Nick Cave

Australian musician and author
Also known as: Nicholas Edward Cave
Quick Facts
In full:
Nicholas Edward Cave
Born:
September 22, 1957, Warracknabeal, Australia (age 67)

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Nick Cave (born September 22, 1957, Warracknabeal, Australia) is an Australian singer-songwriter, actor, novelist, and screenwriter who played a prominent role in the post-punk movement as front man for the bands the Birthday Party and the Bad Seeds. He is best known for his haunting ballads about life, love, betrayal, and death.

Early life

Born in a rural town in Victoria, Australia, Cave was the son of an English teacher and a librarian. When he was about two years old, the family moved to the slightly bigger town of Wangaratta. Raised as an Anglican, Cave began singing in the cathedral choir when he was eight years old.

His creative influences while growing up were somewhat eclectic. In a 2023 interview with the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) podcast This Cultural Life, he recalled being 10 years old and seeing American country singer Johnny Cash perform on television. The “Man in Black” immediately changed Cave’s conception of music: “I just remember sitting and watching [Cash] as a child and understanding suddenly…that music could be some other thing, that it was dangerous.” Other influences include Dame Edna Everage (the sharp-tongued housewife character and talk-show host created by Australian actor Barry Humphries) and Canadian singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen.

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When he was 12 years old, Cave was sent to a boarding school in Melbourne, where he met the friends with whom he would form his first band. At age 17 he enrolled in an art school to study painting, but he failed in his second year there. A year later Cave’s father died in a car crash. Although grief would become an important motif in his songs, he “was unconscious of the effect of grief entirely” at the time of his father’s death, as he recalled to The New York Times in 2022.

The Birthday Party

Cave and school friend Mick Harvey formed the Boys Next Door in the mid-1970s in Melbourne with guitarist Rowland Howard, bassist Tracy Pew, and drummer Phil Calvert. The band released several records before relocating to London in 1980 and changing its name to the Birthday Party. Known for its ferocious live shows, the Birthday Party quickly earned a cult following, and it appeared on John Peel’s BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) radio program, leading to a record contract with 4AD and the release of the group’s signature album, Junkyard (1982).

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and Grinderman

Following the Birthday Party’s breakup in 1983, Cave and Harvey went on to form Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds in Berlin with former Magazine bassist Barry Adamson and Einstürzende Neubauten front man Blixa Bargeld. The Bad Seeds combined the Birthday Party’s dark intensity with a passionate exploration of love and the pain it can bring. The band’s biggest commercial success was “Where the Wild Roses Grow,” a collaboration with Australian singer Kylie Minogue, from the 1996 album Murder Ballads. Bargeld left the Bad Seeds in 2003, but the release of the double album Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus (2004) signaled that the group was alive and as creatively ambitious as ever.

In 2006 Cave formed Grinderman, a Bad Seeds side project that tempered the rage of the Birthday Party with caustic, self-deprecating humor. In between the release of Grinderman’s two eponymous albums (2007 and 2010), the Bad Seeds returned to the studio and produced the critically acclaimed Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!! (2008). In 2009 Harvey split with Cave and the Bad Seeds, ending one of the most-enduring partnerships in the post-punk era. The band’s remaining members persevered with the stark Push the Sky Away (2013). The accidental death of Cave’s 15-year-old son, Arthur, in 2015 became the focus of the fiercely elegiac Skeleton Tree (2016). The double album Ghosteen was released in 2019.

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In 2021 Cave recorded Carnage with Bad Seeds member Warren Ellis, which was nominated for a Grammy Award for best recording package. Three years later Cave and the Bad Seeds released Wild God.

Books

Cave has published several books, among them the novels And the Ass Saw the Angel (1989), a Southern gothic tale, and The Death of Bunny Munro (2009). Other books include The Sick Bag Song (2016), an epic poem inspired by his tour with the Bad Seeds in 2014. The book Faith, Hope, and Carnage (2022) is based on Cave’s conversations with journalist Seán O’Hagan and covers such topics as creativity and grief. It was published shortly after the death of Cave’s 31-year-old son, Jethro.

Cave also authors a popular newsletter called The Red Hand Files, named for one of the Bad Seeds’ best-known songs, “Red Right Hand” (1994). For the letter, he frequently answers questions from fans, to whom he gives deeply personal and thoughtful replies that touch upon such topics as grief, mourning, faith, and creativity.

