PDF version - Ground Under Productions
Transcription
PDF version - Ground Under Productions
Featuring the dancefloor hit Black + Blue [EP still available with remixes from Haujobb, Lights of Euphoria + more] Angel Theory - Re-possession GUP CD 013 www.angeltheory.com other releases: GUP CD 011 Black + Blue EP GUP CD 009 Fatal Condition GUP CD 008 Transmission EP Elegant + emotional electronics... return with their 3rd, best + most substantial album Ascension Resurrection Eve - Ascension GUP CD 012 012 www.resurrectioneve.com other releases: GUP CD 004 Rapture BM 007 Ancient Curse [deleted] (world) Ground Under Productions www.gup.net.au (europe) Endless Records www.endless-records.de (g/a/s) Al!ve www.alive-ag.de issue tenBmarBaprBmay gary numan – 12 zeitgeist – 14 my chemical romance – 16 android lust – 18 dandelion wine – 19 david cronenberg – 20 collide – 22 opeth – 24 fields of the nephilim – 26 festival report – big day out – 30 – distorted – 28 – cold meat industry – 32 – under the blue moon – 35 troma – 36 unter null – 38 iszoloscope – 38 ah cama-sotz – 39 dope stars inc. – 39 leæther strip – 40 crimes of the primary – 42 Reviews: film, computer games, comics, books, music reviews – 44 Iggy Pop photographed by Angelica East angelica@jellibat.com G Editor: Alexandra Heller-Nicholas Sub Editors: Michelle Smith, Penelope Goodes Music Editor: Jarod Collard Sales + Publicity: Kama C. Way editorial The time has come to say adieu—to you and you and you! FIEND will keep kicking, but your faithful editor of the past ten issues is venturing down a different path. In FIEND’s short but feisty life span, we’ve covered a lot of widely varying aspects of dark alternative culture, but the one constant has been our surprise at just how diverse and interesting a bunch our readers are. The anti-Ralphs, the anti-Cleos…trust us there are enough of you out there to form a large and threatening army of Culturally Unimpressed. Through FIEND, I have been proud to document many of the aspects that make our team the winning one. The FIEND Magazine crew—the dedicated and gloriously motley gaggle that they are—live the life: these are no subcultural fucking tourists. Their hard work and passion will continue to fill these pages in future issues, and I for one can’t wait to see what perverse take on the car-crash of popular culture FIEND takes in the years to come. Over and out. – Alexandra Heller-Nicholas (Founding Editor, 2003–2006) Design: Alex Hammond [ah@fiend-magazine.com] Charlie Kinross [charliejnrk@hotmail.com] Jasmin Tulk [jasmintulk@gmail.com] Fiend Logo: 13am [13am@13am.net] Contributors: Jay Annabel, Alicia Campos, Michael Catley, Ben Conant, Aowyne Davies, Brent Donaldson, Justin Donnelly, Tessa Drysdale, Angelica East, Ehlana Hakuli, Peter Hakuli, Amber Hastings, Abby Helasdottir, Mark T Hewitt, James Lowry, Christian McCrea, Matt O’Callaghan, Ben Parker, Martyn Pedler, Emily Potter, Tavis Potts, Aimee Sinclair, Adrian Stephens, Richard Stevenson, Justin Tall, Jarrod Taylor, Nic Toupee, Tom Wark, Montag Wegner, Kathryn Williams, Nat Williams, David Witteveen, Michael Wolloghan. FIEND is staffed by dedicated volunteers. The editor thanks: Jarod; Sonia and Andrew; Kama; Michelle; Teresa; all the designers, writers, contributors and promo partners over the years; JAn; All-weather Matte; Raibell, Mum and Dad; Rolando Caputo; Peril Peter; Christian; Penny Wife; Justin and Ruth; Kate and Ben; and all the bands, artists, and friends who’ve been involved. Advertising: John Joseph – Off Campus Promotions www.oncampuspromotions.com.au PO Box 1382 Collingwood VIC 3066 john@oncampuspromotions.com.au p: 03 94198044 m: 0414543634 f: 03 94198644 Giveaways + Competitions: Entry is open to residents of Australia and New Zealand only (except volunteers and immediate families of FIEND Magazine and GUP). Only entries that comply with these terms will be eligible. The judges decision is final and no correspondance will be entered into. Prizes must be taken as offered and are not redeemable for cash. The promoters is not responsible for lost or redirected mail. The promoter is Ground Under Productions ABN: 80604940282 Privacy Information: To enter, you accept that you must provide certain information to FIEND magazine and its publisher Ground Under Productions. This information will be used only as it pertains to your eligibility to giveaways and other relevent promotions, and to gather information _06 about FIEND readers for marketing purposes. Your specific information will not be passed on to any other person or entity outside of these areas. You can access the information that FIEND holds about you by emailing privacy@fiend-magazine.com FIEND Magazine is published by GROUND UNDER PRODUCTIONS (ABN: 80604940282). Copyright 2006 GROUND UNDER PRODUCTIONS. All rights reserved by Ground Under Productions. All images are copyrighted to their respective owners. No part of this magazine or associated website may be reproduced, in whole or in part, by any means, electronic or mechanical (including photocopying), without the prior written permission of the publisher. All product specifications are correct at th time of printing but are subject to change at the discretion of the distributor. FIEND Magazine and Ground Under Productions assume no responsibility for the content of websites or other external material referenced, some of which may contain mature subject matter. FIEND is not liable for any damages or injury resulting from: accessing, or the inability to access these websites or material, or from any products of services offered via these websites or material. FIEND Magazine. ISSN: 1448-9295 ABN: 80604940282 11/60 Langridge St Collingwood VIC 3066 Australia www.fiend-magazine.com info@fiend-magazine.com U U C I S U M S W E N Clan of Xymox comes thundering into the modern age with a digital-only download for the new single ‘Weak in My Knees’. The seven tracks that make up the release are to serve as a bit of a sampler of the group’s upcoming album to be released later this year... Electric Six’s Señor Smoke may have been released in Australia on Valentine’s Day last year, but the US has only just got its first taste of the album officially thanks to goth/industrial label Metropolis. Is this a sign that the label is moving in a ‘Danger! High Voltage!’ direction? Wait and see... Rammstein has found itself in a somewhat curious legal predicament. According to United Press International, the convicted cannibal Armin Meiwes (the inspiration for the Rammstein single ‘Mein Teil’) has filed suit, claiming the song is about him and that the band did not ask his permission... Ministry has teamed up with Jello Biafra, Killing Joke’s Paul Raven and Tommy Victor (ex-Danzig) for the band’s new album, Rio Grande Blood, due out midyear. Joey Jordison (Slipknot) is set to play drums for Al Jourgensen and co. when Ministry kicks off on a US tour to support the album... Psychobilly legends Nekromantix are busy at work on the band’s new album, Nekroman. Troy and James are planning on its release in late 2006, with a single due out at the end of our winter. Meanwhile, Nekroman’s “other” band, HorrorPops (pictured) posted a message on its website about last year’s Australian tour: “Australia was more than we dreamed for. Besides from hugging the shit out of koalas and chasing down kangaroos, Australia is the rock ‘n roll country and if you play in a band you should head down there immediately! We were a bit scared going there considering that we had to fly everywhere and knowing about HorrorPops luck of engines catching fire. But hey, we didn’t crash or emergency land even once! So we are going to risk our luck and hopefully hit the Aussies soon again”... For the Old People: Brian Eno is recording music again with Roxy Music (Young People translation: like the Velvet Goldmine soundtrack? If “yes”, then this is good news for you!)... Announcements are starting to trickle through concerning the line-ups for some of the big dark alternative festivals in Europe later this year. Leipzig once again plays host to Wave Gotik Treffen, and this year features a breathtakingly eclectic selection thus far: Nitzer Ebb performs its first reunion show since the group’s demise, and is joined by The Legendary Pink Dots, Heaven 17, Implant, Theatre of Tragedy and a musical version of a medieval script of Carmina Burana performed by Corvus Corax! M’era Luna also features Nitzer Ebb, but the big drawcard there will be HorrorPops a live performance by Front Line Assembly, who will be joined by FIEND favourites The Birthday Massacre (pictured), In Strict Confidence, Funker Vogt and running gag, Blutengel. No word yet on the English festivals—the line up for the April and October Whitby festivals and August’s Infest are yet to be announced... Lisa Gerrard’s (Dead Can Dance, award-winning composer) house was threatened by the bushfires in Gippsland, Victoria recently. Gerrard told The Age’s Adam Morton: “When a crisis comes that’s when I know I’m an Australian. I’m not particularly patriotic or a nationalistic person but that’s the spirit of this country”... Congratulations to Sydney bands Dazy Chain and The Process Void, and Perth’s Intrasonic for teaming up with the Crash Frequency collective! The force to be reckoned with just got better... Fellow “Crashers” Tankt join local lads IKON on the US label Static Sky (home of electro-industrial giants Mentallo and the Fixer). Drinks all round! Birthday Massacre metal The Eternal has made a film clip for the track ‘Everlasting’ from the band’s second album, Sleep of Reason. You can download it online at www.the-eternal.com. The Eternal also hopes to make an announcement about the release of its second album in the very near future. See pics of The Eternal supporting HIM on the FIEND website www.fiend-magazine.com. Setting foot on Australian soil for the first time in 2003, the mighty The Haunted (pictured) battered the Australian masses to a pulp with the band’s trademark thrash riffs and unyielding rhythms. Now the European thrash kings return to Australia in March with special guests Exodus. Sweden’s prog death metal masters Opeth are on their way back to Australia in April with the band’s latest offering Ghost Reveries. Come join in a night of interwoven beauty, melody, and aggression as Opeth casts its signature dark sounds across our land. For tour dates and ticket info for these international acts visit www.ozmosh.com The Haunted 07_ wait no longer Placebo’s long awaited new album Meds is by all accounts a return to form after 2004’s somewhat awkward (but high selling) Sleeping with Ghosts. Ten years into the band’s career, Placebo spent eight weeks recording the album in London. “We allowed space for the songwriting to shine through rather than show up how clever we were and how good we’ve gotten at using the studio,” says spunkmuppet vocalist Brian Molko. “We were going for simplicity rather than elaboration.” Does it work? Either way, the album contains a song called ‘Space Monkey’, so we’re happy. Innocent When You Dream, the collected interviews of Tom Waits, spans the 20 plus albums and 30 plus years of the King of the Drunken Bohemians. But lads, don’t get your hopes up—this is far from a selfhelp book. In the words of the man himself: “I’ve never met anyone who made it with a chick because they owned a Tom Waits album. I’ve got all three, and it’s never helped me”. Editor Mac Montadon’s favourite Tom Waits album is Small Change (1976). Innocent When You Dream is out through Allen and Unwin. U another dose K www.placeboworld.co.uk haunted C NECROFANCY GIVEAWAY! Adelaide’s Necromancy darlinks have given FIEND two necroshirts to creep out your folks and their folks. Tell FIEND giveaways what size you need in regular or girly shape and support your local grave robbers. Necromancy is held the last Saturday of every month at Enigma Bar, 173 Hindley Street, Adelaide. (See page 11 to enter) K www.clubnecromancy.com _08 Feeling a little creeped out? Check out these places to see if there’s a supernatural explanation to your unrest; according to theshadowlands. net, these are some of the most haunted places in Australia. (The FIEND office is ominously not on their list, however. Sp00ky!) to hell and back again Latest word in the malbowges is that Melbourne’s Hell is back on 22 April 2006. Dante’s prose is pretty hard going, but from what we’ve managed to decipher “EBM, industrial, cyber, and dance at Deep 11, 456 Queen St Melbourne from 11 pm ‘til late, with guest DJs to make you quake.” For information and to receive spam from Hell email “you-know-who” at phlexmartian@yahoo.co.uk K www.bodymusicfromhell.com New South Wales: Bathurst’s Machatti Park Maitland Jail Queanbeyan’s Air Disaster Memorial Queensland: Brisbane Town Hall Lutwyche Cemetery Mossman Gorge South Australia: The old Norwood primary school Kapunda Cemetery Tasmania: Richmond Bridge Theatre Royal Victoria: Melbourne’s Princess Theatre Victoria Markets Western Australia: The Old Fremantle Prison Nannup’s Old Bakery K www.theshadowlands.net GIVEAWAY! r.i.p moustapha akkad Who, you ask? Akkad was the executive producer of the Halloween films, and without him the numerous sequels that have brought Michael Myers back to life in inexplicable ways time and time again would not have been. Born in Aleppo, Syria, Akkad died on 11 November last year from injuries sustained in terrorist bombings in Jordan. He was 75 years old. the serpent’s web red stripe goes faster Anyone who is lucky enough to live skulking distance from Sydney’s Gallery Sepentine may think that they have a monopoly on le chique gothique, but, as with most things these days, the cool kids have no choice but to share with everyone who has their claws in even the most prehistoric internet connection and a firm recollection of Dad’s credit card number. FIEND’S