INXS is an Australian rock group. The band was formed in 1977 and comprised Michael Hutchence (lead vocals), Andrew Farriss (guitar and keyboards), Tim Farriss (lead guitar), Jon Farriss (drums), Garry Gary Beers (bass) and Kirk Pengilly (saxophone and guitar).
The band's worldwide peak of popularity came with 1987's Kick, a punchy, confident set of pop-rock gems that yielded four top-ten US singles, including the number-one hit "Need You Tonight". They toured heavily behind the album throughout 1987 and 1988. Afterwards, they took a break and Hutchence released a side project of sorts called Max Q, which received decent reviews, but at best attained a cult status.
However, the band's belated attempts to follow up on the success of Kick, 1990's X and 1992's Welcome to Wherever You Are found them struggling to stay relevant as alternative rock began to dominate the airwaves and more traditional rockers like INXS fell out of favor. 1993's Full Moon, Dirty Hearts was their attempt to capitalize on the grunge movement, and while it received mixed reviews, it plunged the band further into obscurity, despite the track "Please (You Got That)" featuring the legendary Ray Charles. 1994 brought the first of many 'Greatest Hits' compilations.
Hutchence, meanwhile, remained in the public eye, dabbling in modeling and film acting and dating several models and public personalities including Kylie Minogue, Helena Christensen and Paula Yates.
Throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, INXS was a major force in Australian popular music, leading the way into worldwide popularity for several Australian bands. The band worked closely with several other Australian artists, such as The Models and Jenny Morris, helping to establish their careers. By the mid-nineties, however, their popularity had waned, especially in the US, where their "Greatest Hits" compilation failed to reach the top 100. In 1997, the group released a comeback album entitled Elegantly Wasted, which garnered mixed reviews. It fared respectably in Australia, Canada and Great Britain, but floundered in the US.
On November 22, 1997 Hutchence was found dead in his Sydney hotel room, an apparent victim of suicide (some speculate his death was actually an accident, the result of autoerotic asphyxiation). Since Hutchence's death, INXS has continued, using Terence Trent D'Arby, Suze DeMarchi and Jimmy Barnes as temporary lead singers. Jon Stevens began singing with INXS in 2000 and was officially named a member of the band in 2002. However, he left INXS in 2003, only recording a song called I Get Up, released as a single (which charted in the top 100 on the Australian ARIAnet Singles Chart) in the same year, and it was used in the Rugby Union World Cup 2003.
INXS returned to the news in 2004 when it was announced that a new reality television program titled would feature a contest to find a new frontman for the band. The show, to debut on the CBS network on July 11th, 2005 (and on VH1 and TMF UK in the UK), features 15 contestants vying for the postion of lead singer. The show is executive produced by Survivors Mark Burnett and is hosted by Brooke Burke and former Jane's Addiction guitarist Dave Navarro.
INXS (1980); #164 US
Underneath the Colours (1981)
Shabooh Shoobah (1982); #46 US, US Sales: 500,000
The Swing (1984); #52 US, US Sales: 1,000,000
Listen Like Thieves (1985); #11 US, US Sales: 2,000,000
Kick (1987); #3 US, #9 UK, US Sales: 6,000,000
X (1990); #5 US, #2 UK, US Sales: 2,000,000
Live Baby Live (1991); #72 US, #8 UK, US Sales: 1,000,000
Welcome to Wherever You Are (1992); #16 US, #1 UK, US Sales: 1,000,000
Full Moon, Dirty Hearts (1993) #53 US, #3 UK
Elegantly Wasted (1997) #16 UK #41 US
INXSIVE (1982)
Dekadance (1983); #148 US
The Greatest Hits (1994); #112 US, #3 UK, US Sales: 1,000,000
(2001)
Definitive INXS/The Best of INXS (2002) #144 US, #15 UK
The Years 1979-1997 (2002)
Stay Young 1979-1982 (2002)
(2004)
from INXS
1980 "Just Keep Walking" #38 AU
from Underneath the Colours
1981 "The Loved One" #18 AU
1981 "Stay Young" #21 AU
from Shabooh Shoobah
1983 "The One Thing" #30 US, #14 AU
1982 "Don't Change" #80 US (1983 Release), #14 AU
1983 "To Look at You" #36 AU
1983 "Black and White" #24 AU
from The Swing
1983 "Original Sin" #58 US (1984 Release) #1 AU
1984 "I Send a Message" #77 US, #3 AU
1984 "Burn for You" #3 AU
1984 "Dancing on the Jetty" #39 AU
from Listen Like Thieves
1985 "This Time" #81 US, #19 AU
1985 "What You Need" #5 US (1986 Release), #2 AU
1986 "Kiss the Dirt (Falling Down the Mountain) #15 AU
1986 "Listen Like Thieves #54 US, #28 AU
from Crocodile Dundee soundtrack
1986 "Different World" #28 AU
from Kick
1987 "Need You Tonight" #1 US, #2 UK, (1988 release), #3 AU
1988 "Devil Inside" #2 US, #6 AU
1988 "New Sensation" #3 US, #25 UK, #8 AU
1988 "Never Tear Us Apart" #7 US, #24 UK, #11 AU
1989 "Mystify" #14 UK
from X
1990 "Suicide Blonde" #9 US, #11 UK, #3 AU
1990 "Disappear" #8 US, #21 UK, #19 AU
1991 "Bitter Tears" #46 US, #30 UK, #37 AU
1991 "The Stairs" #72 US, #4 AU
from The Lost Boys soundtrack
1991 "Good Times" (with Jimmy Barnes) #18 UK
from Live Baby Live
1991 "Shining Star EP" #27 UK
from Welcome to Wherever You Are
1992 "Heaven Sent" #31 UK, #14 AU
1992 "Baby Don't Cry" #20 UK
1992 "Taste It" #21 UK, #37 AU
1992 "Not Enough Time" #28 US
1993 "Beautiful Girl" #46 US #23 UK
from Full Moon, Dirty Hearts
1993 "The Gift" #11 UK, #12 AU
1993 "Please (You Got That...)" #35 AU
from The Greatest Hits
1994 "The Strangest Party (These Are the Times)" #15 UK, #30 AU
from Elegantly Wasted
1997 "Elegantly Wasted" #27 US, #20 UK, #44 AU
from Definitive INXS
2001 "I'm So Crazy" (Par-T-One vs. INXS) #19 UK
Official INXS site: www.inxs.com
Polish INXS Website
Launch's page on INXS
INXS is an informal abbreviation for "in excess," used in chemistry. For example, "HCl is INXS."
