RIP David Bowie – 1947-2016

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Now is the winter of our discontent. Having lost rock’n’roll legend Lemmy so recently, we must now contemplate a world without the genre-busting alien enigma of David Bowie, who has passed days after his final album, Blackstar, was released.

Silently battling cancer for over a year previous, the incomparable artist has left a world forever enriched by his unmistakable creativity, and a void that cannot be filled by any other artist.

In particular, the Goth scene has much to thank him for, as a defiant outsider reinventing himself against the mainstream – we have him to thank for making a space in which we can all rediscover ourselves.

So long as we play his music, he continues to live with us all.

“Look up here, I’m in heaven I’ve got scars that can’t be seen
I’ve got drama, can’t be stolen
Everybody knows me now”

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RIP Lemmy Kilmister – 1945-2015

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Seven Songs that Shaped You: One

One of the many ‘tag a friend’ chains doing the rounds on Facebook at the moment is ‘Seven Songs that Shaped You’. Normally I forget to ever attempt these, but it strikes me that it would be excellent look at what songs really defined me as a person, ensuring my ongoing love for Goth music – and maybe beyond? We’ll have to see where this exercise leads! First (and last, and always) has to be The Sisters of Mercy.

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Tired and emotional at the Sisters in Leeds, 2015

My all-time stand-out number one band, despite Eldritch’s stolid protestations down the years about being ‘Goth’. I respect any band’s desire to reinvent themselves, to avoid being pigeonholed, and I’m part of that small but loud (in every sense of the word) group that rocks up at Sisters gigs in the most garish shirts I can find.

Like a good babybat growing up, I used netgoth.org.uk to advise me on what tunes I should be listening to, and hit the shops accordingly. After a few spins of Floodland – probably one of the first albums I ever bought – I found Lucretia grabbing me each and every time. It was also one of the few tunes I could rely on the DJ at our local ‘alternative’ club to grudgingly play, early in the evening, before turning to the rap-metal or whatever filled the dancefloor more.

But it wasn’t until I started collecting bootlegs that I found a whole new level of appreciation for the Sisters – and it reached perfection for me, back when it all started, with the Teachers / Adrenochrome medley.

That pulsating bass line hooked me in and never let go, even as various other Sisters anthems rose and fell in my estimation. The jagged beauty of Leonard Cohen’s lyrics was immediately apparent, and I could see why it had fired the imagination of the young Spiggy – his delivery, in a throbbing and warbling voice that is at such odds with the rest of his career as a gravel-throated crooner, seems permeated with pure youthful enthusiasm.

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One of the earliest Sisters demo tapes, with thanks to the Sisters wiki pages

The medley was part of the very first Sisters gigs in 1981, and I dream of being there when the drum machine suddenly surges into a new gear and the guitars shred in. Eldritch’s voice takes on more of that superior nasal drawl, packed with delay and reverb, as he begins spitting out his lyrics, including the eternal brilliance of DREAD IN MONOCHROME – a phrase that I should have tattooed someone on my pale flesh in salute.

It’s far more punk-sounding, owing more to influences like The Stooges than contemporaries like the overly-dramatic Bauhaus, or sparse and barren Joy Division, whom the Sisters suffered from repeated comparisons to. I love both of those bands as well, but to lump them all together is to do each of them a serious disservice.

The Sisters of Mercy would transform many times from when they took off – the gloomy, rich and dark sounds of First and Last and Always, through the synthetic coldness and delirious bombast of Floodland, to the snarled and ironic AOR of Vision Thing, before they adopted their current banner of, well… whatever describes the heavy, slow-paced, low-burning thinking-man’s rock of tracks like Suzanne, Summer, Romeo Down, Slept…

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A fanzine photo of the Sisters, after their third ever gig – with thanks to the great people of My Heartland

Yet Teachers still finds its place in the modern live set as well, occasionally, as part of a medley with the deadly and sultry ‘On The Wire‘, which it fits with like a hand in a glove. Much like the band itself, the songs can be reinvented and reintroduced to a brand new audience each and every time.

I’ve loved and left many songs throughout the Sisters catalogue, but if pressed, I will always return to those very early days, where they first broke ground with aggressive, punk-infused live shows, showcasing the acidic wit of Goth’s lizard king himself. Despite his protestations to the contrary.


