* En anglais uniquement
One of the very few members of
the Fall who had a distinct identity in the band other than uncontested leader
Mark E. Smith,
Brix Smith was part of one of the group's most commercially successful and critically celebrated eras, from 1983's
Perverted by Language to 1988's
I Am Kurious Oranj, giving them a melodic edge that buoyed
Smith's confrontational lyrics. At the same time,
Brix had a musical voice of her own as the leader of
the Adult Net, a tuneful combo steeped in '60s-style psychedelic pop, whose playfulness (as heard on 1989's The Honey Tangle) was a sharp contrast to the rougher tone of
the Fall. Outside of her two main groups,
Brix also collaborated with the likes of classical violinist
Nigel Kennedy (on a cover of
Donovan's "Hurdy Gurdy Man") and
Church guitarist
Marty Willson-Piper (they made an album in the '90s,
Lost Angeles, which wasn't released until 2021), and after pursuing other interests through the 2000s, she returned to action in 2014 with
Brix & the Extricated, a band dominated by a fellow
Fall alumni who hit the studio in 2017 to record Part 2.
Brix Smith was born Laura Elisse Salenger in Los Angeles, California on November 12, 1962. Her father was a psychiatrist, and her mother was an executive at the CBS television network. Laura's parents divorced when she was two, and when she was ten, she and her mother moved to Chicago, Illinois, where her mother worked with the Illinois Film Office. As a teenager in Chicago, Laura became a follower of punk rock; her favorite song was "The Guns of Brixton" by
the Clash, which she played so often that her friends started to call her Brixton, which was soon shortened to Brix. After completing high school,
Brix attended Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont, a prestigious school where her classmates included future literary stars Bret Easton Ellis, Jill Eisenstadt, Jonathan Lethem, and Donna Tartt. In her spare time at Bennington,
Brix learned to play the bass, started writing songs, and joined her first band, Banda Dratsing. She dropped out of school and returned to Chicago, where a friend turned her on to the music of
the Fall. When
the Fall played a show in the Windy City in April 1983,
Brix was in attendance, and she happened to meet the group's singer and frontman
Mark E. Smith. The two sensed an immediate connection; weeks later,
Brix traveled to England for the first time to visit
Smith in his native Manchester, and in July 1983, they were married.
Now known as
Brix Smith, she was soon drafted into playing guitar and singing backup in
the Fall, as well as contributing to the songwriting, making her debut on 1983's
Perverted by Language.
Brix brought a more melodic tone to the group that helped buffer
Mark's often abrasive verbal attack, and it proved to be one of the most commercially successful periods of the band's history, spawning several well-reviewed albums (including 1985's
This Nation's Saving Grace and 1988's
The Frenz Experiment and
I Am Kurious Oranj) and a pair of hit singles -- covers of
R. Dean Taylor's "There's a Ghost in My House" and
the Kinks' "Victoria." In 1985,
Brix launched a side project,
the Adult Net, with several members of
the Fall (most notably
Simon Rogers and sometimes
Mark E. Smith) accompanying her on songs evoking the psychedelic pop of the '60s. They made their recording debut in 1985 with a single, covering
the Strawberry Alarm Clock's "Incense and Peppermints," and an album, The Honey Tangle, appeared in 1989. By the time the album came out,
Brix and
Mark had split up, she'd left
the Fall, and for a while,
the Adult Net had a lineup that included three former members of
the Smiths --
Craig Gannon,
Mike Joyce, and
Andy Rourke. (
James Eller of
The The and
Clem Burke of
Blondie also worked with the group.)
After The Honey Tangle failed to make an impression in the marketplace,
Brix disbanded
the Adult Net, and returned to the United States for a spell, playing bass in
Susanna Hoffs' road band and auditioning to join
Hole after the death of bassist Kristen Pfaff. (
Brix has told reporters she was in the band for all of 24 hours before
Melissa Auf der Maur landed the gig).
Brix became romantically involved with noted classical violinist
Nigel Kennedy, and they collaborated on a single, covering
Donovan's 1968 hit "Hurdy Gurdy Man." In 1995,
Brix was persuaded to rejoin
the Fall, appearing on the albums
Cerebral Caustic (1995) and
The Light User Syndrome (1996) and touring with the band before tensions between her and her ex-husband led her to drop out.
Brix also collaborated with
Marty Willson-Piper of
the Church on a 1997 EP, Happy Unbirthday; around the same time, the two recorded an album that initially went unreleased. The material received a digital release in 2007 under the title Neurotica, and a revised and resequenced edition came out in 2021, this time dubbed
Lost Angeles.
In 1999, after
Brix had returned to England, she married Philip Start, a fashion entrepreneur, and together they launched a chain of boutiques called Start. In addition to running their shops,
Brix became a regular presence on British television, often appearing on programs devoted to fashion and lending her sharp wit to a variety of chat shows. After years away from music, she returned to performing in 2014 with
Brix & the Extricated, a group featuring fellow
Fall alumni
Steve Hanley (bass)
Steve Trafford (guitar), and
Paul Hanley (drums), as well as guitarist Jason Brown. The group was initially formed to play a one-off gig celebrating the publication of
Steve Hanley's memoirs The Big Midweek, which focused on his years in
the Fall. The gig was well-received, and the band opted to continue, writing original material and releasing their debut album, Part 2, in 2017. A second LP,
Breaking State, was released in 2018, and Super Blood Wolf Moon was issued in 2019. During her rare downtime from her various projects,
Brix wrote an autobiography, The Rise, the Fall and the Rise, which was published in 2016. ~ Mark Deming