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David J, Peter Murphy, Kevin Haskins, and Daniel Ash of BAUHAUS. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)
Music

Deep Cut Friday: ‘All We Ever Wanted Was Everything’ by Bauhaus

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Each week, SPIN digs into the catalogs of great artists and highlights songs you might not know for our Deep Cut Friday series.

Many artists have made songs popularly associated with Halloween, from Michael Jackson to Oingo Boingo. But there’s perhaps no band whose entire catalog suits spooky season better than British goth rock trailblazers Bauhaus, whose founding guitarist Daniel Ash is releasing a new project today. The band’s 1979 debut single “Bela Lugosi’s Dead” remains their signature song, but over the years, the more subdued “All We Ever Wanted Was Everything” has emerged as one of their most popular tracks.

The third Bauhaus album, 1982’s The Sky’s Gone Out, was the band’s highest charting release, reaching No. 4 in the U.K. The band largely wrote the album in the studio, ending up with a more diverse and eclectic set of songs including “All We Ever Wanted Was Everything.” The track’s lyrics are as cryptic as any Bauhaus song (“The sound of the drum has called / Flash of youth shoot out of darkness”), but the acoustic arrangement is lush and moving. Bassist David J wrote in his 2014 memoir Who Killed Mr. Moonlight?: Bauhaus, Black Magic and Benediction that the song “evokes nostalgic memories of a time of innocence and naïve yearning.”

“Spirit” was the only single released from The Sky’s Gone Out, but with time, “All We Ever Wanted Was Everything” has become by far the album’s most famous track. It’s been featured in a 2018 episode of The Walking Dead and the 2011 film I Melt with You, and covered by MGMT, John Frusciante, and Xiu Xiu. The first time Bauhaus reunited in 1998, Billy Corgan of Smashing Pumpkins joined the band onstage in Chicago to perform “All We Ever Wanted Was Everything.”  

Three more essential Bauhaus deep cuts:

“Double Dare”

The members of Bauhaus struggled to record a studio version of “Double Dare” that measured up to a live performance they’d done for John Peel’s BBC 1 Radio program. So the band opted to simply open its debut album, 1980’s In the Flat Field, with the Peel Session version of “Double Dare,” which remains perhaps the most powerful drumming by Kevin Haskins in the Bauhaus catalog.

“In Fear of Fear”

Bauhaus aren’t always remembered as one of the great dance punk bands. But they could whip up a frenzied disco beat on songs like the live staple “In Fear of Fear” from 1981’s Mask, which features squealing synths and Daniel Ash on saxophone.

“Slice of Life”

Bauhaus had broken up by the time 1983’s Burning from the Inside was released, and frontman Peter Murphy’s estrangement from the rest of the group resulted in his bandmates taking on more vocal duties. “Slice of Life,” sung by Ash, feels a little like a preview of Love and Rockets, the band he’d form a few years later with David J and Haskins.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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With Ashes and Diamonds Daniel Ash Carries on His Bauhaus Legacy » PopMatters
Music

With Ashes and Diamonds Daniel Ash Carries on His Bauhaus Legacy » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Some people are fortunate enough to play in one successful band; Daniel Ash managed to be in two. Following the dissolution of gothic rock band Bauhaus, Ash and brothers Kevin Haskins & David J founded Love and Rockets in 1985. This trio embodied a slicker sound than the more arty Bauhaus, and Ash has continued to pursue his artistry with his latest group, Ashes and Diamonds.

Ash has formed a band with percussionist Bruce Smith, of Public Image Ltd. fame, and bassist Paul Spencer Denman [Sade]. In some ways, this is a supergroup, but the intention is to keep the album “honest” sounding. Fittingly, their debut record is called Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever.

“I’m all over the place,” the guitarist chuckles. “My mum’s half-French, half-Belgian, and my dad’s English. I’ve lived here in the United States since 1994; do you notice an accent?” It is admittedly more transatlantic than British. “I notice it when I go back,” he laughs. “And I jump into a cab. They say to me: ‘Are you from America?’ I go: ‘Northampton!’ But I very much still sound English in the States still!”