 

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Whitby Halloween 2015: Saturday Bands Review

A couple of days ago we posted our review of the Friday Night Bands at Whitby Goth Weekend November 2015. Read on, brave follower, and learn what we made of Saturday’s bands!

wgwoct2015teaser-6As always, the first band on stage has the heaviest job to do, but In Isolation are consummate professionals; indeed, lead singer and guitarist Ryan Swift cuts a dashing pose in elegant three-piece.

This collaboration between three veteran UK alternative musicians is hypnotically tuneful – they begin, and immediately people are lured in from the foyer and begin snapping photos of this professional outfit. Swift’s vocal style is deep, passionate and throbbing with emotion, owing more to The Editors than Eldritch – a welcome change!

The band – including guest bassist Jo – unleash a track called “Tear Me Apart” that will appear on their debut album coming out this year… and you immediately know this will be a valuable addition to the music collection of any discerning collector. It’s distinct, intense and heartfelt.
“A Certain Fractal Light”, title track from the new album, reminds this reviewer of early Smiths, with Swift channeling Morrissey at his most passionate, rather than his most contrary!

As they deliver more songs to a hungry audience, we pick out deliciously dangerous synths in the backing tracks, authentic post-punk guitar riffs and a mesmeric thumping bass line, all laid lovingly over an energetic drummer that gives the whole performance vibrant life. The crowd is entranced – a brilliant beginning.

wgwoct2015teaser-7It’s a violent and ugly gear-change when Vince Ripper and the Rodent Show take the stage by force, next! Wielding a theremin and the will to use and abuse it, Vince unleashes the tunes whilst Batcave escapee Ratfink twitches and lurches across the stage, screaming and howling along to some abused song I eventually figure out is The Cramps “Human Fly”.

The band use Lux Interior and The Cramps as their unholy religion, and also in their pantheon of gods – or devils? – are Alien Sex Fiend, who Ratfink cut his fangs with as guitarist and drummer. He cheerfully unleashes a bastardized, feedback-riddled version of “I Walk The Line” that is even more fucked up than Nik could manage, and the crowd is whooping and hollering and lapping up this twisted horrorpunk, sleazy goth-rock noise.

wgwoct2015teaser-8Later we crash headlong into “Ghost Rider”, and the band begins hurling 3D glasses into the crowd. It’s not just a gig, it’s a performance and we’re joining Vince and Ratty on ‘Adventures in 3D’, a projected mashup of Fifties horror movies and other spooky ephemera as they generate that unearthly chorus of covers and capering that is absolutely electrifying the Spa. The audience is jammed up almost to the rear doors and they’re hanging on Ratty’s every twitch, laugh, shriek and yell, laughing even louder when he manages to knacker his microphone in the process.

I thoroughly enjoyed this insane cavorting, but my only criticism is the same that goes for Alien Sex Fiend when they played WGW in 2012 – and that’s the loving lingering over every track, that inevitably degenerates into simple shouting and feedback. I’m having the most fun when the band are tight as a whip and ploughing mercilessly through the tunes.

Then Ratty wishes a fond goodnight to all boils and ghouls, and they depart to ecstatic cheers and a delightfully cheesy Hammer Horror organ fanfare. Catch these Blackpool bad boys at your earliest opportunity.

wgwoct2015teaser-10I’ve seen The Last Cry several times, and every gig looks like severe emotional torture for their singer, Andy Birch. He hangs from his mic stand like a man clinging to a lifebelt, and his voice all but breaks with the passion he feels. This band has become a firm favourite, a fixture of gigs and clubs throughout Goth subculture for their heartfelt floorfillers; they headline everywhere they go, and it’s appropriate they are second only to Spear of Destiny.

In particular I love this band’s honed, professional stage presence. Andy wraps up the first song with a curt, Northern “Ta” even as the crowd explodes in applause. The guitarists are rising above, concentrating fully on delivering flawless performances that illustrate just how practiced and coordinated they are.

The audience is utterly with them – I’ve never seen so many people singing and dancing along, as I said The Last Cry’s songs are phenomenally popular and always well received. I predict them occupying the same beloved place as veteran bands like Screaming Banshee Aircrew amongst Goths.

Poor Andy though – he has to suffer for our entertainment. His painful confessions and declarations are the beating bloody heart of The Last Cry’s enthralling anthems. “I want to be with you… again” Birch murmurs, during a song for ‘a friend we lost’, and the room is utterly silent, complete strangers commiserating. It’s truly a sign of the sincerity in every song, and it’s as warmly applauded as their faster stuff – I’ve never seen so many close friends in one place!