fave orders from the Gallery Serpentine website are the corset bag (who wants to spend a mountain of cash on a corset and then have the cat swinging on it?! Although they do look cute when the do that), the filigree cross in ruby, and best of all, the customisable bone channels to go with an underbust corset, so you can have a black corset and add silver, red, or a lewd pink, if you must. For Messrs. the FIEND web order faves are the slim line shirt in pinstripe and the mourning coat in lush brocade. The vaults of Dame Druscilla’s finishing school taught these girls proper manners; to say thanks for visiting their website they’ll give you the opportunity to win a $100 haul. See the Gallery Serpentine ad this issue for details. LipServiceHeavyRedDemoniaRoute66 LiquorbrandLucky13DollDeluxe AngeloriumDeuceCreepersSinnersInk HellForLeatherEquinoxManicPanic Beserk… Dizzy yet? Perth’s Red Stripe Clothing has a giddying range of smokin’ hot gear, whether you want to play dolls or damned, and get extra FIEND horns for being so supportive of Australian designers. Fortunately for those off the Perth radar, Red Stripe is preparing to dive into the data stream and go online. Visit their website for a “boo” at the huge range of shoes and a tease of the brands above, and to sign up to pounce when they throw the switch on the web store. FIEND’s “I’m feeling pov/ I’m feeling loaded” picks are a standard spiked cuff by Hell for Leather (you can never have too many) and a pair of monster shiny boots to make you taller than your uncle Nev. Go browse at 8-10 Roe Street, Northbridge, WA or visit K www.redstripeclothing.com K www.galleryserpentine.com.au C GIVEAWAY! RESURRECTION THEORY The much anticipated new albums from Australian favourites Angel Theory (Re-possession) and Resurrection Eve (Ascension) are on non-stop rotation in the FIEND office, and we’ve got five of each to giveaway (if we don’t wear out all the copies first!) courtesy of Ground Under Productions. (See page 11 to enter) K www.angeltheory.com K www.resurrection-eve.com 09_ GIVEAWAY! free autumn decadence raw GIVEAWAY! wildloot! The queens of the Wild West at Wildilocks in Perth are feeling sorry for the rest of the country, and think a bottle of iridescent hair dye is enough to make it all better. Well, we’ll take your absurdly-intense, only-stockist-in-Australia big-bottle of hair dye, but don’t think this makes us friends. Got it? Care of Wildilocks FIEND has one atomic pink and one blue mayhem bottle of hair dye to give to the sulkiest reader. Tell us which one you need to make it all go away. Check out the colours at www. wildilocks.com and at the new store at Bases808, 808 Hay Street, Perth. (See below to enter) There is a high chance that if you’ve seen a gorgeous piece of bat or spider jewellery in Australia, it has been made by the ever-distinguished and savvy Gregory Bolton. Long a FIEND favourite, Gregory spins a trove of tasteful period jewellery with a dark decadent edge. Close relatives of the heralded Bat and Spider collections are the exquisite Egyptian Revival collection, the Rubber Collection, Rose Collection, Filligree Collection, and, for sheer jewel-encrusted indulgence, FIEND favourite, the Beyond Deluxe Collection. Have a tiptoe around the crystal waist cincher, and make sure you’ve got someone to catch your swoon. Gregory has been a dear, as always, and given FIEND two bat chokers and two bat bracelets to give away, perfect peeking out from a coat or shirt in blustery autumn. Find his wares at your nearest peddler of spooky jewels or visit his online store for free shipping anywhere in Australia. (See below to enter) GIVEAWAY! alchemy gorgeous k Free jewellery! Yup. The generous grimoire merchants at Le Cabinet Des Curiosities want everyone to know they are the spot to dig for Alchemy Gothic jewellery, so they’ve given FIEND a beautiful skull and coffin necklace to give away. FIEND giveaways are more popular than ever, so zap, spam, or love-letter us post haste. This gem is totally suitable for misters, misters. (See below to enter) K http://stores.ebay.com.au/LeCabinet-des-Curiosities mONSTER HAUL! HOW TO ENTER... If any of the lush loot appeals to you, enter with your name, postal address, and preferred creepy freebie. By snail mail: FIEND Giveaways, 11/60 Langridge Street, Collingwood, Vic 3066 By email: giveaways@fiend-magazine.com By SMS: 0400 569 895 K www.gregorybolton.com holding a grudge Multiple entries for the same item will be used to line the bird cage: one entry per item per hottie only, please, and that includes SMS. Entries close 31/05/06. Winners announced 07/08/06 at www.fiend-magazine. com. SMS/text messages charged at your standard pre-arranged rates. FIEND Magazine receives no revenue for this message, and denies all and any liability for fees incurred by your telecommunications carrier. If you are unsure of your fee structure, FIEND requires that you submit giveaway entries only via post or email. Privacy policy page 5. Both Sarah Michelle Gellar and director Takashi Shimizu have signed up to make the American sequel to The Grudge, based on the Japanese sequel also directed by Shimizu. Set for an October 2006 release in the US, fans are hoping that the Australian release won’t be too much further off. But will it, like the first American Grudge film, be better than the original? Sceptics in the FIEND office suggest it couldn’t be any worse… 11_ _12 Gary Numan, a pivotal and founding figure of modern electronica, is on the phone talking about his new vision, Jagged, the first release of new material in roughly six years. Jagged is, up front, a tough and aggressive album in the current nu-metal vein that he first tapped into in 1994 with his (mostly overlooked) turning-point album, Sacrifice. Sacrifice represented a complete rebuilding of Numan from the ground up. Yet it wasn’t until 1998 and the release of the lauded Exile that the world rang to the sound of nu-metal and the vast legions of Numanoids returned from their exile in the wilderness. Jagged is arguably the most intricate and dense album since 1980’s iconic Telekon. Resplendent and dripping with lush strings, soaring guitars and choral voices it also offers multiple layers of rich tonality and endless depth; a sonic landscape composed of massed minute details laying in wait for anyone willing to take the time to explore. I asked, why such detail, why so much intricacy? “I love industrial music and I think industrial music has always had that element running through it. This use of noises and little effects and little strange graunches and groans and clicks, you use that as your production technique instead of using conventional musical parts … The idea of using noises and so on is something I’ve been into almost since day one really … I would wander around the streets with a little tape recorder and a microphone just kicking things and banging things and wobbling