After
Psychocandy, the band recorded and released the single "Some Candy Talking", which is commonly misunderstood as being about
heroin use. In a 2005 interview with Jim Reid featured in
Filter Magazine, Reid noted that: '"Some Candy Talking" had nothing to do with drugs, actually. It was just something a radio DJ picked up on, and it was banned in all the major radio stations in the UK.' It should be noted though that images of poppy flowers are featured in the video for the single, seeming to imply that the song is indeed about heroin. Furthermore it wasn't banned by the only UK radio station likely to play it, BBC Radio 1, being voted at no. 9 in that years John Peel Festive fifty
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/johnpeel/festive50s/1980s/1986/
Following the release of "Some Candy Talking", Bobby Gillespie left to front
Primal Scream on a full time basis. The band's second album,
Darklands, was released in September
1987. Featuring a more melodic sound, the album was recorded almost entirely by the Reids themselves, replacing live drums with a drum machine, and received overwhelmingly positive reviews by the British music press.
The band's live shows, at one time considered the most exciting element of the band and the reason for most of their success, were now overshadowed by their records. In 1987 they toured without a drummer, instead employing a roadie to play a tape of drum tracks through the PA system. The gigs were very poorly received and they quickly reverted back to live drums, drafting in
John Moore , then Dave Evans, former Mary Chain soundman and bass player with
Biff Bang Pow! (which also featured Alan McGee and Dick Green of Creation Records), Richard Thomas for two years, subsequently replaced by
Steve Monti in
1990. Moore went on to form John Moore and the Expressway, and released a solo album before forming
Black Box Recorder with
Luke Haines. Douglas Hart also left in 1990. The fluid nature of the Mary Chain's line up continued throughout their entire career, with a revolving door of drummers, bassists and guitarists being recruited for TV appearances and gigs whenever they were required, the only constants being the Reid brothers.
The band's dangerous reputation culminated at a gig at the RPM club in
Toronto in November 1987, when Jim Reid allegedly hit two fans with a microphone stand for spitting on him. Jim was arrested and spent a night in jail. He was subsequently given absolute discharge after agreeing to give £500 to charity.
Following the odds-and-sods collection
Barbed Wire Kisses (
1988) and constant touring, the album
Automatic was released in September
1989. Boasting heavy use of synthesized bass and
keyboards, the album was not received quite as well as its predecessors. It contained the singles "Head On" and the
Dylan ode, "Blues From A Gun". By this time, the violence that was originally associated with the band was practically non-existent and the Reid brothers were less antagonistic and aggressive in general.