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Gothic rock

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This article is about the musical style of gothic rock. For the goth scene in general, see goth subculture.

Gothic rock (also called goth rock or goth) is a genre of rock music that originated during the late 1970s. Originally a label designating a handful of punk rock/post-punk bands, goth began to be defined as a separate movement in the early 1980s. In contrast to punk bands' aggressive hard-driving music and style, the early gothic bands' music was more introspective, and dealt with aesthetics and "dark"-themed literary or intellectual movements such as gothic horror, Romanticism, existential philosophy, and nihilism. Notable gothic rock bands include Bauhaus, Siouxsie & the Banshees, The Cure, The Sisters of Mercy, and Fields of the Nephilim.

Largely separate from other genres of alternative rock of the 1980s, gothic rock gave rise to a broader goth subculture that includes goth clubs, goth fashions, and goth-oriented magazines.

First generation (c. 1979–c. 1985)

The first generation of goth bands were not all associated with the goth subculture. Fans of goth-influenced or proto-goth punk, post-punk, and New Wave bands were not necessarily part of a goth scene. The core 1970s and 1980s goth-influenced or proto-goth bands eschewed major record labels, presumably seeing them as anathema to creative expression [1]. Most of these early goth-influenced or proto-goth rock groups were from Britain, although some bands were from other countries: Christian Death came from Los Angeles, The Virgin Prunes from Ireland, and Xmal Deutschland was from Germany.

United Kingdom

Two early post-punk groups labeled "gothic" were Joy Division[1] and Siouxsie & the Banshees in 1979. Between 1978 and 1979 these bands developed a haunting sound and dark-themed lyrics. John Lydon's Public Image Ltd and Killing Joke also influenced the development of the goth sound.

Siouxsie & the Banshees' output from her debut album The Scream (1978) to Nocturne (1983) were influential on the goth sound. Although Joy Division was short-lived, due to vocalist Ian Curtis' suicide, the two albums Unknown Pleasures (1979) and Closer (1980) were influential in the gothic scene. The remaining members of Joy Division became New Order, whose first album Movement (1981) continued Joy Division's gothic style; this early New Order sound was influential to some gothic bands (for example, Danse Society and Clan of Xymox). New Order subsequently turned into a New Wave/dance group.

As the gothic label began to stick to Joy Division and Siouxsie & the Banshees in 1979; then came Bauhaus, originally called Bauhaus 1919. They started out wearing plain jeans and t-shirts, but after appearing on the same bill as Gloria Mundi (who looked and sounded gothic yet remained unknown since nobody ever saw them), Bauhaus ended up having a make over, dressing in all black and wearing make up. Strongly influenced by English Glam rock, such as David Bowie and T. Rex, Bauhaus's debut single "Bela Lugosi's Dead" released in late 1979, is considered to be the beginning of gothic rock proper.[2] Despite their legacy as progenitors of gothic rock, bands like Siouxsie and the Banshees, Joy Division, and the The Cure at the time chiefly self-identified as punk acts.[3]

In 1980 and 1981, Danse Society, Theatre of Hate, March Violets, Play Dead, and The Sisters of Mercy were formed. UK Decay, a late-1970s punk band, influenced the emerging gothic movement of the early 1980s. In February 1981, Abbo from UK Decay used the term gothic to describe the style of bands such as Danse Society and Play Dead. A year later, Ian Astbury of the band Southern Death Cult used the term "goths" to describe Sex Gang Children's fans. However, the term "goth" did not become a label for a movement or 'scene" until 1983[2]. The emerging scene was described as "positive punk" in a February 1983 artcle in the NME magazine. Journalist Richard North described Bauhaus and Theatre of Hate as "the immediate forerunners of today's flood" (which included Southern Death Cult, Sex Gang Children, and Blood & Roses) and declared "So here it is: the new positive punk, with no empty promises of revolution, either in the rock'n'roll sense or the wider political sphere. Here is only a chance of self awareness, of personal revolution, of colourful perception and galvanisation of the imagination that startles the slumbering mind and body from their sloth."[4]