“Gimme a sign, gimme a sign, that I might follow!” Birch hollers, and you know everyone in the room would get up and go into the night with him. An effortless, effective show.

The stakes are set high before anyone even hits the stage. Spear of Destiny are our headliners, with thirty years performance under their belts and an army of fans waiting breathlessly in the busy Spa. The beautiful, doomed music of Barber’s ‘Adagio for Strings’ is playing, as the band take to the stage and the crowd rumbles in barely pent anticipation.

Kirk nods companionably to the audience, shoulders one of many guitars he’ll be wearing that evening – and we all travel back in time instantly. His voice is impeccable, utterly unchanged after three decades, and still charged with all that passion and fury. “I hope you’re listening now!” he thunders at us, and the crowd roars its agreement – of course we are! In fact all we can hear is the singer, as he effortlessly holds a note until well after every instrument has died away. The audience erupts in cheers!

The third song is the firm favourite “Never Take Me Alive”, and the crowd is almost silent, straining to hear every hammered note and bellowed lyric. It’s one of my favourite songs of all and I count how lucky I am to be present. It’s as perfectly delivered as any recording, yet charged with all the energy of a live performance in a room full of people who love it. Indeed, Kirk is surprised it still fills dance-floors in clubs around the world!

I can’t get past how mobile they all are – Kirk, bassist Craig Adams and guitarist Adrian Portas hurl themselves enthusiastically about the stage. As songs end, a roadie hurries on with a new guitar, Kirk straps it on and we launch right into the next, with barely a pause between them. There’s a natural rhythm at work in this veteran band, and it’s communicating with the crowd, who are bobbing and lurching in time with the unstoppable post-punk sound.

Then, Kirk delivers a sombre and slow-paced track called “Fascinations”, one of a string of new songs woven into the set. It’s clear Spear of Destiny have aged perfectly, and their new stuff is going down a storm. He’s more reflective and doleful over this song, and he fades away – again after every other instrument – to a solid round of cheering, from many who have never heard the song before!

Finally, they unleash “Liberator” and the crowd all but screams itself hoarse going along with this classic. Everything’s built up to this long-standing fan pleaser, and the whole room jumps along with Kirk – we’re at risk of sliding off the cliff, such is the vibration from so many boot-stomping feet!

Of course it doesn’t end there. Kirk ushers bassist Craig to the middle of the stage and, well, you know what happened next…!

But one Goth classic wasn’t enough! Kirk and Co. wheeled out a spiky, aggressive cover of Joy Division mainstay “Transmission” that just capped an absolutely blinding performance. It was a bloody privilege to see this classic band play these classic songs to an adoring audience. Spear of Destiny put in a showstopping appearance that will be hard to top!

 

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Whitby Halloween 2015: Friday Bands Review

After April 2015’s epic four-night festival at Whitby Pavilion, it’s almost a relief to go back to the less exhausting two nights of gigs. But don’t be lulled into a false sense of relaxation – the Whitby line-up this year is still stuffed with bands to appeal to veterans, newcomers, casual and crucial fans alike, and if you catch the lot – like this fearless blogger – you’ll find yourself missing your days just to make it to the nights!

wgwoct2015teaser-1Friday night, first night and first band. It’s a tough slot for any band to tackle, but Chasing Dragons hit the stage confidently. They’re from Leeds but don’t have any whiff of patchouli about them – instead it’s pure, classic rock and roll all packed into the mobile and vocal form of lead singer ‘Tank’. She has incredible power, impressive range, and sounds like the daughter of Iron Maiden, Metallica and Guns and Roses combined!

The band hits us with a power ballad called “Don’t Play Dead” that proves Tank is anything but, roaming the stage, striking poses on the monitors and roaring at the crowd. The audience themselves are a little lacklustre – this is a difficult slot to play – but they’re soon clapping along to Chasing Dragon’s pumping beat. These guys deliver honest, chugging rock and roll that not only breaks the ice, but gleefully tramples it into water – and Whitby has lift-off!

wgwoct2015teaser-2The next band up is firm fan favourites, Bad Pollyanna. These alt-rockers are also from the People’s Republic of West Yorkshire, and are a foundation stone of WGW – they’ve played every November since 2012, to fans eager every time to hear them again.

Unfortunately the start of their set is marred with technical difficulties, but I’m pleased to report that was the only issue all weekend! Once they’ve gotten everything straightened out, singer Olivia Hyde is immediately into the thick of it, twisting us all out of shape! She’s deeply charismatic, powerfully passionate and a superb, experience promoter as she stokes the audience’s enthusiasm. It is a truly warm welcome for these veterans, as they effortlessly deliver complex guitar solos with lyrics that pluck at heartstrings.