things, trying to record hundreds and hundreds of little noises to build up as vast a library as I could of just noises and then find ways of using those noises on the record. I think to have your melody and your vocals and your guitars doing their thing is all very valid and that’s obviously a core part of the music, but to have all this other stuff going on, this background of little noises and glitches and so on, I just think that it makes a very interesting listening experience really.” With Jagged, for the first time in a very long time, Numan has relinquished control of the sonic behemoth at his command and let his long-time fan and friend Ade Fenton take responsibility. How did this come about? “He’s been a fan of mine for a long time … He’s also been a friend of mine now for many, many years so he’s very aware of my ambition and the sort of music that I’m into and where I want to go. When I got him in to work on the album with “In all of us there is this potential to go one way or the other depending on what life throws at us. I find that a very fascinating experience.” musicality, lyrically seeps from a desolate and dark crevice in Numan’s brain. Is it cathartic to release such demons upon the world or is it just your creative vehicle? “A bit of both, to be truthful. Lyrically, Jagged is pretty dark and there’s some fairly heavy things going on in there with the subject matter and the lyrics, yet there is a thread of my life that runs through all of it. A lot of this album lyrically was created because I saw a documentary on television … it was about a serial killer and there was a traumatic experience that happened in his life, which made him go that way. It just made me think about my own life … it looks at the seedier side or the more perverse things that I dabbled with over the years and just that whole darker side of our lives as we go through it. There is that thread running through pretty much all the songs on Jagged. If I could describe it this way, I open the door to the studio and it’s as if I’ve opened a door to another side of my brain where all this other stuff is sitting and lurking and waiting to come out and I’m fascinated to see it in myself and to write about it. In all of us there is this potential to go one way or the other depending on what life throws at us. I find that a very fascinating experience.” me, he was already very familiar with where I wanted to be and the problems that I was having … he just stepped straight into the breach and he was an absolute waterfall of ideas. It was brilliant, absolutely brilliant! Ade was a revelation to me, to be honest. He’s never even produced an album before … It was like watching a genius in the making… It was an amazing thing! His impact on the album has been very, very impressive.” Even before its official release, Jagged is already being heralded by the critics and vast armies of Numanoids, me being one, as his greatest work to date. With its imminent launch pending, Numan will begin a gruelling year of live shows across Britain, Europe, and America to assail the earth with his ashen vision for a nu-metal landscape. Careful, this nu-metal is Jagged. Jagged, despite its anthemic themes and soaring www.numan.co.uk – Michael Catley 13_ _14 Sydney’s Zeitgeist has become a familiar name to those who haunt live venues, dark alternative-friendly music stores and the internet. With its dedicated fan-base consistently on the rise with each new release, Zeitgeist has created its trademark sound from a hotchpotch of classic gothic metal, female ethereal and—gasp!—even a little smidgen of electro now and then. FIEND chats to the rising stars. FIEND: The term “gothic rock” is pretty expansive: while some consider you guys metal, others find your style much more in tune with a lot of the softer death rock stuff coming out of Germany and places like that. What does genre mean to Zeitgeist, in terms of both your own sound and that of other bands, and in reference to the music industry in general? DRYNE: For me, unlike my fellow members, genres are a must. I know that many bands are afraid of such a thing and don’t want to “pigeonhole” themselves into a category or genre but I personally have always felt that genres were very important. As much as everyone hates to admit it, labels and such are really a fact of life and something we come across every day. However I don’t think that we’ve been restricted by it. MATT: To me, the gothic genre defines an image, what we sing about and how we look: dark and mysterious, black leather and eye make-up. TRYST: Labels are getting harder and harder to place these days. The sign that you are doing something right is probably the fact that it isn’t biased to any one style or genre. Then again it’s much harder for people to identify with something when they can’t identify it first … CINDEL: I … find that Zeitgeist has a wonderful collection of songs which seem to have no boundaries when it comes to genres. No one person likes to write or play the same type of song every time—that would be boring and uninspiring … I just play what I feel and what I think sounds interesting. FIEND: Zeitgeist is one of the only Australian bands that falls under the “goth” banner that isn’t an electro band … DRYNE: We are not an electro band by any means and in fact we have very little knowledge of all things electro. This is one reason why we leave it up to the ones that are in the know to do it for us via the remixes we have made. I think it arises from the fact that traditionally we are very much a band that is influenced from artists that don’t necessarily have a lot to do with electronica. However that’s not to say that we’re not interested and we are slowly incorporating more electronic elements into our sound. MATT: I think that everyone in the band considers themselves musicians before anything else. Therefore, when it comes to recording or playing live, we want the audience to hear us play rather than program. Any band can pre-record stuff or use sequences to play along with. To me, that kind of thing is just a notch above karaoke! FIEND: Zeitgeist has been kicking around for a bit now—is there in your opinion a supportive community for you (and bands like you) in terms of audience support and a network of other bands? DRYNE: It’s probably the internet that has probably been most favourable to us and our contemporaries in enabling people to be aware of bands that would otherwise be largely ignored by traditional media. I still think that clubs should be much more responsible for supporting Australian music and to me it is nothing things we were doing at the time of Lunar, our second release. Lunar was an album in which each track really stood out as being quite different from the other, where each one had a real strong identity of its own and where there was a greater degree of variation, stylistically, between songs than perhaps what one would normally