He’s wearing spectacles, but beyond those rock furnishings, he comes across as a humble musician. “I don’t believe in jam sessions,” he admits, discussing the beginnings of Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever. “Now, I would get drum loops and a bassline from Paul [Spencer Denman] and Bruce [Smith]. We did most of this album independently because we live in different parts of the country. Bruce lives on the East Coast, I live on the West; so does Paul.”

He coughs and continues: “So they’d send me stuff, and I’d get the headphones on. I used this cut-up method that William Burroughs used, as did David Bowie. I’d get a bunch of headlines from tacky magazines: The Sun, The National Enquirer. All the gossip mags! They’d have all the best headlines, so I’d cut them up and put them on the kitchen table [while] listening to the backing tracks. If I were lucky, I’d get a song out of it by the end of the day. All this mix and match!”

Not an uncommon method: John Lennon did something very similar on “A Day in the Life” in 1967. “Yeah, that was an example of that,” Ash nods. “‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’ came from a painting with his kid. So, a similar idea, but I got the whole of the song from the headlines. Gets you started on something you wouldn’t usually write about.”

Was it a lengthy process? “We started this seven years ago,” he confirms. “This was started in 2017, 2018, and then COVID hit. So, we had to work independently. And at the 11th hour, we decided to scrap it and start it all again. We booked a studio in Los Angeles for ten days, and re-recorded and remixed everything. This was with a producer called Robert Stevenson.”

Another cough: “What I’m leading up to is that we had time to reflect and perfect everything. Because of that, I’m pretty much 100% on all the songs, but one track I like is ‘Ice Queen’. It’s different: not rock. I love the romantic sound of that track. The romance in it.”

Ash co-wrote the romantic number “So Alive” during the 1980s. “I wrote the lyric on that one,” he smiles. It has proven to be one of Love and Rockets’ most enduring tracks. “The situation with that track is we were going to do it the day before we were in the studio…” He splutters and pauses: “Well, on Friday, we had planned on Monday to do one of Dave’s songs. I had come up with just the riff and thought I had something special here. I had just the riff and the opening line. I said: ‘Give me half an hour.’ I went down into the cellar with a bottle of whiskey. It was a magic moment, because I got the lyrics in half an hour. With the help of a glass, or three!”

Ash joined his bandmates upstairs, where they set up and basically played that song.” Ash is reminded of Bauhaus staple “Bela Lugosi’s Dead” because both compositions were recorded quickly. “We played the song,” he confirms, “and I did a scratch vocal. And then by day two, we got the backing singers in. The whole thing was mixed and produced in 24 hours!”

He denies that the intention was to write a contrast to Bauhaus. “If you think about that track, it’s in the same vein as Lou Reed‘s ‘Walk on the Wild Side’. We didn’t plan it that way initially, but as I say, I was coming up from writing the lyric, and everyone locked in real-quick. We all agreed it needed female backing singers like ‘Walk on the Wild Side’. We got three girls in on backing, but you know, when you’re writing a song, you don’t know where it’s going to go.”

Morale was high in the studio. “David [J] and I were joking,” he giggles. “We said: ‘If ‘So Alive’ isn’t a hit, we quit.’” Ash says that the record company in America printed promos boasting that the album [their eponymous fourth] contained the hit ‘So Alive’. “That’s how confident they were,” he grins. It grossed the top position on the Billboard Modern Rock Charts in 1989.

Returning to Bauhaus, were they compared to Joy Division? “Yeah, because of the similarity in the vocals,” Ash agrees, suggesting that Peter Murphy and Ian Curtis shared a resonance. Curiously, both bands formed sequel outfits with the lead guitarist promoted to lead singer. “I never put that together,” Ash says. “Like New Order, yeah. Love and Rockets certainly sounds different to Bauhaus.”

