Ian Astbury
Real Name: Ian Robert Astbury
Ian Robert Astbury was born May 14, 1962, in Heswall, Cheshire, (near Liverpool) England, to a Scottish mother Marion Lindsay(died on Mothers day in Glasgow May 14, 1979/Ian's 17th Birthday) and an English father Robert (died 21 Feb 1990, was 58). He spent a majority of his youth living in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, where he discovered the different cultures and backgrounds of various tribes of Indigenous Peoples in southern Ontario which has featured (influenced) in many of his songs over the years.
His mother, and his aunts on both sides, were huge Beatles fans, which was Ian first memory of music.
1973 Ian first records he purchased with his own money 110717 & 49817.
28 June 1975 First Live Music experience with his brother. Pink Floyd – Ivor Wynne Stadium, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada 348873
1978 left school to work, because his mother was diagnosed with cancer
Saw live Rhettmatic and then a week later The Stranglers In Glasgow.
1979-1980 Liverpool first experience with music/bands, rehearsed 1 or 2 times with Send No Flowers, and then shortly after in 1980 moved to Belfast, homeless, living in a squat with others, came up with one song, influenced by reading "The Island of Doctor Moreau by H.G. Wells" a passage, "Not to walk on all four, are we not men?" and he saw this as a lyric and came up with a drumbeat,.. band was called "Children Of Lust", and they only played in a front room of damp squat in Belfast, which Astbury stated during a audio interview/podcast with Rick Rubin in July 2025.
1980-1983
Astbury then started following (became a devotee) of Crass and stayed in the building (converted living) with them for a time, which Astbury states opened his mind to so many things, which then lead him into the city of Bradford, and was offered a room for 10 quid a week where in the basement of the same house, the ex band members of Violation (9) were rehearsing with gear from New Model Army. They asked Ian if he could sing, rehearsed with some Sex Pistols tunes, and then offered to be in a band.
They moved to rehearsing on top floor of Roots Records Shop, which was owned by Rastafarians, who was the basically the first audience would watch them play. They had three songs, and the drummers brother heard about a local Yorkshire TV show who were making a documentary about unemployed youth cultures (who were making art), and was able to get them on. They were filmed for a few days, also in a local pub, with about 80 kids to be the audience. They did not have a name for the band at the time and was asked what the bands name was, for the TV documentary. Ian was reading a book about Native American Anthropology about serpent mounds which were referred to as The Southern Death Cult, because they worshipped skulls, which he took the name from. This was the first gig, which was televised locally. This Yorkshire TV footage is apparently lost, according to Astbury he saw it once, and it actually did happen. At this time, Ian was known as Ian Lindsay (using his mothers maiden name).
March 1983 Ian quit Southern Death Cult, due to personality differences and disagreements with signing contracts with CBS, as it did not feel right for him.
Ian moved to London, meet up with Billy Duffy, and then formed Death Cult.
In 1984, the band dropped the word Death and achieved international fame as The Cult. He has been the vocalist with The Cult ever since.
Astbury married Aimee Nash in Las Vegas on May 26, 2012. He had met in May 2010 during the "LOVE LIVE" tour, when her band, The Black Ryder, opened up for The Cult.