Film work

Cave has also worked in film. With Ellis, he composed scores for such movies as The Proposition (2005), The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007), The Road (2009), Hell or High Water (2016), Kings (2018), Blonde (2022), and Back to Black (2024). His song “People Ain’t No Good” (1997) features in the computer-animation film Shrek 2 (2004).

In addition, he penned the screenplays for The Proposition, which earned him a special prize from the 2006 Venice Film Festival, and Lawless (2012), a Prohibition-era drama about bootlegging. Cave’s acting credits include the films Ghosts…of the Civil Dead (1988), which he also cowrote, and Johnny Suede (1991). Cave was the subject of the documentaries 20,000 Days on Earth (2014) and One More Time with Feeling (2016). He also worked on the scores for both documentaries, the latter of which was nominated for a Grammy.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by René Ostberg.

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AC/DC, Australian heavy metal band whose theatrical high-energy shows placed them among the most popular stadium performers of the 1980s. The principal members were Angus Young (b. March 31, 1955, Glasgow, Scotland), Malcolm Young (b. January 6, 1953, Glasgow—d. November 18, 2017, Sydney, Australia), Bon Scott (original name Ronald Belford Scott; b. July 9, 1946, Kirriemuir, Angus, Scotland—d. February 21, 1980, London, England), Brian Johnson (b. October 5, 1947, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, England), Phil Rudd (original name Phillip Rudzevecuis; b. May 19, 1954, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), and Cliff Williams (b. December 14, 1949, Romford, Essex, England).

The Young brothers formed AC/DC in Sydney, Australia, in 1973 with Angus (famous for his schoolboy short-trousers outfit) on lead guitar and Malcolm on rhythm guitar. The rest of the band’s lineup changed when the Youngs moved to Melbourne, and AC/DC’s blues-based records and live appearances made them favourites in Australia by the mid-1970s. The band relocated to London in 1976 and found success in Britain with Let There Be Rock (1977). After solidifying their lineup (with Scott as vocalist, Rudd on drums, Williams on bass, and the Youngs), the band recorded Highway to Hell (1979), which brought them international fame. AC/DC’s rise was hampered by Scott’s alcohol-related death in February 1980, but replacement Johnson’s falsetto fit in well with the group’s tight, clean metal punch and their raucous bad-boy image. The band’s next album, Back in Black (1980), sold more than 10 million copies in the United States alone, and For Those About to Rock (1981) was also a million-seller. The early to mid-1980s was the band’s peak period as a live group; a number of personnel changes occurred after that time.

By the 1990s AC/DC found itself comfortably ensconced among the elder statesmen of heavy metal. The Razor’s Edge (1990) featured the hit singles “Thunderstruck” and “Moneytalks,” the latter of which reached number 23 on the Billboard chart, making it the group’s sole Top 40 single. The band settled into a pattern of roughly two studio releases per decade, following The Razor’s Edge with Ballbreaker (1995), produced by Rick Rubin, and Stiff Upper Lip (2000), an album that attempted to capture the stadium-filling sound of the Back in Black era. After more than 30 years of producing some of the roughest and loudest head-banging anthems in heavy metal history, AC/DC scored its first Billboard number one album with Black Ice (2008). The band reached another milestone in 2010 when it collected its first Grammy Award (in the category of best hard rock performance) for the single “War Machine.”

British musical group Culture Club on the set of the "Karma Chameleon" video, 1983; (left to right) Roy Hay, Jon Moss, Boy George and Mikey Craig.
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Age began taking its toll on the band in subsequent years, leading to a series of lineup changes. In 2014 AC/DC announced that founding member Malcolm Young had been diagnosed with dementia and had retired. He was replaced by his nephew Stevie Young, whose first album with the band was Rock or Bust (2014), which achieved commercial success. After Rudd’s 2014 arrest on drug and other charges, Chris Slade, who had earlier played with the band, took over as drummer. Two years later Johnson was forced to stop touring because of hearing loss, and he was succeeded as vocalist by Guns N’ Roses front man Axl Rose. In 2016, after the Rock or Bust tour was completed, Williams announced his retirement. AC/DC was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.

Gillian G. GaarThe Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica