Clan of Xymox

OriginNetherlands
Activity1981-
StatusActive
GenresSynthpop, Gothic rock, Electronic rock

Clan of Xymox, also known as simply Xymox, are a Dutch rock band formed in 1981. Clan of Xymox featured a trio of songwriters and gained success in the 1980s, releasing their first two albums on a prestigious independent UK label and a third and fourth album on a major US label, and scoring a hit single in the United States. Their 1980s releases included synthpop/electronic dance music.

Though the band is still active and continues to tour and release records, of the original songwriters (Nooten, Moorings and Wolbert), only Moorings remains in the band today. After the departure of Nooten and Wolbert in the early 1990s, their music turned increasingly goth.

Clan of Xymox have been in the unfortunate position of always being compared to other bands since their inception. Whether it’s the Cure or Joy Division, Clan of Xymox have never been able to shake off the similarities to their influences. Nevertheless, the group has produced an impressive body of work that consistently absorbed new sounds while remaining faithful to the ’80s goth rock menu.

Clan of Xymox were formed in Nijmegen, Netherlands in 1983 by Ronny Moorings (vocals, guitar) and Anka Wolbert (bass, vocals). A year later, Moorings and Wolbert moved to Amsterdam, releasing the LP Subsequent Pleasures as Xymox. (The album was limited to 500 copies.) Xymox then became the opening act for Dead Can Dance in England. The band’s presence on Dead Can Dance’s U.K. tour caught the interest of 4AD Records, and the label eventually signed them.

A year later, Xymox lengthened their name to Clan of Xymox and recorded a self-titled album in 1985, followed by Medusa the next year. In 1987, the group shortened its appellation to Xymox once again, contributing another version of “Muscoviet Mosquito,” originally on Subsequent Pleasures, to the 4AD compilation Lonely Is an Eyesore.

After the release of the single “Blind Hearts,” Xymox left 4AD and joined PolyGram/Wing. In 1989, Xymox released Twist of Shadows, their most commercially successful LP, selling 300,000 copies. The infectious and uncharacteristically upbeat “Phoenix of My Heart” landed on the modern rock charts in 1991.

However, the full-length Phoenix didn’t do as well as Twist of Shadows. Wolbert departed from the band that year, replaced by bassist Mojca Zugna.

In 1992, Xymox left PolyGram/Wing for ZOK Records. Xymox recorded two albums for ZOK Records — 1992’s Metamorphosis and 1993’s Headclouds — before switching to Tess Records in 1997 for the album Hidden Faces.

Moreover, Moorings called the group Clan of Xymox once again. In 1999, they signed with the Metropolis label and released Creatures, which was followed a year later by the two-CD Live. The 2001 album, Notes from the Underground, was reinterpreted on the double-remix CD Remixes from the Underground, which landed in 2002.

Farewell from 2003 was a themed album with bittersweet goodbyes to lovers and friends as the main topics. The 2004 collection The Best of Clan of Xymox found latter-day highlights next to re-recordings of the band’s early material. Two years later, the album Breaking Point was announced by the single “Weak in My Knees.”

Their 2009 effort, In Love We Trust, was a return to the layered sound of their 4AD years. Darkest Hour and Kindred Spirits appeared in the years that followed, and their 15th LP, Matters of Mind, Body and Soul, appeared in 2014.

Members
Ronny Moorings
Mojca Zugna
Mario Usai
Sean Göbel

Discography
Clan of Xymox
Medusa
Twist of Shadows
Phoenix
Metamorphosis
Headclouds
Hidden Faces
Creatures
Notes from the Underground
Farewell
Breaking Point
In Love We Trust
Darkest Hour
Kindred Spirits
Matters of Mind, Body & Soul
Days of Black