He suggests that Tones on Tail, a band he formed with drummer Kevin Haskins in 1982 (revived in 2024), sounded different “again”. Ash pauses: “Are you familiar with Tones on Tail?” Pop is a fine exploration of textures. “That was the one album we made,” Ash says. “Kevin’s daughter Diva [Dompé] joined us in 2017 for Poptone. We called ourselves that because we covered Love and Rockets, Tones on Tail, and Bauhaus. We were a covers band, but covering ourselves, which was fun, but for the Cruel World gig that Tones on Tail played in 2024, Diva played bass on that.”

Returning to Bauhaus, some of the tunes, notably “Bela Lugosi’s Dead”, are soaked in reggae imprints. “Well, actually more Kevin, David, and me,” Ash replies. “I don’t think Peter was so into the reggae at that point [August 1979.] It was a mixture of various influences. You can’t really pinpoint…”

He realizes there is a yarn here. “I had this riff,” he elaborates. “This haunting riff: using open tuning. I was talking to Dave on the phone the night before we recorded that song. I said: ‘I have this real haunting riff.’ ‘That’s really funny,’ he said, ‘I’ve got this lyric about the vampire Bela Lugosi.’When we got into the rehearsal studio, I started playing, and Kevin started doing this bossa nova beat. David started on bass and handed the lyrics to Peter. He started singing it pretty much as you hear it, so again, real quick.”

Acknowledging the reggae influence, the guitarist points out that there is “bossa-nova beat there.” As a teenager/young man in the 1970s, Daniel Ash was struck by British glam rock. “I was brought up, you know, the big thing that hit me at 15 years old was the Ziggy Stardust thing,” he confesses. “Life-altering. That, and T-Rex. Iggy & the Stooges. That’s basically all I listened to at the time.”

Ash had an older sibling who was “into the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Kinks,” so this guitarist was exposed to older influences. “My two favorite guitar players are Hendrix and Mick Ronson,” he admits. “I’m not really into lots of shredding, so the Ronson thing was a big influence.”

Was he taken with Queen? “No, that’s different,” he replies. “It’s a little bit like Kiss in America; not the same thing.”

Ashes and Diamonds feature a drummer from John Lydon‘s band Public Image Ltd. “When the Sex Pistols came out in the 1970s, that was mind-blowing. On Top of the Pops, I hadn’t seen anything this exciting the whole Ziggy thing. That’s why a lot of bands came after. Siouxsie & The Banshees, the Damned [sic], the Cure. Sex Pistols are my favorite punk band.”

Primarily a guitarist, Daniel Ash has also dabbled with the saxophone. “There’s some crazy sax on a song called ‘Champagne Charlie’ on this album [Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever],” he confirms. “A bunch of sax at the end of this album.” Bauhaus favored frenzy, as is apparent on “She’s in Parties”. “That sounds polished to me,” he laughs. “If it sounds raw, great. It doesn’t sound raw to me like Velvet Underground raw. I love Velvet Underground, and it suited them to be lo-fi. I think their third album was more of an Andy Warhol vibe; he would use the cheapest cameras, simple lighting. I think the Velvets were influenced by that.”

Reed, like bassist John Cale, had a “healthy ego”, which Ash confirms is “part and parcel of being in a band. You’ve got to have an ego to want to create in the first place, as far as I’m concerned,” Ash says. “It’s tough, but if you ain’t got an ego, you won’t create anything.” Did the pandemic inspire Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever? “It only inspired the lyric to ‘2020’,” he elaborates. “That’s the only track that had an influence. The three of us recorded long-distance initially, but when we decided to re-record it, we were all in LA with Robert. Ten days to get it all done, and we finished it at 22:00 on the tenth day. Much better to do it that way.”

“The first Bauhaus album took two weeks,” Ash admits. “We used the band Crass’s studio, and then years later, with Love and Rockets, we were getting successful.” He pauses: “Not in England, Ireland, or Europe, but the States. We ended up taking two years to make Hot Trip to Heaven. We’re still proud of it, but it was commercial suicide. I remember thinking: ‘This is either our Dark Side of the Moon, or it is going to flop’. Commercially, it bombed, but we’re still proud of it.”

