•
Andy Sheppard: Jazz saxophonist and composer (born 1957). •
The Silhouettes: Formerly The Falcons. A 7-piece rock and roll band, prominent in the early 1960s. Brian Howard (vocals), Jerry Hatfield (lead guitar), Dave Johnson (bass), Roger Parker (rhythm), Alan Laker (keyboards), Nick Munton (sax), Mike J Lewis (drums). Support to numerous top acts of the era throughout the UK. •
Nick Sheppard: Guitarist and songwriter (born 1960). Came to prominence at the age of 16 with punk band
The Cortinas, with recordings on Step Forward Records and CBS. After they disbanded he was a member of
The Viceroys and
The Spics. After
The Clash sacked Mick Jones in 1983, Sheppard toured America and Europe with them and played on their final album 'Cut the Crap'. He then joined up with
Gareth Sager to form
Head. •
Roni Size: Ryan Williams (Roni Size) is a music producer and DJ (born 1969). He came to prominence in 1997 as the founder and leader of
Reprazent, a drum and bass collective. They won the
Mercury Prize for their album "New Forms" in 1997. •
Curt Smith: Musician and songwriter (born 1961,
Bath). Best known for his work with
Roland Orzabal as
Tears for Fears. Smith and Orzabal met as teenagers and formed their first band at school, then went on to form the ska influenced
Graduate. They were also session musicians for the band
Neon. Smith has released three albums as a solo artist, the last two in association with guitarist-producer Charlton Pettus. •
Smith & Mighty: drum and bass/trip hop duo (1987–present), consisting of
Rob Smith and Ray Mighty, with Peter D Rose. Their early work included breakbeat versions of "
Walk On By" and "
Anyone Who Had a Heart", by
Burt Bacharach/
Hal David. •
Sneaky Bat Machine: Cybergoth band (1997–2000). The band consisted of Sneakybat (aka Ross Tregenza), Evil C (aka Crash 303, aka Clive Lewis), and Maxislag (aka Max Niblock). In 2000 the band changed its name (to
Goteki), and its musical direction to 'lo-fi phuturists'. They released a number of albums before disbanding in 2006. •
Specimen: A Glam Goth band (1980–1985 and 2006–present). Guitarist/vocalist Jon Klein was formerly in the band
Europeans, and later went on to work with
Siouxie & the Banshees. Although their record output was not prolific, they are credited as one of the pioneers of the
Gothic movement. •
Spiro, a band who emerged in 1993 from the Bristol session scene, combining folk, Celtic, minimalist, ambient and dance influences. They reached a higher level of fame when
Peter Gabriel signed them to his world label
Real World Records. •
Stackridge: The band mix folk, pop and progressive rock with quirky humour (1969–1976, 1999–2000, 2007–present). Formed by Andy Davis and James "Crun" Walter, their debut single was Dora the Female Explorer. They played the first and last notes at the first ever
Glastonbury Festival in 1970. James Warren and Andy Davis went on to form
The Korgis. •
Stanton Warriors: Breakbeat duo Dominic Butler and Mark Yardley (1997–present). They are a DJ and producer team of Breakbeat electronic dance music. Their name was originally conceived from one of the warriors tripping over a "Stanton Warrior" draincover on Tower Bridge, London. •
Stantz: Bristol based multi instrumentalist / producer and performer composing a mixture of world sounds with contemporary dance music such as garage, dubstep and IDM •
Startled Insects: Synthpop/Rock band (1983–1996). Originally a collective of three producers/multi-instrumentalists (Tim Norfolk, Bob Locke and Richard Grassby-Lewis), they were commissioned by the
BBC to produce music for two of their wildlife documentaries. •
Stereo Models: New wave band (1971–1981). The Stereo Models song 'Move Fast-Stay Ahead, released on the Bristol compilation album
Avon Calling in 1979. •
Mark Stewart: Vocalist, songwriter, and pioneer of
industrial hip-hop (1960–2023). Founding member of
The Pop Group, after their split in 1981 he recorded as a solo artist, and with
The Maffia. He has been a major influence on Bristol's eclectic music scene where he blended diverse genres of dub, funk, punk, techno, and electro noise along with political lyrics. •
The Stingrays: New wave band (1977–current). The line-up included, amongst others: Russ Mainwaring,
Chris Bostock, Sean McLuskey, and Bill Stair. Current Line up is Russ Mainwaring (guitar/vocals), Paul Matthews (bass) and Richard H. Meredith (drums). •
Strangelove: (1991–1998). The initial line up was:
Patrick Duff (vocals, guitar),
Alex Lee (guitar, keyboards), Julian Pransky-Poole (guitar), Joe Allen (bass) and
David Francolini (drums). Francolini played two gigs with the band, before being replaced by John Langley, then Nick Powell (keyboards) joined in late 1995. Their 1996 single 'Beautiful Alone' reached No. 34 in the UK Chart. •
Steve Street: Bassist with
Europeans, and later joined
Apartment, then briefly
Interview. He recorded demos at his studio (GBH) for
The Pop Group and the
Glaxo Babies, and subsequently went on to engineer and produce a number of other Bristol-based bands including Electric Guitars,
The X-Certs,
Vice Squad and
The Blue Aeroplanes. •
Svalbard (band): A Post-hardcore/blackgaze band formed in 2011, Svalbard are seen as hugely important and influentual to the blackgaze genre. Consists of Serena Cherry (Vocals and guitars), Liam Phelan (Vocals and guitars), Matt Francis (Bass), and Mark Liley (Drums). Set to break up at the end of 2026, the band will end their musical career with 4 studio albums. ==T==