ICP on several of the tracks. This lends the album a strong hip-hop-horror aspect that is far from the punk or dark electronic that has come to represent the body of goth music. Zug Izland's fairly faithful rendition of "Cry" has more in common with the band's second less-ICP-influenced album, 3:33.

Zug Izland is currently not easy to find. They parted was with Psychopathic Records records in 2004 and have gone out of print since then. Many of their songs can be heard through their MySpace or their orphaned Downloads page. (It should be noted that much of Zug Izland's music is not work safe or for the easily offended.)

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