It contrasted the jokes they made about Fleetwood Mac‘s protracted studio times: “We ended up taking two years on an album!” Perhaps humbled by that experience, Daniel Ash takes the time to say thank you for this interview. “If the album’s successful, and there’s interest, then we’ll look at the live level,” he continues. “But if it’s not, then there’s no point going out. It’s in the hands of the Gods. We’re open to it. There’s so much traffic every day, and it’s tough to stand out.”

He’s not a fan of AI. “The concern is that it will take over,” he sighs. “Very strange, and very weird. They will be able to come up with ten Brad Pitts, no problem. Actors are talking about protecting themselves from that happening. We will all become obsolete. I haven’t used any AI in the making of the lyrics.”

Ash admits he’s been “moaning about it” but sees some potential that it could “help the human race, but it also could completely fuck us up,” he warns. “We’re just in the infancy stage. By Christmas, we might not be able to control it. The people who have made it are concerned.”

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Daniel Ash performs with Love and Rockets at The Fillmore Silver Spring on June 11, 2023, Silver Spring, Maryland. (Credit: Paul Morigi/Getty Images)
Music

Bauhaus Alum Daniel Ash’s New Project Is Modern Art

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

“‘Danny, we need a gimmick. Wear a gas mask.’”

Daniel Ash is recalling his first paid gig as a young musician with a band called MI5. It was at Glasgow Rangers Supporters Club in Corby, an industrial town in Northamptonshire, where Ash is from, nearly two hours from London. Aside from its (obvious) Scottish pride, Corby was, according to Ash, also known for its violence, most apparent when they take the small stage—and the audience starts throwing bottles at them. They ran off after only a few minutes, confronted by their promoter, who’d been “piss drunk” since about 3:00 that afternoon.

“He said, ‘What are you doing? Get back out there.’ We said, ‘They hate us, they’re throwing glasses!’ ‘No. When they throw glasses and bottles, that means they love you. When they don’t like you, they jump the stage and beat you up.’ Good thing he wasn’t wearing the gas mask, and instead opted for a “really white” boiler suit. The other guys, in case you were wondering, were “dressed in totally normal clothing, doing their soul thing.” They played together for about a year, Ash, by his own classification, the “weirdo” in the group. 

“I even had a funny haircut back then,” he adds. 

Bauhaus perform at the Roundhouse in Camden, London during the filming of their video of “Ziggy Stardust” in August 1982. Left to Right: David J, Peter Murphy, Daniel Ash, Kevin Haskins. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

I don’t ask and I hadn’t planned to, but he immediately declares he doesn’t want to talk about Bauhaus origins and his well-documented child/teen-hood friends and band members Peter Murphy, David J, and Kevin Haskins. “I’m not going to tell that story again,” he says, launching, unprovoked, into the story. “I knew Peter from 10 years old and hadn’t seen him for five years,” he recalls, of the day he decided to reconnect with Murphy and, shortly thereafter, form a band, Ash as the guitarist. “Then just on the spur of the moment, I just thought, I’m going to drive to Wellingborough, which was 10 miles away. I’m going to drive there and just knock on his door. Neither of us had phones back then, I don’t think. Knocked on his door, and then—boom, boom, boom—and everything started off.” 

Bauhaus debut, 1980’s In the Flat Field, shot the band immediately into legend status, widely regarded as trailblazing the goth genre. This launched Ash into a nonstop creative cycle, with and without bassist David J and drummer Kevin Haskins: Tones on Tail, Love and Rockets, Poptone, a series of solo albums. Most recently, he’s formed Ashes and Diamonds with drummer Bruce Smith (Public Image Ltd.) and bassist Paul Spencer Denman (Sade, Sweetback). Their debut album Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever (releasing October 31) continues Ash’s ongoing legacy of creating sexy art-school soundtracks; its 12 songs—undeniably cinematic, provocative, and powerful—sculpt an unexpected story and create one of the best albums of the year. 