The lead singer of the punk band The Damned, Dave Vanian (a former grave digger) sometimes dressed up as a vampire, which may have influenced the gothic fashion stylings of Siouxsie & the Banshees, Bauhaus and The Cure. Siouxsie & the Banshees and The Cure have retained the goth imagery in their onstage appearance and album throughout most of their careers, but their music has explored other related genres. After the Nocturne album, Siouxsie's songs became more synthesizer-based and alternative. Bauhaus were more consistently gothic in their onstage appearance and musical styles, until their break-up in 1983. Some members of Bauhaus had a side project called Tones on Tail which continued during the mid 1980s, releasing gothic-styled music influenced by The Beach Boys experimental Pet Sounds album and 1970s drug subculture psychedelic music.

By 1982, gothic rock had become a broader sub-culture, with the emergence of bands such as Sex Gang Children, Southern Death Cult, Skeletal Family, Specimen, and Alien Sex Fiend, and because clubs such as the Batcave in London provided a venue for the goth scene. The Batcave aimed at reinventing David Bowie's vision of glam rock, but with a darker, horror-influenced twist. Gothic rock band members, hangers-on, and fans socialized at the Batcave, which became the prototype goth club environment. By 1984, Batcave DJs were playing Siouxsie, The Cramps, Sweet, Specimen, Eddie Cochran, and Death Cult. By 1983, the British press began commenting on the gothic rock scene gaining at the Batcave and similar venues.

US and Canada

The US Deathrock scene, centred in Los Angeles, California, began in the late seventies with bands such as Christian Death, 45 Grave, T.S.O.L, Voodoo Church, Kommunity FK, Burning Image, and Theatre of Ice. When Christian Death were recording their debut album Only Theatre of Pain in 1982, frontman Rozz Williams had heard about the UK goth scene, but he had not heard any of those bands. Christian Death attracted listeners in Europe (especially in France) and started touring Europe and England in 1984. The band's subsequent albums Catastrophe Ballet and Ashes were more goth-influenced, and also showed borrowings from surrealism and the dada movement. US Punk blues pioneers the Gun Club also started playing in Europe and England, often as the opening act for the Sisters of Mercy.

Europe and Australia

Goth was as much a continental European phenomenon as it was British or American. At the same time bands like Bauhaus and Christian Death were forming in those countries, bands with dark, gothic musical styles such as Einstürzende Neubauten (1980), Xmal Deutschland (1980), Die Krupps (1981), and Pink Turns Blue were being formed in Germany. Belgium's electronic body music (EBM) scene produced the hard-driving, sample-laden music of Front 242 in 1981, a musical style that was influenced by Kraftwerk. Amsterdam-based Clan of Xymox formed in 1983. By 1992, Germany developed a large wave and gothic festival, the yearly Wave Gotik Treffen in Leipzig.

In Australia and New Zealand, Nick Cave's second band, The Birthday Party (c. 1979 and later moving to London) and other post-punk collectives like Foetus Productions (also called The Features/The Foetals, c.1979) influenced the development of gothic music, fashion, and aesthetics. New Zealand's film archive New Zealand Film Archive site states that Foetus Productions operated "...as an audio-visual company from 1980-1989,...part of a small global 'industrial' culture network, which included Throbbing Gristle in Britain, and Survival Research Laboratories on the West Coast of America. They released seven albums, designed clothing, wrote manifestos, made films, and challenged the parameters of music and art, blending pop, industrial and philosophical methodologies. Their music attacked advertising's promulgation of perfect images and lithe bodies using images of medical misadventure and mutation." In 2004, Foetus Productions were still exhibiting their controversial depictions of deformed human beings in museums.

