The original line-up consisted of Coughlan, Nick Allum, Jonathan Fell, Zac Woolhouse and Aindrias O'Gruama. They took their name from the Fatima Mansionscorporation flats in Rialto, Dublin.[2][3]
They entered the Top 10 of the UK Singles Chart in 1992[4] with a heavily reworked version of Bryan Adams' song "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You", taken from an NMEtribute album in aid of the charity, the Spastics Society. The single was a double A-side; the flip-track, Manic Street Preachers' version of "Suicide Is Painless" received most of the radioairplay.
They also gained mainstream exposure by opening a European leg of U2's Zoo TV Tour in 1992, although they were nearly booed off the stage and almost started a riot when front man Coughlan swore at a Milan audience and insulted the Pope.[5] The band often courted controversy with religion, dictators, empires and general authority being targets for Coughlan's vitriol.[1] Despite this, The Guardian newspaper described him as "the most underrated lyricist in pop today",[1] and DJ John Peel said he could "listen to Cathal Coughlan sing the phone book".
The album and singles campaign for 1994's Lost in the Former West was styled on the glamour of Liberace, and featured a cover version of The Walker Brothers's "Nite Flights".