Wednesday, January 3, 2024

The Top 15 Goth/Post-Punk Albums of 2023

 


2023 was finally the year of the Goth Revival, but not in the way that many of us had hoped for. Rather than being the year the mainstream rediscovered the genial panoply of new sounds emanating from one of the most criminally-ignored and under-rated sub-genres, it was instead the year of Goth Nostalgia, forty years on from the original movement’s annus mirabilis of 1983 (not that it had yet adopted that sobriquet).

Not one, not two, but three critically-acclaimed histories of the genre were published in the UK (and garnered many mainstream column inches), one (which actually had the working title “Post-Punk”) by the drummer of a band who frequently flirted with the goth sound and culture without ever really being central to it, one by a then-very-young fan who became a leading music journalist and author, and the third by an alternative scene veteran and well-regarded alternative media figure whose band was never particularly associated with the scene at the time. All three are worth tracking down, and place the original 'gothic' music within a social, historical and cultural context, lending much-needed gravitas to a style of music often mocked and derided in the media as a whole as cartoonishly lightweight.

This general nostalgia-fest in the media coincided with many of the original acts creeping back onto the touring circuit as it recovered from the covid-enforced hiatus, with the unexpected returns of the major league likes of Siouxsie, ‘Death Cult’ and Bauhaus, in a year that also saw The Rose of Avalanche, The March Violets, Theatre of Hate/Spear of Destiny, Sex Gang Children, The Sisters of Mercy, Christian Death and most other acts you can think of from the original era hitting the road to boost the pension fund.

This should have been the signal for a surge of interest in the contemporary gothic scene, but my own observation was that current goth acts struggled to attract a crowd, particularly when the “heritage” acts were in town the same month. As in recent previous years, the best chance seemed to be for those bands who managed to get a support slot with one of the more established bands, with A Cloud of Ravens being particularly successful in this respect, bagging show-opening rights on tours by The Sisters of Mercy and Clan of Xymox, but such examples were sadly rare over the year.

Perhaps one of the main reasons for the mainstream failing to take an interest in newer goth acts, whilst wallowing in the pervading nostalgia, was the fact that many of the leading lights on the current scene took a studio sabbatical in 2023: well-established artists with multi-album careers, such as She Past Away, Then Comes Silence, Kaelan Mikla, Diavol Strain and Whispering Sons didn’t manage an album between them during 2023, although most are planning new releases next year.

In their stead, some of the more recent acts of the current wave took the opportunity to step up a level and stake their claim to higher status within the scene, as most of the bands featuring in this rundown of the best LPs of 2023 in the goth genre were not newcomers to the scene, but on their second or third albums already, and having found their musical feet, now producing the best music of their careers.

If 2022 had seen the resurgence of trad goth, the highlights of 2023 feature many bands with a more melodic mainstream-friendly gothic alt-rock sound, although more batcave/death rock/horror punk acts also fared well. This year’s list is notable for a renewed dominance of bands from North America and Western Europe, with fewer new artists of note from other territories than in recent previous years,

The fifteen selections below are presented in no particular order, but all have strong artistic merit and integrity and are all highly recommended!

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Ashes Fallen - Walk Through Fire

Husband and wife duo James and Michelle Perry’s goth rock act released its third album in 2023 which continued the project’s development from a more rock-based sound to a purer goth/post-punk sonic palette.  James Perry’s vocals have become stronger with each release, and with fewer guitar solos making the cut, the sound is sleeker and more modern, yet also less formulaic. Lyrically the band has always been one of the most political with a small “p”, taking on contemporary issues and championing the underdog in a way that the original goth bands, who grew out of punk roots, would surely approve of. With anthemic choruses and soaring melodies, Ashes Fallen are reminiscent of Manic Street Preachers at their polemical best, and are a breath of fresh air in a genre all-too-quick to regress to the lowest gothic trope lyrical denominator.

Bandcamp link


The Bellwether Syndicate – Vestige and Vigil

TBS’s William Faith may be one of the senior figures of the second (90’s) wave of goth, but the project’s 2023 release shows that he has lost none of his youthful vigour, energy and righteous anger. Building songs around bludgeoning, syncopated riffs (courtesy of Sarah Rose Faith) and grunge-esque song dynamics, The Bellwether Syndicate’s Vestige and Vigil was a real guitar goth tour de force, thanks to Faith’s infallible ear for a catchy chorus and a lyrical bon mot, the sound of an artist uncompromisingly raging into the dark night.

Bandcamp link


A Cloud of Ravens – Lost Hymns

Brooklyn duo A Cloud of Ravens maintained their reputation for angsty, earnest, pseudo-Celtic gothic rock with their latest album, which has the same authenticity and passion that has contributed to the enduring appeal of the likes of New Model Army or The Levellers. As effective on low-fi low-tempo reflective pieces as on arms-in-the-air choruses, AcoR confirmed their position in the new vanguard with another album of well-crafted 100% pure artisan goth.

Bandcamp link


Black Angel - Lascivious

Already onto their fifth album in as many years, Matt Vowles’ Black Angel continued their astonishingly consistent record of producing high quality albums stuffed with unashamedly retro and respectful references but with a full-on modern sound. With nods to the pillars of the original mid-1980’s UK gothic rock sound – Floodland, Phantasmagoria and Love – Black Angel create an original yet strangely familiar film noir soundscapes which never fail to impress.