Second generation (c. 1985–c. 1995)

In the UK, goth bands became more popular and the subculture grew and broadened. Throughout the 1980s, there was much cross-pollination between the European goth subcultures, the Death Rock movement, and the New Romantic (New Wave) movement. The rise in popularity of alternative rock music in the mid-1980s, was mirrored by the rise of gothic rock, most notably in the form of the seminal goth rock bands, The Sisters of Mercy, Fields of the Nephilim (1984), a new version of Christian Death (1985), The Mission (1986), and Mephisto Walz (c.1987) founded by former Christian Death composer / guitarist Barry Galvin (alias Bari Bari). Galvin defined the dark droning style of Christian Death on the album Atrocities, the songs of which he composed and later transferred to the Mephisto Walz repertoire.

By 1985, the post-punk era was giving way to new musical styles, and many of the first generation gothic groups disbanded or changed their style. The Sisters of Mercy's debut album First and Last and Always (1985) cracked the British top ten, which showed the important influence that this 'first generation' goth band was having on the second generation. Vocalist Andrew Eldritch voice earned him the moniker "the Godfather of Goth", and the bands' use of a drum machine (along with fellow Leeds' residents March Violets) was innovative for the goth scene. The Three Johns and Red Lorry Yellow Lorry, also Leeds-based bands also used drum machines, which became much more common during the second generation (drum machines continued to be common in goth music in the 2000s).

During the second wave of goth that the term and the style became noticed in mainstream British publications like The Face and the NME. Goth fans developed fanzines and goth clubs began to spring up in imitation of London's Batcave. The 1983 vampire-genre film "The Hunger", starring David Bowie, featured an appearance by Bauhaus, which helped to cementing the relationship between glam, horror, goth and mainstream. 4AD recording artists such as Clan of Xymox (who had a mainstream hit with "Imagination"), Dead Can Dance, and the Cocteau Twins got US college radio airplay, and 'first generation' acts such as of Siouxsie and the Banshees became the goth scene's de facto spokespeople to the mainstream press.

Several goth magazines were published, such as Propaganda (though it later became a softcore gay porn magazine). Goth zines split their direction in much the same way that the scene itself did. Earlier magazines such as Permission were allied to the punk roots of goth, and tended to veer towards industrial music, while later magazines such as Carpe Noctem focused more on the lace-and-poetry romantic sound, setting the stage for the "spooky kids" of the third wave.

By 1987, gothic groups started to emerge in Canadian cities such as Toronto and Montreal, such as Disappointed a Few People (Montreal 1986) and Masochistic Religion. Masochistic Religion included the singer from Armed and Hammered, the Guitarist from technicolour rain coats and a member from Ichor. Toronto band Exovedate signed with German record label Pandaimonium Records and their third CD "Seduced by Illusions" received airplay in Australia, Russia, the US, Brazil, Guam, Germany, and Canada.

By this time, a cross-pollination with the growing global industrial music scene was developing. The blending of goth and 'industrial' music scenes and subcultures can be heard in the music of Dog Pile, Crash Worship, and Skinny Puppy. Depeche Mode's blend of goth, industrial, and pop and synthesized sounds influenced many goth musicians. Synthpop acts such as Camouflage, Secession, Celebrate the Nun, and Red Flag followed Depeche Mode's lead, and eventually gothic music found its way into club music, and synthpop began appearing in goth rock.

Third generation (c. 1995 to Present)

In the 1990s, some of the influential 1980s "first generation" bands were still performing. At the same time, North American bands such as Switchblade Symphony and London After Midnight, were released by the Cleopatra label. New English bands Included Children On Stun, Vendemmian, Inkubus Sukkubus and Rosetta Stone. Other popular goth acts to emerge in the 1990s included The Crüxshadows, The Last Dance, Sunshine Blind, Trance to the Sun, The Shroud, and Voltaire.