expect. It is very different, in that respect, to Neurotic and Latonic, our last studio album, one which I felt was a lot more straightforward. TRYST: A touch of “bash your head up against a wall until it sounds good”-styled industrial has been incorporated and you will hear this on Cindel’s ‘Victims of the Times’. MEMBERS: FIEND: What influences Zeitgeist, as individual members, as songwriters, and as a group? Dryne (guitar) Pantha (vocals) Cindel (keyboards and piano) Tryst (bass and backing vocals) Matt (drums and electric pads) Troy (guitar) CINDEL: I started playing piano when I was young and so have been brought up playing classical but I also love artists like Kate Bush, who incorporate their piano skills into their songs in addition to playing with heavier instruments ... If I could take the dark keyboard mixed with heavy guitar sounds of black metal music and use it with female-only vox, it would be a perfect world (not really a fan of the growling vocal technique). DISCOGRAPHY: Prologue (1996) Lunar (1998) Entrap (Caught in Winter) (2000) Neurotic and Latonic (2002) Victims of the Zeitgeist (2004) Horoscope (2005) Love, Horror, Adult Themes (2006) short of a national shame that so many good local bands are ignored in favour of their safer European counterparts. As I said in this very magazine in 2004, one day clubs will find that the support of Australian artists will become paramount to their existence—this I still believe! FIEND: Tell us about the latest release—how do you think it varies from older material? DRYNE: The new album, Love, Horror, Adult Themes, is our seventh release to date and features a total of nine tracks. This album is very much a return to the kind of PANTHA: I constantly look for something or someone to influence my artistic endeavours. Influences include new ideas in melody and recording styles as well as historic ones. I look at trends such as The Red Stripes’ and Schvendes’ (WA band) interest in early US country music, to trends in UK magazine NME, to old ’80s dance songs … FIEND: Where to now? What’s on the cards? TROY: We will continue to focus on Zeitgeist merchandise and clothing apparel (which has proven hugely successful) with a view to establishing a national network of stockists across the country. DRYNE: As this interview takes place, we are right now in the midst of the national club launch for the ‘Horoscope’ single. ‘Horoscope’ has acted as a prelude to Love, Horror, Adult Themes. … By the time this issue hits the shelves the album will be out and we’ll be most likely kicking off another national club launch in support of it. There are plans for a second single to be lifted off the album, which we will endeavour to get out in the second half of the year. It’s going to be a busy time from here on in! Read the full transcript of this interview and Zeitgeist’s 2004 interview with FIEND at www.fiend-magazine.com www.zeitgeistaustralia.com 15_ Emerging from New Jersey in the early 2000s, referencing Irvine Welsh and often compared to bands such as Thursday, A.F.I. and The Used, My Chemical Romance has spent the last few years growing from a musical project between two brothers and friends to one of the most popular new bands in the alternative scene. Nat Williams snuggles up. My Chemical Romance began life as a collaboration between Gerald Way and Matt Pelissier. Having known each other since high school, they and the other future band members kept in contact through years and various musical projects. Dissatisfied with the direction his life was taking, Way contacted Pelissier and the two came together to write music. ‘Skylines and Turnstiles’ was the result. “I was doing animation in New York City, living in my mother’s basement, and I was really starting to question the direction of my life,” Way has said. Revenge. Combining the emotional post-punk of the band’s first album with high production values and pop sensibilities, the album was created to appeal to both the established fan base and also to a larger, mainstream audience. With the anthemic ‘I’m Not Okay (I Promise)’ and the ballad ‘Helena’, Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge manages to balance the commercial singles with tracks reminiscent of the first album, such as ‘Thank You for The Venom’ and ‘I Never Told You “So I called Matt, who’d been asking himself a lot of the same questions. We decided we would get together and play some music.” values, including the funeral-themed ‘Helena’ and the recently released video of ‘Ghost Of You’. The band has been touring off the back of such success, appearing on the ‘Taste Of Chaos’ tour and supporting Green Day on its ‘American Idiot’ tour. This included dates in Australia in late 2005, with Jimmy Eat World as well, marking the first time My Chemical Romance had played here. To accompany this extensive touring, My Chemical Romance’s third release, a live CD and DVD entitled Life on the Murder Scene, has been slated for late March 2006. Critically, the band has had mixed reviews. Commercially, My Chemical Romance has penetrated the mainstream market much better than bands of a similar sound or style, appealing both to the average 14–20year-old MTV market and the “Hot Topic” teenagers. However, the band has received criticism from the posthardcore scene and longtime fans, after the more “pop-orientated” singles and commercial production of Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge, and also due to the apparent “goth” categorisation that often gets applied to bands such as My Chemical Romance and A.F.I. The collaboration was a success for Way and Pelissier, who then invited Ray Toto, Frank Iero and Gerald’s brother Mikey to form the then nascent My Chemical Romance. In 2002, the band recorded its first album, I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love, on Eyeball Records. Musically fast and energetic post-punk, but with dark and introspective lyrics often referred to as “emo” or “goth”, the album garnered a devoted local scene and cited influences from The Misfits to The Cure and The Smiths. There have been unavoidable comparisons to the band Thursday: both hail from New Jersey, both recorded for Eyeball records and Thursday’s vocalist, Geoff Rickly, produced I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love. “Ha nd in your icy b lues, mine, into And then I’d say to you: Gerald has said that the lyrics written for the album were a great way to deal ‘We could take to the highway’…” incidents of depression and illness in the Way family. The music on I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love ranges from the energetic and confrontational ‘Honey, This Mirror Isn’t Big Enough for the Two of Us’ and ‘Cubicles’ to the introspective ‘Early Sunsets Over Monroeville’ and the emotionally epic ‘Demolition Lovers’. What I Did For A Living’. With the support of a major label and the success of ‘I’m Not Okay (I Promise)’, which