Dempsey was born on 29 November 1958 in Salisbury,
Southern Rhodesia (now known as
Harare,
Zimbabwe). His family later settled in
Crawley, West Sussex, where he was a school friend of future bandmates
Robert Smith and
Lol Tolhurst. Along with various classmates, the three first formed a band called the Obelisk in 1972, which eventually evolved into the Easy Cure and finally
the Cure, the original lineup of which consisted of Dempsey on bass guitar, alongside Smith and Tolhurst. Upon the official formation of the Cure in 1978, Dempsey was the band's bassist starting with their first single "
Killing an Arab" and then their debut album
Three Imaginary Boys in 1979. Dempsey has the distinction of being the only member of the Cure other than Smith to perform lead vocals on a released track, doing so for their cover of the
Jimi Hendrix song "
Foxy Lady" on the 1979 album. During sessions for the band's second album
Seventeen Seconds, Dempsey criticized the shift in Smith's songwriting toward gloomy
gothic rock. He left the Cure in November 1979 and was replaced by
Simon Gallup. During his later days with the Cure, Dempsey had been filling in for
the Associates on bass, and officially joined that band soon after leaving the Cure. He was a member of the Associates until 1983, appearing on the albums
Fourth Drawer Down and
Sulk. During this period he also served briefly as a session and touring bassist for
Roxy Music. Dempsey next joined the
new wave band
the Lotus Eaters and was a member from 1983 to 1985. In the early 1990s, Dempsey made several guest appearances with band
Presence, which featured his former Cure bandmate Lol Tolhurst. He later composed music for the animated TV series
PB Bear and Friends and scored the short animated film
Swan Song. During this period he was also briefly a member of
Levinhurst, another project headed by Tolhurst. Dempsey now works in audio production and restoration for various companies, and founded his own firm MDM Media. ==Discography==