In Germany, many labels such as Apocalyptic Vision, Apollyon Rekordings, Deathwish Office, Dion Fortune, Glasnost Records, Hyperium Records, Sounds Of Delight, and Talitha Records, released Gothic compilations and recordings from bands such as Dreadful Shadows, Love Like Blood, Mephisto Walz, The Merry Thoughts, Requiem In White, and Two Witches. France produced some new goth bands, such as Corpus Delicti, Dead Souls Rising, and Brotherhood Of Pagans. Thanks to internet communities and broader CD distribution through such a plethora of record companies, fans of these labels and bands were no longer regionally based; the music was becoming more globalized than before.

In the mid and late 1990s, major record labels, particularly in the United States, began marketing hard rock acts as "gothic" or "industrial" bands. The formerly underground subcultural aesthetic of goth was incorporated into the sound and image of several popular mainstream bands, such as HIM and Marilyn Manson. The goth look became associated in the public's mind with the Hot Topic chain, the "mallgoth" aesthetic, and the Columbine school shooting, which led to the US press's subsequent vilification and scrutiny of goth culture.

Internally, the gothic subculture during this time had come to be dominated more and more by dance club attendance. Goth rock adapted in turn: contemporary dance club goth followed the footsteps of beat-driven industrial music, using many of the same production techniques and aesthetics, though danceable industrial music tended to be "harder" sounding while goth was "softer" sounding, with less distortion and minimal influence from techno and metal. Much modern goth often has the evolutionary feel of New Wave music or synth pop, though there are also "old school" or "first generation" gothic rock or faux-medieval acts.

Since 2000, some fans have embraced a Death Rock revival, returning to the 1980s music and fashions of the first generation of goth. Bands such as Cinema Strange, Bella Morte, The Deep Eynde, and Black Ice, along with the website Deathrock.com have contributed to the revitalization of the first generation-style goth, and Nina Hagen even headlined the 2005 Drop Dead Festival in New York City. This movement has been boosted by the success of acts like Interpol, Scarling. and The Dresden Dolls who are indebted to post-punk and early goth-styled music. The Cure and Bauhaus's high-profile performances since 2004 have also helped to promote the earlier goth sound, characterized by "jangly" guitars, and less club-oriented arrangement.

Today's underground goth music is been marked by stylistic pluralism, genre-blending, and a retro sensibility. There are active bands performing in nearly every musical style that has been grouped under the "goth" moniker over time. Meanwhile, many underground goth acts like Rasputina, The Prids, and The Phantom Limbs are stylistic amalgams unto themselves, incorporating cabaret music, electroclash, and indie rock into their palette. With live shows' use of spectacle, elaborate dress, and drama, such musicians are in many ways picking up where The Virgin Prunes left off.

Though the goth scene has diminished in popularity and its record sales have fallen off, there are still events, labels, and publications supporting it. Dancing Ferret Discs, Projekt Records, and Metropolis Records are releasing goth music in the American market, and Cherry Red has been reissuing early goth rock recordings in Europe. The genre's most popular live events, such as the German Wave Gotik Treffen, Zillo festivals, the British Whitby Gothic Weekends, and NYC's Drop Dead Festival & Chamber's DAMF still draw tens of thousands of fans. Some of the pioneering goth zines or magazines have transitioned to the web, including Blue Blood, Asleep By Dawn, and Gothic.net. Others are still available in print editions, such as Gothic Beauty, Virus and Drop Dead Magazine.