hit #4 on American single charts, My Chemical Romance reached the “MTV audience” and have been enjoying that success. Touring combined with this album to cultivate a strong local following and establish a name for My Chemical Romance on the internet. Utilising the relatively new community of MySpace, the band created a large cult presence that was soon noticed by the major record labels. In 2004, My Chemical Romance signed with Warner and set about recording Three Cheers For Sweet My Chemical Romance has also released a plethora of music videos to accompany its releases. I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love brought videos for the tracks ‘Honey, This Mirror Isn’t Big Enough for the Two of Us’ and ‘Vampires Will Never Hurt You’. The major label support of Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge made for music videos of higher quality and production My Chemical Romance is one a number of bands that have attained a large degree of their popularity and fan base from MySpace, a “blog”style network of personal web pages. My Chemical Romance has accumulated almost half a million “friends” in its personal network, and its signing to a major label is partially accredited to this form of internet word of mouth. And for the future? The band has been wrapping up months of touring and preparing for its live CD/DVD set. The band has also been quoted as indicating that it’s preparing to go into the studio to begin recording its third album. Having to record a follow-up to its breakthrough album, this may prove the point at which My Chemical Romance continues its success or fades back into obscurity like so many other bands like them. “I’ll see your eyes, and in this pool of blood, I’ll meet your eyes; I mean this forever” 17_ Conceived in the mid-‘90s to drag people’s perplexing emotions and not just their asses on to the dancefloor, Shikhee’s intense electro/industrial project Android Lust is an aptly named combination of unwavering drive and fleshy reality. Moved by, but never imitating, PJ Harvey, David Bowie, NIN, pre-Process Skinny Puppy, and even Pink Floyd, Shikhee has FIEND firmly in her sniper-sights, and she’s not going to miss. Kama C Way takes the shot. 2004’s widely successful album The Dividing was a rhythmic industrial meal, full of conviction and excellently produced, and one of those that has you saying, “oh no wait, this is my favourite track.” Shikhee feels the new album Devour, Rise and Take Flight is better still: “it’s my best work to date. I don’t have rigid preconceived notions of what the album should sound like when I start the process. It evolves as I write, and starts to take shape. Overall, I wanted this album to be more direct lyrically, and sonically unrestrained. I also don’t like to adhere to one particular feel throughout the album. That gets tired for me. So you’ll find some variety of moods on the album. Some people complain that it’s too much variety, but you can’t please everyone.” No, you can’t, and Shikhee’s instinctual obedience to her own motivations is clear in her music and sets her apart from many other female musicians who present a sultry or cute image. Android Lust is more primal and even a bit alien. “There’s no point in working if it’s not honest,” Shikhee says. “I do it for myself, and I write what needs to be released. And if people like it, then it’s an added bonus. I can’t get in the studio and create a groove or write lyrics if it’s not going to make a difference to me. I tend to stay far away from the traditional female image the industry likes to push. It’s too easy to dress up a woman, or undress her, and flaunt her sexually, thus diminishing her beyond her flesh. And unfortunately a lot of women are all too willing to bend over and accept this role because it’s easy. But that kind of appeal doesn’t go far beyond your crotch. And I don’t want to degrade my art like that. My image is based on who I am, what my art is about, and what appeals to me. With such a momentum for honest art, it would be easy to imagine Shikhee bucking the idea of music downloads as opposed to the tangible experience of buying a CD or even gracing a live gig (no, really? People still do that?), but the mesh of technology and humanity seem to prevail. “I am a believer in legal downloading. There’s nothing quite like the instant gratification. But I do hope that the physical media never goes away. Because it’s always nice to hold the package in your hands and turn the pages of a booklet to read the lyrics as you’re hearing the songs. And of course the artwork that accompanies the music says something about the music and the artist. We love playing live. It’s a great feeling, and it’s wonderful to meet fans all over and realise that the art you create matters to some people. We plan to tour a lot this year. www.androidlust.com “It’s too easy to dress up a woman, or undress her, and flaunt her sexually, thus diminishing her beyond her flesh. “ _18 Melbourne-based duo Dandelion Wine may have had line-up shifts over the years, but core members Nicholas and Naomi have kept the nectar flowing across Australia and Europe. On the eve of the release of the new album An Inexact Science, Dandelion Wine’s signature Ye Olde Wall of Sound meets a darker and more aggressive style encompassing their wide and varied tastes and inspirations. By Alexandra Nicholas. Alexandra Nicholas: Tell us the Dandelion Wine story thus far! Dandelion Wine: Formed many moons ago in the late ‘90s as a four piece—we kind of thought we’d end up like Lush or the Clouds or something, but it came out darker than that and we started adding flute and dulcimer… we got more instruments and more pedals and then less members and more technology. We’ve had a couple of independent releases here in Australia before we released Light Streaming Down, which was distributed in Europe and the US. We ended up touring Europe a couple of times in 2002 and 2003 and getting to visit some of the most amazing places around. Now we’re just itching to go back! Strangely enough we’ve done a lot more gigs in Europe than we have in other states of Australia so we intend to rectify that this year. AN: What precisely does “an inexact science” refer to? DW: It’s one of those things that has a lot of layers to it: it initially came up when talking about microphone placement and music in general. Basically music is all physics, but all the scientific knowledge in the world is not going to create something of artistic value. AN: You are now officially a duo? DW: Well seeing as our last member (violinist Daniel Stefanski) has moved to Botswana, yes—at least for the “It’s been a long line of Spinal Tap-esque exploding drummers and the like until we finally realised that we basically are a duo! Seems the universe has been telling us that for a while but we weren’t really listening!” foreseeable future. It’s been a long line of Spinal Tapesque exploding