The 21st Whitby Goth Weekend: Final Prep

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Mel's 'pointy-boot dilemma'

Mel’s ‘pointy-boot dilemma’ – How many is too many?

The length and breadth of the country, Goths are fighting with their luggage and squeezing in just one more long jacket or pair of boots. From Wednesday onwards, Whitby Goth Weekend will be celebrating its 21st birthday, with two extra nights of first-class alternative bands!

Here is a detailed itinerary produced by the WGW Team, featuring many of the fringe events as well as the bands – but remember, stage times are always flexible!

Who are you most looking forward to seeing? Vote for your favourite band below – we know, narrowing it down to just one is difficult! – and discuss the choices in the comments below.

Last year, Cogwheel films made the hilarious and popular parody music video ‘WGW #Selfie’ and they’re back, better than ever, with ‘Goths Just Wanna Have Fun’! Watch it below, and let us know what you think in the comments!

Veteran DJ Martin Oldgoth is running nights that will bookend the festival, kicking off with Sanctuary (in aid of the very worthwhile S.O.P.H.I.E Foundation) and continuing to celebrate on Monday 27th with Restoration, the classic Goth night of Goth nights!

restoration

Unfortunately, The Shambles – venue for fringe events like Heavier than a Heavy Thing and The Legendary 80s Night – is out of action for this weekend. However, The Wellington has stepped into the breach and will be hosting one of the longest-running and popular events of the weekend – fear not, cheesy retro fans!

The infamous football match, which attracted even mainstream media attention last year, however inaccurately, will start an hour earlier on Sunday, so make sure you get down and get your tickets well in time!  wgwfootieThe Blogging Goth will be there from Thursday to Monday, and we’ll be doing our best to interview as many bands, WGW staff, and punters like yourself as we see in an amazing 21 years of the Whitby Goth Weekend. Have a great time and keep us followed on the blog and on Twitter!

The band lineup for WGW-1 in 1994

The band lineup for WGW-1 in 1994!

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Documentary Makers seek Goth Parents

The vague sense of bafflement that the rest of the country holds for the enduring nature of the Goth subculture seems equally long-lived. An independant documentary company is working with Channel Four to produce a programme looking at the differences between parents and children in British family units. They’d love to include a family with Goth parents and definitively not Goth children! The Blogging Goth has been contacted by ZKK’s Executive Producer, Kathy, and we had an informative chat about the nature of the documentary, which addressed our concerns that it might be a ‘freakshow’ style lowbrow entertainment affair. We’re assured it will not be, so we’re happy to work with ZKK to arrange contact for this production. Kathy kindly gave us the following introductory statement for interested parties;

ZKK television are making a documentary about a variety of types of family relationships, and are interested in including…one family where the parents are Goths. It needs to be a family with children of around 15 – 25, who are not Goths themselves, and who might like to understand more about what their parents are getting up to in their spare time and what it all means. If you would like to be involved, or would simply like to know more about the film, we’d love to talk to you – there’s no obligation to get involved – it really helps us to speak to as many people as possible.

Kathy can be reached directly via her e-mail, or you can contact The Blogging Goth’s editor Tim Sinister if you would prefer to speak to us first. We’ll be following this project with interest, and we look forward to sharing more information as we get it.

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Whitby April 2015 – Preparation

It’s been quiet recently, as The Blogging Goth has alternately gone on holiday, fallen ill, and been selected for a new job (in communications, naturally). Now, looming over the horizon is Whitby Gothic Weekend – April 2015!

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A four-day double-strength bonanza of bands, to celebrate the world-famous festival’s twenty-first birthday!
To whet your appetite, you can watch a trailer featuring some of the most popular alternative bands out there, right here…

The Blogging Goth will be there, talking to the bands, the organizers, and of course yourselves – to see how people are finding the celebrations for twenty-one years of Whitby Goth Weekend!
In the meantime, we have some great articles planned that do what we always set out to do – report on the news that matters to the UK Goth Scene.

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Incite Change and Kill Hate Crime: A guest reblog

We were written to by Fiona Chick, a blogger who wants to share how she and her friends are raising money for the SOPHIE Foundation. We’re more than happy to pass on her article about the work they’ve done, and the other ways we can all support this charity that is close to our hearts.

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“The Art of Gothic” by Natasha Scharf – Review

goth01-bigWhen I first heard about The Art of Gothic, the new book from author, journalist, DJ and all-round raconteur Natasha Scharf, I was expected some slim volume of familiar faces and photos. Perhaps something suitable for casually leaving on coffee table, more appearance than information.

Instead, a formidably weighty tome arrived fresh in the post from the helpful people at Omnibus Press. Sullen black and rich purple colours are subtly studded with enticing photography on this imposingly large hardback. Turning to the back cover, however, and you feel some over-exuberant PR type has got a fevered grip on Goth.