“On a Rocka,” the album’s lead single, features a video directed by Jake Scott (Ridley Scott’s son), compiled footage from a full day-to-evening shoot of Ash riding a motorcycle in and around Joshua Tree. “It was a really fun day because I’m on a bike. What’s better than that, in my element? If you told me when I was 16 years old that I’d be living in Southern California with a load of bikes and being able to ride every day, I would never have believed you. It’s a dream come true times 10. Yes, it’s great. Having a variety of bikes is fantastic.” He says he has 25 bikes on the road, one to commemorate every tour. “I take a different one out every day,” he says. “There was actually a quote from Steve McQueen. He said, ‘I’d rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than any city on earth.’ I’m pretty much the same.” 

(Bruce Smith, Daniel Ash, and Paul Spencer. Photo courtesy of Ashes and Diamonds.)

His love of riding started at 12, stealing his father’s Lambretta scooter. After getting his license at 16, he got his own bike, a 42 pound (as in English dollars) Triumph with no wheels. “I got it from a farmer,” he says. “Then I took it home and got some wheels and built it. The first bike I ever got was a little 250 BSA. Then I went from that real quick to a 500 Triumph Twin, and then never looked back. My brother, he was a mod in the ’60s, and he was like Sting in Quadrophenia. He was the king mod. I’ve said this story before, but it is true. Girls used to pay him to be on the back of his bike going through town center on a Friday and Saturday night. Just to be seen with him on the back of the bike. That’s how popular he was. He had the bike, just like in Quadrophenia. He had one of those bikes with all the mirrors on it, and the fur things on the back, and this and that, full on like a Christmas tree going down the street. His best friend was a rocker who had a BSA 650. He took me on the back of that. As soon as I got on the bike, no way was I going to be fucking around with scooters. It was all about motorcycles because the power of motorcycles is through the roof in comparison with any scooter. I leaned towards the motorcycle thing, not the scooter thing.”

(Credit: Regan Catam)

“Actually, this is going to sound really goth…” he says. “I love visiting graveyards. Doesn’t get much more goth than that, does it, thinking about it? In the graveyard, I’d look at all the ages of what people died. I was fascinated by how long people lived. Back then, there was a lot of infant deaths, but there was also a lot of people that lived to ripe old ages. Going back to the 18th, 17th, and 16th centuries.

“There are some of these tombstones that go back to the 13th century in England. They’re all crooked. A lot of them, you can’t see any writing on them. They’re covered in moss. I still do that all the time because on a bike, you always find stuff that you would never usually find when you go for a wander. Yes, that was one of my favorite things to do… I must be a goth after all,” he says, with a laugh. 

“I’m joking. Of course I’m not a goth. I love sunshine and riding on bikes in the daylight. Goths don’t do that.” The airborne vibrations of this statement no doubt shattering thorny goth hearts throughout the globe.

Love and Rockets in 1987: David J, Kevin Haskins, and Ash. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns/Getty Images)

If we look at Bauhaus as the start of Ash’s career (let’s leave MI5 out of this for now), we can easily trace Ash’s evolution from dark-aesthetic subculture pioneer, to new wave pop chart-topper (Love and Rockets), traveling through other uncompromising peaks and valleys to arrive here, at Ashes and Diamonds, a genre-defying blend of Ash’s entire career, mixed with modern, high-tech, heavy beats, fit for a club or an action thriller. (Don’t worry, he’s still taking us to dimly-lit places.) 

The Ashes and Diamonds trio officially came together seven years ago when East Coast-based Smith and Denman, who’s often in the U.K., were finally all in the studio together. Their careful collaboration slowed, like so many, when the pandemic hit in 2020. Even after the album was recorded, Ash says at the 11th hour they went into a Hollywood studio to rerecord everything in just 10 days. “It was a very expensive mistake to think we had the album finished, but it just wasn’t good enough,” Ash says. “Tweak it and tweak it and tweak it—because now it’s fully realized. There’s no filler tracks, there’s no cover versions of anything. The production is like we’re all 100% on it now. We had that breathing space to really get it right.”