drummers and the like until we finally realised that we basically are a duo! Seems the universe has been telling us that for a while but we weren’t really listening! It’s opened up the creative side a lot and, hell, touring is much easier and cheaper now! I guess we were always scared of it becoming a bit karaoke with just the two of us but we’ve found a way to do it where we’re still doing the bulk of things live and not just playing a couple of incidental bits of a backing track. AN: Europeans seem to have really picked up on you guys. What is it about your sound that you think hits that indigenous aspect of places like Eastern Europe? DW: Good question! In part they seem to have an affinity for less direct and straightforward styles of music there. I guess they also relate to the medieval and folk elements and instruments because there’s more of a tradition of that over there. We’ve had people come up to us in clubs in Poland and be a tad baffled as to how an Australian band does music like this because we don’t have any real history in that respect but maybe it stems from the fact that Australia is a huge mix of almost every other culture… we don’t know! www.dandelionwine.com.au 19_ _20 g are awash with bodies The films of David Cronenber sforming— sometimes mutating, changing, and tran t, but always compelling, dangerous, sometimes malevolen side. Transformation has exciting, and a touch on the ick in almost every film he been a recurring theme, evident no surprise that Cronenberg has made. So it should come as sformation from being himself has undergone a tran or “Dave the Depraved” known as the “King of Sleaze” , unique, and interesting to one of the most intelligent Matt O’Callaghan. filmmakers working today. By Cronenberg’s name became familiar in the ‘70s with a series of low-budget horror films, made thanks to generous tax shelter film financing offered by the Canadian government to encourage local filmmakers. He fashioned three movies that demonstrated his own sensibilities at the same time as appealing directly to the burgeoning home video crowd, which was hungry for cutting edge bad-ass horror that could be watched safely behind closed doors. The first two films made were his debut Shivers and the follow-up Rabid. Both movies were about infectious diseases that turned their victims into raging blood hungry psychopaths. Shivers particularly featured some still potent scenes involving diseased people killing, raping, and feasting on their friends, family, and neighbours. The Brood gave a glimpse of the filmmaker that was evolving. Made during a time of personal tumult, Cronenberg turned the pain and misery of his own divorce and custody battle into art. The movie itself is a direct answer to what he perceived to be the horrible artifice of the Hollywood film Kramer vs. Kramer, which reduced divorce to a fluffy romantic comedy. The Brood is clearly no romantic comedy, featuring the first scene of Cronenberg’s that was ever censored: a sequence in which a woman who can sire a legion of girls to do her murderous bidding holds, cleans, and licks one of her newborns. The cut to his film hurt Cronenberg personally, and he has enjoyed a combative relationship with censors ever since. After The Brood, Cronenberg had established himself as a commercially successful filmmaker—one with a unique vision who could turn in a cheap film, on time and under budget, that would easily recoup costs and garner both audience and critical acclaim. But the films only got weirder. Although somewhat lacking in some areas, Scanners contained one of Cronenberg’s signature images: exploding heads. Videodrome gave birth to the term “The New Flesh”, which pertained to the desires of the forcesthat-be to transform the human body into the next stage of evolution via the signals and images found on and in televisions. Cronenberg characters’ psychological troubles manifested physically. In every film the human body and mind was under attack. People did not wage war with an enemy so much, as wage war with the enemy that was inside them. Often the best a Cronenberg protagonist can hope for is to get back to square one. His next series of films (Dead Ringers, Naked Lunch, M. Butterfly, and Crash) contained the usual themes of biological change but no longer occurred within the horror genre. The films are rigorously intellectual, possess a dry wit, and in each the protagonist must endure some kind of personal transformation, both psychological and physical. Cronenberg’s long and tiring battle with censors reached its apex when Crash was banned in Britain. An adaptation of author JG Ballard’s cult novel, it documented the sexual obsession a group of people have with car accidents and the resulting wounds and scars the body acquires from them. Although not particularly graphic, it has moments of genuine weirdness, most notably a scene in which James Spader enjoys sexual congress with the wound in a woman’s leg. Despite (or because) of its reputation, Crash was a success, and further contributed toward Cronenberg’s evolution into a highbrow art house director of noted quality and intelligence, even if you had to wade through the beastly insect/creature/addictive jism hijinks in his adaptation of William Burroughs’ The Naked Lunch. Spider, another adaptation of a notoriously difficult to adapt novel, was not a commercial hit, nor was eXistenZ, which had its head-twisting narrative completely overshadowed by The Matrix. His most recent film to hit Australian screens was an adaptation of the critically acclaimed graphic novel A History of Violence. A serious minded film disguised as a pulpy revenge thriller, A History of Violence is rich in iconography and full of broadly drawn and archetypal characters, and attempts to depict the effect of violence on everyday lives—what it does to every aspect of a person, their relationships, their identity, even their sex life. It contains just enough gory little moments to remind you that even though he is now a respected, influential, and critically admired filmmaker, deep inside there is still the mad scientist of gore who ultimately can’t help but add a little bit of goo to the proceedings. From low-budget schlock king to Oscar nominated filmmaker, one time head of the Cannes film festival (where he famously refused to acknowledge the quality of any of the American movies in contention), and recipient of the Order of Canada and the Order of French Arts and Letters, it’s a transformation that is every bit as fascinating as the ones he commits to film, but with considerably less violence, goo, and bits falling off. Offers to direct Hollywood films soon came flooding in. At one time or another, he was offered Top Gun, Beverly Hills Cop, and The Return of the Jedi. Trying to find a project where he could earn a decent paycheck that still dovetailed with his own sensibilities, Cronenberg chose to adapt Stephen King’s book