“The Art of Gothic lifts the coffin-lid on the seemingly endless appeal of the gothic aesthetic, its followers dressed head-to-toe in black, often with extreme makeup.”

It reads like an American news report, hollow wonder in its tones! Surely Scharf, author of the vital Worldwide Gothic and frequent Goth pundit, was above such shallow assumptions?

Reading her introduction I was, of course,  proven right. My favourite quote, that seems to encapsulate the entirety of the Goth ethic – no mean feat! – goes as follows:

“Dark, sensual, macabre, edgy, alternative, but always with a knowing wink, goth has become a seductive and cultural lifestyle choice.”

A dry, caustic, self-aware sense of humour is vital to this camp, cod-horror subculture we’ve somehow kept going for nigh on three decades – miss that, and you run the ultimate risk of becoming unironic. No greater crime can be committed!
Mind controlled dress

Scharf sets the tone appropriately, and proceeds to launch into a tome that is deep and complex, wreathed with all the powerful imagery that comes from years of flirting – and full-on fraternising with – our darkest imaginations!

She effortlessly leads the reader through the snarling, twisting history of dark alternative music, from Andi Sex Gang’s own introduction, through Siouxsie and Bauhaus, into the Gothic metal of Lacuna Coil and Paradise Lost, the pounding techno music of Suicide Commando or Apoptygma Bezerk, and into the latest inheritors and pretenders to the throne, like Motionless in White and HIM (who have just concluded supporting stalwarts The Fields of the Nephilim). 2008_11_29_Poster_San_Diego

The entire experience of Goth music history is shot through with imagery – from familiar album covers to subversive independent creations like tour and gig posters.
Beside the lone picture of arch-denier Andrew Eldritch – taken during his partnership with Patricia Morrison – is an excitingly unusual poster for The Sisters of Mercy’s gig in San Diego during their 2008 tour.

It’s this kind of departure from the well-trodden path of Goth history that makes The Art of Gothic really stand out from its contemporaries. When Natasha spoke at the Louder Than Words festival in Manchester, she stressed that the imagery and artwork were the core of her new book, and it is a rewarding decision.
Every page is bursting with the glorious, gory creativity of Goth down the ages, all captioned with commentary from the musicians and artists who realized their worst nightmares for our entertainment.

cavecoffee2There’s a righteously revolting rendition of Nick Cave in concert, produced by American artist Gris Grimley, that to me is evocative of the great Ralph Steadman, who famously illustrated the nightmarish adventures of Hunter Thompson.
I’ve never seen anything like it before, I love it, and images like this draw me on through the packed pages.

Even as the music charts our course, Scharf makes frequent sidelines into other styles as well – from the glamorous models, to the equally well-turned-out attendees of Wave Gotik Treffen.
There’s examinations of fringe creativity like comics – think Nemi, or Rosie Poe or Johnny the Homicidal Maniac – as well as mainstream breakthroughs with movies like The Matrix and The Crow.
There’s page after page after page of the insane illustrations that adorn the albums of our favourite artists, almost all of them with fascinating trivia in the captions.

As well as the mandatory chapter on burgeoning separate subculture Steampunk, there’s also an extensive look at how Japan has picked up and sprinted with the dark designs of Goth. Entire city blocks in Tokyo seem to be inhabited by manga-style Elegant Gothic Lolitas that put the Whitby Old Town to shame!Emma Tooth - Madame Geist

The few suggestions I could make acknowledge that the book’s focus is the imagery and artistry of Goth – it’s not a broader history, like Worldwide Gothic or Mick Mercer’s retrospectives. Expect to read a specialist text that might overlook details it considers irrelevant – The Art of Gothic should complement your Dark Library, not be a core text.
I would have enjoyed some full interviews with some of the artists who contributed, perhaps to break up the flow of text – the decision to use snippets here and there as captions felt like appetizers rather than a full meal!

Still, The Art of Gothic excels at being both a fantastic introduction for the intrigued and artistic non-Goth, as well as a rewarding read for any veteran alternative types. It’s an expertly woven tapestry of all the colourful and unique threads that make up the iconic history of this enduring subculture.
Everything is meticulously recorded in Scharf’s media-honed writing, that is accessible and entertaining in equal measures. Her contributors are to be applauded for ensuring this book is well-sourced and full of unique perspectives.

You can order the book directly from Scharf’s own website, as well as picking up Worldwide Gothic and some back issues of the sadly-defunct Meltdown Magazine all for an early Christmas gift. I highly recommend adding this gorgeous grimoire to your black shelves!

Natasha Scharf signs my copy of The Art Of Gothic

Natasha Scharf signs my copy of The Art Of Gothic

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