The Nectarine No. 9, comprising Henderson on guitar and vocals, guitarist and keyboardist Simon Smeeton, bassist Iain Holford, and drummer John Thompson, formed in Glasgow in 1991. Henderson, who had first gained attention as the leader of the avant-funk Fire Engines in 1980, and Smeeton had first played together in the underrated '80s popsters Win. Their new group debuted with 1992's A Sea With Three Stars, which was followed later the same year with the Unloaded for You EP. A nine-track compilation of various BBC sessions recorded in the first half of 1993 was released by Strange Fruit under the title Guitar Thieves. A 16-track summation of the first album and EP, Niagara Falls, was released in the U.S. and Canada in 1994; it also included one new track, This Arsehole's Been Burned Too Many Times Before, that came out on a limited edition 7" in the U.K.
That song turned up a third time on the Nectarine No. 9's long-delayed second proper album, 1995's Saint Jack. Even more dissonant than A Sea With Three Stars, Saint Jack also introduced a new fascination with electronic noise on a few tracks. After a tour with Henderson's old mate Edwyn Collins, the group went underground for two full years before finally returning in 1997 as the backing group and co-writers on Scots poet Jock Scot's album My Personal Culloden, which sounded like a cross between Ivor Cutler and John Cooper Clarke's albums with the Invisible Girls. The Nectarine No. 9's third proper album, the puzzlingly-titled Fried for Blue Material, was released in 1998 on the Glasgow indie Creeping Bent, and included the group's side of a 1997 split single with Suicide singer Alan Vega, Port of Mars. ~ Stewart Mason, Rovi