You’ve got great taste.
Sign in to follow your favorite artists, save events, & more.
Sign In
Bandsintown
get app
Sign Up
Log In
Sign Up
Log In

Industry
ArtistsEvent Pros
HelpPrivacyTerms
Get Tickets
See Tickets
About this concert
Shiiine On Weekender 2025

Find a place to stay

Event Lineup
Follow
UNKLE
156K Followers
Follow
Cast
71.6K Followers
Follow
The Undertones
63.4K Followers
Follow
Inspiral Carpets
44.1K Followers
Follow
The Bluetones
38.6K Followers
Follow
Reef
36.5K Followers
Follow
Jesus Jones
31.8K Followers
Follow
Sleeper
23.2K Followers
Follow
DJ Yoda
15.1K Followers
Follow
The Others
15K Followers
Follow
The Icicle Works
14.8K Followers
Follow
The Soup Dragons
14.2K Followers
Follow
Senser
10.1K Followers
Follow
The Spitfires
8.6K Followers
Follow
Pastel
7.51K Followers
Follow
Rats
4.84K Followers
Follow
Northside
4.52K Followers
Follow
CUD
3.83K Followers
Follow
My Life Story
3.34K Followers
Follow
BMX Bandits
2.79K Followers
Follow
Kyle Falconer
2.71K Followers
Follow
Ultrasound
1.87K Followers
Follow
Deja Vega
1.55K Followers
Follow
Miles Hunt
1.49K Followers
Follow
Cronin
1.2K Followers
Follow
The Dream Machine
917 Followers
Follow
SPACE
849 Followers
Follow
Ian Prowse
764 Followers
Follow
S*M*A*S*H
699 Followers
Follow
David Gedge
345 Followers
Follow
Phil Hartnoll
95 Followers
Follow
Rob Newman
59 Followers
Follow
Easily follow your favorite artists by syncing your music
Sync Music
musicSyncBanner

Share Event

The Soup Dragons Biography

The Soup Dragons were a Scottish rock band of the late 1980s and early 1990s, named after a character in the 1970s children's TV show The Clangers.

The Soup Dragons formed in Bellshill, Scotland a town very near to Glasgow (which would later spawn another popular band, Teenage Fanclub) in 1985. The line up was Sean Dickson (vocals, lead guitar), Jim McCulloch (guitar, second voice) and Sushil K. Dade (bass). The original drummer, Ross A. Sinclair, left the group after the first proper album, This Is Our Art, to pursue a career in art, and was replaced by Paul Quinn. Most of their songs were written by Dickson, while some were co-written Dickson/McCulloch.

Originally lumped in with the C86 movement, along with fellow members of the Bellshill Sound, such as the BMX Bandits and Teenage Fanclub, they went through a number of stylistic changes in their career.

Their debut was Buzzcocks-inspired pop-punk, and over the course of six singles (collected in 1987 on a US-only compilation, Hang Ten), they gradually developed a more complex rock guitar which culminated in their first album proper This Is Our Art.

In the year following This Is Our Art their sound got heavier and heavier. Suddenly they underwent a major change from an indie rock sound, to the rock-dance crossover baggy sound, popular at the time with the release of the album Lovegod. This change mirrored that of fellow Scottish band Primal Scream, and can be attributed to the rise of the ecstasy-fueled acid house rave scene in the UK. This led to accusations that they were jumping on the "baggy" bandwagon. However, in 1990, it produced their most notable hit single in the UK, "I'm Free", a cover of a The Rolling Stones song.

Subsequent albums continued the rock-dance crossover sound, as they concentrated on trying to break America, succeeding in 1992, when "Divine Thing" hit #35 on the American pop chart.

But the band split in 1995. Paul Quinn joined fellow Bellshill band Teenage Fanclub. Sushil K. Dade formed the experimental post rock band Future Pilot AKA, and singer Sean Dickson formed The High Fidelity.
Read More
Rock
Follow artist