History
INXS began under the name The Farriss Brothers but the band changed their name to INXS in 1979, just prior to the release of their self-titled debut album in 1980. INXS and its follow-up, 1981's Underneath the Colours (produced by Richard Clapton) were hits in their native Australia, and their third album, Shabooh Shoobah was released worldwide. The single "The One Thing" brought them their first top 40 hit in America. With the Nick Launay-produced fourth album, The Swing in 1983, the band received significant attention in the US and UK, as the single "Original Sin" became a minor pop radio hit and the band's charismatic singer Michael Hutchence gained attention for his MTV-ready looks. The band, which had started out as a New Wave act featuring more synthesizers than guitar, gradually moved in a more straight-ahead Rock oriented direction through the first half of the 1980s. By 1985's breakthrough album Listen Like Thieves the band had perfected a matured sound influenced by The Rolling Stones and U2 but true to the band's original roots in the Aussie pubs. In the US, the first single, "This Time" stalled at #81 in late 1985, but the band literally roared out of nowhere with the second, "What You Need", which in early 1986 became a top five hit, bringing the band their first breakout U.S. hit.The band's worldwide peak of popularity came with 1987's Kick, a punchy, confident set of pop-rock gems that yielded four top-ten US singles, including the number-one hit "Need You Tonight". They toured heavily behind the album throughout 1987 and 1988. Afterwards, they took a break and Hutchence released a side project of sorts called Max Q, which received decent reviews, but at best attained a cult status.
However, the band's belated attempts to follow up on the success of Kick, 1990's X and 1992's Welcome to Wherever You Are found them struggling to stay relevant as alternative rock began to dominate the airwaves and more traditional rockers like INXS fell out of favor. 1993's Full Moon, Dirty Hearts was their attempt to capitalize on the grunge movement, and while it received mixed reviews, it plunged the band further into obscurity, despite the track "Please (You Got That)" featuring the legendary Ray Charles. 1994 brought the first of many 'Greatest Hits' compilations.
Hutchence, meanwhile, remained in the public eye, dabbling in modeling and film acting and dating several models and public personalities including Kylie Minogue, Helena Christensen and Paula Yates.
Throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, INXS was a major force in Australian popular music, leading the way into worldwide popularity for several Australian bands. The band worked closely with several other Australian artists, such as The Models and Jenny Morris, helping to establish their careers. By the mid-nineties, however, their popularity had waned, especially in the US, where their "Greatest Hits" compilation failed to reach the top 100. In 1997, the group released a comeback album entitled Elegantly Wasted, which garnered mixed reviews. It fared respectably in Australia, Canada and Great Britain, but floundered in the US.
On November 22, 1997 Hutchence was found dead in his Sydney hotel room, an apparent victim of suicide (some speculate his death was actually an accident, the result of autoerotic asphyxiation). Since Hutchence's death, INXS has continued, using Terence Trent D'Arby, Suze DeMarchi and Jimmy Barnes as temporary lead singers. Jon Stevens began singing with INXS in 2000 and was officially named a member of the band in 2002. However, he left INXS in 2003, only recording a song called I Get Up, released as a single (which charted in the top 100 on the Australian ARIAnet Singles Chart) in the same year, and it was used in the Rugby Union World Cup 2003.
INXS returned to the news in 2004 when it was announced that a new reality television program titled would feature a contest to find a new frontman for the band. The show, to debut on the CBS network on July 11th, 2005 (and on VH1 and TMF UK in the UK), features 15 contestants vying for the postion of lead singer. The show is executive produced by Survivors Mark Burnett and is hosted by Brooke Burke and former Jane's Addiction guitarist Dave Navarro.
Discography
Albums
Compilations
International Charting Singles
External links
INXS is an informal abbreviation for "in excess," used in chemistry. For example, "HCl is INXS."
