The cold, dark Northern Hemisphere nights of February and
March were appropriately filled with the sounds of goths young and old, with old
stagers like Siouxsie Sioux, The Sisters of Mercy and The Cure announcing new
live dates and the current keepers of the flame keeping the internet crackling
with impressive new releases.
Some of the best albums from the last couple of years were deservedly
re-released after widespread critical acclaim to reach new aficionados, such as
the current releases by death punk act Adrenochrome, Batcave deathrock band
Shrouds, deathgaze innovators Vazum (whose album V- features stripped down
versions of their best songs to date) and trad
goth rockers Long Night (with their own new greatest hits compilation Miscellanies),
whilst other leading lights of the current scene, such as former collaborators
Antipole and Kill Shelter (enhanced by the sultry vocals of Veronica Stich on
the new LP) released excellent new albums which nevertheless moved towards the starker
beats-centred coldwave branch of the genre and therefore away from the more guitar-based
sounds on which this blog focuses.
Real connoisseurs of the current goth scene will already be
familiar with most of the songs featured in this month’s countdown, either from
excellent YouTube channels such as the seminal Obscura Undead mixes and the
excellent internet radio specialists, but all of them bear repetition and
deserve a larger listening audience for their music.
1. The Hangman’s Daughter - Serafina, Who Knows?
From the energetic drum and bass intro (which took me
instantly back to the dancefloor of Nottingham’s Rock City in 1985 and hearing
Rebel Christening’s Tribal Eye for the first time) through to the
classically catchy chorus, this is one fantastically accomplished debut single
from Ian “Danger” Michael’s The Hangman’s Daughter project, with sumptuous
additional guitar from Fatally Lucky’s Anthony Manfredo, who has sadly
subsequently left the act. A deserved winner of the Goth/Post-Punk Revival blog's best new release accolade.
2. Killing Joke – Full Spectrum Dominance
Bone-crushing riffs? Check. Haunting post-apocalyptic synth
riff? Check. Punishing tub-thumping drumbeat? Check. Unexpectedly inventive
bridge? Check. String-bending full-on chorus in a mind-blowingly different key?
Check. KJ may on the one hand be the Status Quo of goth, endlessly recycling
their best moments (to the extent that I had to double-check that Full
Spectrum Dominance was actually a new song, such was the familiarity of the
key elements), but on the other it’s astonishing that over four decades in they
can still put out new material that outpunches bands a whole generation their
junior. For those still willing to give the old guard a listen, the subtle new
single from Treponem Pal (often somewhat harshly but accurately referred to as
“the poor man’s The Young Gods”), which is nevertheless still some accolade) is
also worth a listen, whilst the likes of The Damned, Ghost Dance and Skeletal
Family also have promising new material out this spring.
3. The Bellwether Syndicate – We All Rise
Anyone still doubting Killing Joke’s relevance to the
current scene needs look no further than the latest releases from the most
accomplished performers on the current live scene, The Bellwether Syndicate and
Then Comes Silence. The Swedes’ last single Tickets for Funerals had a chugging
riff Geordie would have been proud of, and the in-your-face anthemic chorus
of The Bellwether Syndicate’s latest
release We All Rise is also reminiscent of vintage angry Jaz. The chorus
is somewhat out-of-kilter with a more sedate, jangly, reflective opening verse
and a deathrock middle eight, showing the versatility of William Faith’s
talent, which is also visible on our next selection..
4. Suburban Spell – The Lonely Man (William Faith remix)
This blog normally gives remixes a wide berth, but this
reworking of Suburban Spell’s coldwave masterpiece The Lonely Man is a
notable exception, drenched as it is in some stunning reverb guitar by William
Faith, giving extra layers and energy to what was a one-dimensional original
and pushing the song into very welcome darkwave goth territory.
5. Damian Hearse – Cat Man Vampire
There’s a slightly deranged vibe to this graveyard trope-laden
180+ BPM horrorwave dancefloor banger, with a Fad Gadget meets current
dancefloor maestro Dark sound that simultaneously gives the song a 1980’s feel
whilst being right on point for 2023. Coming soon to a dingy club near you.
6. Another Abyss – Broken
After the full-on choices so far, this understated modern
classic is even more impressive, Broken’s cleverly layered sound which
is reminiscent of the dark new romantic likes of B-Movie opening out into a
chorus featuring a deep baritone vocal with a wonderfully warm yet vulnerable
tone. Impressive work from the one-man project from Germany with a suitably
lugubrious name, who featured in one of our round-ups last year and a song that
would have been a Top Ten hit had it been released in 1984, and it’s hard to
argue with the YouTube commenters astonished by this project’s comparative lack
of success.
7. Dark Side Cowboys – The Undertaker
Swedish goth rock legends celebrate 30 years of prairie goth
with new single The Undertaker, containing all the consummately-produced
familiar elements of effortlessly cool slow-burning dusty
straight-from-the-plains scandi goth’n’roll that one would expect from a band
that has based its entire career on the cover photo of Fields of The Nephilim’s
scene-defining Dawnrazor debut. Here’s to the next thirty years.
8. Naut – Nightfall
The Bristol (UK) band’s new release was always going to
feature in this rundown after Louder published guitarist Jack Welsh’s list
of “Top 10 goth songs that every metalhead needs to hear” featuring classics as
diverse as Bauhaus’ Double Dare, The Sisters of Mercy’s Floorshow,
The Sound’s Winning and Red Lorry Yellow Lorry’s Talk About the
Weather, and that impeccable taste extends to the band’s debut album Hunt.
With a dark, driving guitar-based sound reminiscent of the late lamented
Terminal Gods, Nightfall canters along perfectly with a nagging grubby
riff and full-on modern gothic sound.
9. Reflection Black – No Stars in the Sky
The top ten could literally be filled with albums released
by the faultless arbiters of taste at the Swiss Dark Nights label, and deciding
between Pulsations and Reflection Black was particularly difficult this month.
The latter won out for their slightly fuller sound, but both acts specialise in
the high quality atmospheric melodic darkwave that the likes of Holygram, the
Secret French Police and Mirror of Haze have popularised in recent years, and
seems ripe for wider success.
10. After The Sin – In My Mind
Poznan band’s After The Sin’s long-awaited debut album Echoes
is finally out on their homeland’s Bat-Cave Productions label, collecting
together their various singles over the past couple of years along with some
new tracks. A homogenously excellent album for fans of 80’s-influenced melodic
darkwave post-punk to wallow in, the understated vocals, spacey production and
skilled songwriting combine to produce
one of the strongest albums of the year so far.
The following artists also had excellent new releases during
February and March (click on artist name for link):
- Vazum
- Kill Shelter/Death Loves Veronica
- Batboner
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