One of their new songs, “Pull The Trigger”, goes in a very industrial direction and I’m nodding really appreciatively even as I’m trying to take notes. Soon after, they deliver the goose-pimple causing classic “Invincible Girl”, written in memory of Sophie Lancaster, with just a lone electric guitar and Olivia’s voice. The room is breathlessly silent, and as the last notes fade away, explosively appreciative. Bad Pollyanna then swing right back into the heartfelt dark rock that makes them so addictive, and “Wake Up” goes down to a storm of cheering, who are clearly connecting with the song on a deeply personal level. It’s what Bad Pollyanna do so very, very well.

wgwoct2015teaser-3Fearless Vampire Killers are back after an outstanding set at WGW November 2013, playing with Bad Pollyanna and supporting William Control, some of the strongest artists that have played Whitby. These guys prove they have what it takes to hang with the big hitters, and they take the stage to near-hysterical cheering. As befits Halloween, the whole band have arrived tricked out as various Jim Carrey roles – I can see an Ace Ventura and The Mask exchanging vocal duties right at the front.

The crowd love it – the first few rows are ablaze with camera flashes, and they’re soon lapping up the band’s frenetic emo-punk noise. It’s youthful, vibrant rebellion and you can tell why they’re such a good pairing with Bad Pollyanna – their underlying message is so similar. The fans are utterly tuned in, word-perfect as they sing along, and in many cases scream appreciatively. Even when Fearless Vampire Killers roll out new tracks from their new EP “Bruises”, released just a week ago, the audience is surging along in time and you know their fearless fans are memorizing all the words.

They return to older songs like “Death or Disgrace” and they get actual screams and squeals of appreciation – you suddenly realize you’re utterly surrounded by a fan-base of impressive size!

However, it’s gotta be said these fans probably have an average age in the teens, early twenties at best. Beyond myself and a few hardcore onlookers, anyone in their thirties has already drifted to the bar. I observed last year, while watching William Control, that there is a much younger generation of fans coming to WGW who might not be as connected to Eighties classic bands like many Goths – and again, I’ll observe that it’s probably a good thing.
Goth can be terribly stuck in the mud at times, and bands in the vein of Fearless Vampire Killers are bringing a wealth of new blood into this scene, if you can forgive the pun!

wgwoct2015teaser-4Still, the top seat at the table always seems to be occupied by a Golden Age outfit, and this year it’s Claire Grogan’s new-wavers Altered Images, who started off championed by John Peel, and had high scoring hits in the top forties in the early Eighties.
As if to remind us, Claire greets us all in that soft Scottish lilt she’s famous for, letting us know it’s her first time in Whitby, as the iconic piano riff from “Happy Birthday” plays behind her. It’s a trick! We suddenly segue seamlessly into “We’re Just Ourselves”, and just as easily slip back to 1982. Grogan’s voice is unchanged, flawless, and confident. She is a diplomat, describing the shared interests we all have – an experience Altered Images have, of course, from their tours supporting Siouxsie, and the Cure, and Adam Ant to name a few.
It isn’t the original line-up, of course – Grogan has instead assembled a glamorous array of ladies to back her up, but the sound is still authentic; she makes a nod to their earliest days, recognition from John Peel, and they fire up “Insects”, his favourite track.

The audience is a complete shift from those who applauded Fearless Vampire Killers. It’s a large but mellow crowd, who nod along and cheer in a deeper, bass note to the songs they know. Grogan herself is calmer and reflective, waxing lyrical about the songs that have become a diary of her life. For her, performing is a callback to the early career of Altered Images, and we’re at total contrast with the frenetic new activities of the younger bands on the bill.

This isn’t to say Altered Images are out of touch – on the contrary, after satisfying the crowd with a perfect flashback to those early Eighties heydays, they suddenly pull off a blistering cover of Taylor Swift’s “Shake It Off”!
It’s brilliantly accomplished, and in one swoop Altered Images have suddenly upgraded themselves and delivered a slice of cheesy pop that the even the most po-faced Goths lap up enjoyably! Claire Grogan turned the wheel full circle, and it’s a fitting end to the first night of WGW.

wgwoct2015teaser-5Many thanks to Mel Butler Photography for our pictures. Check back soon for our Saturday Night Review!

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