Tom Ashton

Tom Ashton is a musician, producer and film composer. He is also an original founder member and guitarist of early 1980s British gothic rock/post-punk band The March Violets.[1][2][3] Based in Leeds, England, the band released many tracks which went on to be rated as classics of their genre. He also guested in bands The Sisters of Mercy,[4] The Danse Society and toured and recorded[5] with Clan of Xymox. As a side project to The Violets, he also co-wrote and recorded the first album from The Batfish Boys, The Gods Hate Kansas.

In 1987 his music was featured in director John Hughes' coming of age drama, Some Kind of Wonderful. A year later he co-wrote the score for Zelda Barron's teen thriller, The Bulldance, during his stint in London Records band Hard Rain.

Throughout the 1990s he was based in London and played in various bands, including Amania, with ex-Violets singer Cleo Murray and Craig Adams and also Bully, with Australian singer/songwriter/actress Abi Tucker.

After reforming in 2007, The March Violets released their first proper studio album in 2013, Made Glorious. The band also toured extensively in the US and Europe.

In 2012 he returned to film scoring and completed 8 features with director Daniel E. Falicki and two shorts for director Ryan Lieske.[6] In 2016 he embarked on an audio re-imagining of E. Elias Merhige's Begotten in tandem with its director. This is still a work in progress.

In 2016 he founded SubVon Studio based in Athens, Georgia and since then has recorded, mixed, and mastered many Georgia based darkwave bands including Vision Video,[7] Tears for the Dying, Hip To Death and Entertainment!

  1. ^ "Tom Ashton". Discogs. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  2. ^ "March Violets - Interview". Penny Black Music. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  3. ^ "Traveler: Tom Ashton | Cargo Manifest: The March Violets + Leeds + Music for FIlms". Spotify. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  4. ^ "Tom Ashton - SistersWiki.org - The Sisters Of Mercy Fan Wiki". sisterswiki.org. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  5. ^ Xymox – Spiritual High / Wild Is The Wind (1993, CD), retrieved 17 February 2021
  6. ^ "Tom Ashton". IMDb. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  7. ^ "Vision Video and Tom Ashton cover a dark classic from Ski Patrol". Vanyaland. 14 August 2020. Retrieved 16 February 2021.