Bandcamp link


The Waning Moon – A Dream Or A Vision

With The Kentucky Vampires continuing their studio hiatus, guitarist Zac Campbell has busied himself with a number of side projects, notably an innovative surf-goth project Los Vampiros del Mar and this fully-fledged trad goth project The Waning Moon, a collaboration with Costa Rican vocalist Ariel Maniki. Campbell’s multi-layered approach and golden guitar tone makes The Waning Moon’s debut album a delight for all fans of late 80’s/early 90’s gothic rock, giving full rein to his genius, with Maniki’s dramatic vocal adding an impassioned element to the overall sound.

Bandcamp link


Treponem Pal – Screamers

In a year when heritage acts like The Damned and Iggy Pop delivered unexpectedly good albums, the most pleasant surprise of 2023, Treponem Pal’s Screamers is the album many fans of industrial goth have been waiting for since The Young Gods’ seminal TV Sky. With tongue firmly in cheek and covering a range of sub-genres, Screamers is best played at the recommended “full power” and would be the perfect soundtrack to an all-night biker festival. This is the album Al Jourgensen has been trying to make for the past thirty years.

Link


Ground Nero – Blood Never Sleeps

Belgian/Manx trio Ground Nero had showcased half of their November 2023 release Blood Never Sleeps as singles over the past two years, their first full length release since Mark Sayle replaced the irrepressible Gwiijde Wampers on vocal duties. Ground Nero’s trademark wall of sound studio approach gives their songs a depth and richness of texture few can emulate, and Sayle’s velvet baritone is the perfect foil to Peter Smeets’ inventive guitar work over keyboard soundscapes which are heavier and more powerful than Sayle’s work with his other excellent band, Mark E Moon.

Bandcamp link


Byronic Sex & Exile – Everything But The Ghoul

The prolific Mr Heyes has built BS&E into arguably the most expansive and original UK goth act of the last decade, and his latest LP is by far his most consistent and accomplished set yet. Ranging from bar room piano laments to dancefloor filling Lucretia-esque goth bangers, Everything But The Ghoul is stuffed with a range of simply-but-beautifully constructed songs which Heyes’ beloved Damned would struggle to better.

Bandcamp link


La Scaltra - Mater

La Scaltra started the year with a bang with this stunning set of witch doom classics, the twin female vocal embellishments contrasting superbly with the sleek stoner riffs beneath them in a series of hypnotic modern gothic chants. Like most bands on the Solar Lodge imprint their image and sound flirt dangerously with the ridiculous at times, but they have the class and panache to pull it off.

Bandcamp link


Varsovie – Pression À Froid

The latest set from Grenoble-based Varsovie was the stand-out post-punk album of the year, combining intricate arrangements, a driving insistent beat, and a timeless, semi-spoken vocal that has been the hallmark of French language darkwave for over four decades, in songs which had enough musical and lyrical originality to rise above the competition and mark Pression À Froid out as a future classic.

Bandcamp link


Maletas Vacias – Bitacora Incognita

After Diavol Strain in 2022, Maletas Vacias maintain a Chilean presence in our annual countdown with their own uniquely singular take on the gothic darkwave sub-genre on a stunning debut album which bristles with a fresh energy and a willingness to dip into other genres, adding a haunting retro 80’s quirky dark pop sheen to their post-punk sensibilities.

Bandcamp link


Decena Tragica - Animal Moderno

The second Latin American selection of 2023 may only be a mini-album, but Mexican post-punk project Decena Tragica deserve plaudits for conjuring up the ghost of legendary early 80's Spanish post-punk outfit Paralisis Permanente on the main track of this release, with shades of death rock on other tracks.

Bandcamp link


Shrouds - Grimoire

Although this blog usually eschews artists who embrace rather too enthusiastically some of the more cartoonish aspects of goth, there were undeniably some excellent if cliché-ridden examples of Californian deathrock in 2023, with Grimoire, the physical release of an expanded re-working of Shrouds’s 2017 debut EP an undisputed highlight. Indeed an early version of the track below, Sin, initially featured on an even earlier EP back in 2015! Histrionic vocals, frenetic drumming, angular spooky guitar parts, the whiff of ultra firm hold hairspray and a wilfully muddy production mix conjure up ghosts from the 1981 heyday of positive punk.

Bandcamp link


Cemetary Girlz – L’envol du Corbeau

France’s Cemetary Girlz are another act not afraid to tie their colours (ok, colour) firmly to the 1980’s/1990’s goth mast, and their debut LP L’envol du Corbeau was a thrillingly haunting examination of some of the darker corners of the genre, exhuming corpses left untouched for thirty years. Their songs are intriguing guitar FX-drenched soundscapes which branch off into ever deeper, more melancholic sub-worlds.

Bandcamp link


In A Darkened Room – Sorrow

Another stunning debut, In A Darkened Room’s Sorrow was another release which brought together previous singles alongside new material. Slower, more melodic and more introspective than many other acts, with lugubrious shades of the 'miserygoth' sub-genre at times, Sorrow was another consistently excellent release from a North American scene which enjoyed a real renaissance this year.

Bandcamp link



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