Musical Roots

  • Joy Division are often considered the direct progenators of gothic rock. The sparse guitar lines of Bernard Sumner and the low voice and dark-themed lyrics of singer Ian Curtis influenced the development of the sound of the goth rock genre. Joy Division did not dress in a goth style, but their musical style and lyrical themes, along with their concerts with other founders of gothic rock such as The Cure, have helped to associate them with the goth movement.
  • David Bowie's glam rock style of the 1970s influence goth both musically and visually. As goth broke further away from punk, the androgynous look, which Bauhaus favoured was taken even further by bands like Alien Sex Fiend. David Bowie's androgynous appearance, love of melodrama and his use of dark themes influenced early goth bands. Bowie's songs frequently appeared on the Batcave playlists. Bowie described his Diamond Dogs (1974) album as gothic, and his "Berlin" albums LOW and HEROES have a "gothic" sensibility with their chilly synth-based soundscapes (by Brian Eno) and Bowie's detached vocals. Iggy Pop's THE IDIOT - created in Berlin around the same time, with its drum machines, angular robotic rhythms and Pop's monotone deep voice may have also influenced goth rock.
  • The Velvet Underground from the (1960s) had a dark sound and gloomy themes that were referenced by early goth bands such as Siouxsie & the Banshees. Joy Division performed a cover version of "Sister Ray", and Christian Death covered "Venus in Furs". Nico, who performed with the Velvet Underground, performed in a style that influenced 1980s Gothic Rock.
  • The Doors influenced the Los Angeles emergence of Death Rock, particularly with the album Strange Days (1967). Joy Division and Echo and the Bunnymen were influenced by The Doors' sound. The Bunnymen's cover of "People Are Strange" is included in the film (as well as on the film's soundtrack) The Lost Boys. A 2000 album on Cleopatra Records, Darken My Fire: A Gothic Tribute to The Doors, featured covers by bands such as Mephisto Walz, Ex Voto, Alien Sex Fiend, and The Mission UK. The New Creatures, heavily influenced by The Doors, also took their name from a book of poetry by Jim Morrison. Dave Vanian's vocal style shown in The Damned's later albums and also his work in Phantom Chords may be influenced by Jim Morrison.
  • Alice Cooper is not usually considered a goth rock act, but his performance make-up and bizarre onstage behaviour influenced goth bands such as Alien Sex Fiend.
  • 1970s glam rock band T-Rex, led by Marc Bolan, influenced on the goth scene, as his songs were in the playlists from the Batcave, and Bauhaus recorded a cover of "Telegram Sam".

Musical Styles

As the genre of gothic rock contains sub-genres whose boundaries overlap, it is difficult to identify musical characteristics that are common to all gothic rock. Nonetheless, certain musical styles from early English gothic rock have remained common, such as the guitar tone. In gothic rock, the guitar tone is usually processed with electronic effects. A clean or warmly overdriven guitar sound is processed through chorusing, flanging, analog delay, and/or dense reverb, resulting in a timbre that resembles those used by Bauhaus, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and The Cure.

As well, gothic rock has a characteristic guitar playing style. Gothic rock guitar playing takes its downstroke playing style from punk, and emphasizes angular melodic lines instead of thick chords. Minor keys and minor mode melodies are prevalent, but major keys are also used. The Phrygian mode, with a flattened second scale degree contributes to the gothic sound with its "haunting" and dissonant mood. Gothic rock songs are typically mixed so that there is a heavy bass sound, which creates a moody and gloomy atmosphere.

Gothic rock often uses repetitive snare drum snap to propel the beat, either a real drum beat or, later on, usually a drum machine beat. The metronomic snare drum sound can be first heard on Iggy Pop's The Idiot. It continues on in Joy Division's songs, Gary Numan's early music, on early Cure Cds (beginning with Seventeen Seconds) and early Sisters of Mercy recordings. More sophisticated variations of the snare drum snap are used by Kevin Haskins in Bauhaus's music.

In the early 1990s, some bands in the gothic genre wrote songs with a more hard rock feel, such as the Sisters of Mercy's Floodland and Vision Thing albums, and Fields of the Nephilim, Rosetta Stone, and The Wake.

Samples

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See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Reynolds, Simon. Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978-1984. Penguin, 2005. p. 352
  2. ^ Reynolds, Pg. 359
  3. ^ Kilpatrick, Nancy. The Goth Bible
  4. ^ North, Richard. "Punk Warriors." NME. February 19, 1983.