Ash says he used “the cut-up idea,” popularized by William S. Burroughs, to write nearly all of the lyrics on Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever. “I remember when I was a kid, I saw it on the TV,” he recalls. “I use trashy magazines because they have the most juicy headlines, like the National Enquirer and stuff like that, and People magazine and all the gossip mags because you get terrific headlines.

“Then I just cut them all. I cut all these headlines up. Put them on the kitchen table. Listen to the backing track, bass drums, and then I start joining the sentences together. Then hopefully, if I’m lucky, by the end of the afternoon or evening, I’ve got a song out of it. All of these songs and all the titles came from cut-ups from trashy magazines.” 

Ash performs with Love and Rockets at the YouTube Theater on August 13, 2024 in Inglewood, California. (Credit: Corine Solberg/Getty Images)

This conversation started when I’d noted my affinity for the album’s ninth track, “Setting Yourself Up for Love,” a song I’d referred to as a vampire love song. “‘Setting Yourself Up for Love’ must have been something that I’d seen as a title, or it could have been two sentences, ‘setting yourself,’ and then the word ‘love,’ and I join them together. That’s the whole cut-up thing.

“What’s great about it is it sets you free because you don’t have to work and sit there and think, how do I feel about whatever? This thing takes over. Your subconscious takes over, and you’re just having fun putting words together. It’s such a great way to create lyrics. 98% of this album, most of the other stuff I’ve done as well in the past is like that. Again, I don’t know what I’m going to write about when I very first sit down and have the track in my head. I don’t know. I just look at words. Oh, I like that headline. I like this. I like that. Put them on the kitchen table, and then I start mixing them up. Then suddenly, it’ll start working. Then I’ll have a whole song.

“It wouldn’t have been about something that I would have even wanted to sing about initially, but it creates itself because of the cut-up idea. That would have been the case with that track.” The ambiguity, the individual interpretations, he loves it. “Go wherever you want to with it,” he says. 

Ash in 1982. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

It’s no surprise that Ash started out as a visual artist, doing an extra year at art school because he loved it so much. “They couldn’t get me out of there,” he says. “I loved the solitude of being on my own. When everybody had left at 5:00 or 6:00, I’d be there until 10:00 p.m. with my little record player, playing records and doing my own work there. They used to have to kick me out every night. I was totally at home at art school.” 

He majored in industrial design. “What that actually meant was you could do whatever the fuck you wanted all day long,” he says. “It was perfect. It was very loose back then. This is back in the ’70s. Industrial design basically meant you can work in plaster, oil colors, gouache, water colors, anything you wanted to. It was very, very free and easy. Yes, I absolutely loved it.” 

That’s where he met Kevin Haskins and David J; Tones on Tail bassist Glenn Campling also went to art school. 

“I went for a job at the Weetabix factory,” he says, recalling making the top 10 of applicants for a job to design Weetabix cereal cartons “for the rest of [his] life.” At the second interview, he was terrified he might actually be offered the position. Luckily, his fashion sense blew the opportunity for him. “The guys that were interviewing me knew my older brother because he went to art school as well. They said, ‘Your brother’s eccentric.’ He says, ‘Why?’ He said, ‘He came to the interview in a black velvet suit, and he had earrings on.’ That was outrageous to them. I wasn’t going to be fitting in doing the yogurt cartons. I remember after I went away, they said to me, ‘We’re so sorry, but you haven’t got the job.’ I said, ‘Oh, thank you so much.’ I drove out of there in my $50 car, my old Ford Cortina. I could see the Weetabix sign. I’ll always remember it getting smaller and smaller in the rearview mirror, and me going, ‘Oh, that’s it. That’s it. I can tell Dad now, ‘well, I tried, didn’t get the job.’ That’s it.’ It’s funny because the next couple of years, I think I ended up pumping gas at a gas station until what happened, happened.”

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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