ster, all other media have been banned by Hutchence's family from the funeral. The service for Hutchence, the INXS front man found hanging by a belt from the back of his hotel door on Saturday, is expected to feature INXS rock songs, according to local media. Miller's statement said the service would be broadcast live by Seven Network, which would provide tapes to other stations. No print or radio journalists will be allowed inside the church. According to one British media report, Hutchence's lover Paula Yates has said she plans to dye her wedding dress black and wear it to the funeral. Yates and Hutchence were expected to be married in January. Yates, 37, and the couple's 16-month-old daughter Heavenly Hiraani Tiger Lily, have not been seen in public since their arrival in Sydney on Monday. But the British television personality told British media on the flight from London that she blamed her former husband Bob Geldof for Hutchence's death, saying the singer took his life due to the acrimony surrounding her divorce from Geldof in 1996. A Sydney coroner on Monday said a post mortem on Hutchence, 37, found he died from hanging, but said it was still not clear whether the hard-living singer had committed suicide. Irish rock musician Geldof has declined to comment. INXS, pronounced In Excess, had been together since starting on the Australian pub circuit in 1977 and were to have begun their 20th anniversary "Lose Your Head" tour on Tuesday. The tour has been cancelled and the band's future is under a cloud.