The Dead Zone. Flat and relatively uninspired, it looked more like a TV movie than the passionate grotesqueries Cronenberg had treated us to previously, and its relatively cool reception was clearly something Cronenberg noticed. On that note, Cronenberg essentially ended the first phase of his career and unexpectedly transformed into a mainstream filmmaker with a bona-fide Hollywood hit, The Fly. An adaptation of the 1958 sci-fi film about a man who accidentally swaps his head and hand for that of a housefly when a science experiment goes horribly wrong, which was reconfigured to become an unbearably tense film in which Jeff Goldblum’s scientist genetically absorbs the DNA of a fly that gets caught in an experimental teleport machine he has invented. another, he was “At one time or Beverly Hills offered Top Gun, of the Jedi.” rn tu e R e Th d an , Cop 21_ Appearing on the scene in 1998 with the self-released The Crimson Trial, Collide has evolved as a partnership musically and professionally. FIEND’s Tavis Potts talks with kaRIN and Statik to discover the real meaning behind the duo’s music. _22 It has been a learning and organic partnership for Collide since 1998. With a new live DVD and CD, and several successful albums released under the band’s own label Noiseplus, life could not be any busier or more rewarding. Statik: We’re both strong personalities, so we collide when we’re working too. You know, like when mountain goats ram their heads together. That can be us. I think by this point though, our horns have been ground down to little nubs. kaRIN: Having our own label makes us push ourselves harder. Every success is a direct result of our actions … it’s kind of thrilling in that sort of way. As far as on the creative end, we have always done our own thing. I don’t think either one of us could have ever worked with someone else telling us what to do. The music industry wants you to make music to sell. We want to make art and that is most important to us. If we did not believe in the music ourselves we would not be happy with it. This is the type of partnership that can make or break a band. Obviously in the case of Collide it is the former situation, with a string of full-length albums, EPs, remix albums, and a new live compilation recently released. The Live at the El Ray DVD and accompanying Like the Hunted album was a particularly special experience for Collide as it was the culmination of the desire to perform live for an audience, something rare for the band. Statik: Running our own label has helped because we are in charge of everything. With most people on a label, you get some money up front, and then the label decides on everything else—the artist is out of the loop. I’d hate to be out of the loop. I like the loop. I live in the loop. kaRIN: We are both very loopy. One of the ingredients in the success of Collide is the nature of the musical partnership between kaRIN and Statik. It is the harnessing of these different creative forces within the one band that gives Collide a sense of technical excellence overlaid with an emotional and passionate edge. kaRIN: For me it is 100 per cent organic. I have to do it as I feel it. It’s like I can’t do it any other way. If someone else tells me what to do it only leads to frustration. kaRIN: Yes, it was an extremely special show for us. We have played live so rarely that each show so far has had great meaning for us. The DVD shoot was only our ninth live show ever after being together as a band for over ten years. We are primarily a studio band with only two members. We always knew it would be a challenge for us to play live, as we would need to have more people on stage to help interpret our music. We got asked so much about playing live, that we decided that we needed to finally answer the question for ourselves. It was great to finally experience it; it feels like we climbed a mountain. “With most people on a label, you get some money up front, and then the label decides on everything else—the artist is out of the loop. I’d hate to be out of the loop. I like the loop. I live in the loop.” Statik: For me it’s a bit more technical, which is probably why it works so well that we don’t work the same way. The good thing about working with kaRIN is that she doesn’t think like me … for that matter, she doesn’t think like a normal human sometimes. It may be very apparent to me when I start a song what the chorus or verse should be, and she’ll sing something completely opposite of what I would do. I really have to keep an open mind and listen to see what really might sound better. kaRIN: Collide represents the clashing together of the two of us who are very opposite in our approach, as well as a clashing of our varied musical taste. We have a style that takes any element that appeals to us and throws it into the mix. This makes our music very hard to categorise and fit into a compartment. I like that about it: it leaves us open to do whatever we feel like and then you never really know what to expect, we don’t even know what to expect. Statik: Probably just the fact that since we’re actually playing most of what’s being heard instead of just pressing play on a computer. We were still so new at doing it. It was always kind of just trying to make sure we played everything properly, and that all of the technical things were working. We had six people on stage, so we were definitely a living, breathing animal when we were playing. The new Collide album is a work in progress, eagerly anticipated after the success of Vortex and the energy shown on the Live at the El Ray. We are looking forward to hearing it! kaRIN: Slow but sure … it’s too soon to say. Something different … we try not to bore ourselves, which is challenging. Statik: We’ll be picking up the pace soon. We’ve been busy with a few details of other things that we were putting off while finishing the DVD. While an Australian tour is still a long way off, the success and sincerity of Collide will ensure that the band receives a favourable welcome here. The DVD Live at the El Ray and album Like the Hunted are both available from GUP. www.collide.net 23_ P rogressive death-metal act Opeth’s eighth full-length album was awaited with both fear and anticipation, but in the short time since its release, Ghost Reveries has been overwhelmingly viewed as some of Opeth’s strongest and most experimental work in recent years. While out on tour in the U.S., Justin Donnelly tracked down guitarist Peter Lindgren in Detroit to discuss Opeth’s approach to making its latest album, the introduction of keyboardist Per Wiberg into the fold and the band’s upcoming tour of Australia. First, however, I wanted to take a step back to when the band first announced its decision to sign with Roadrunner Records. Given the label’s reputation for spearheading the nu-metal movement through the late ’90s, more than a few fans openly questioned or criticised Opeth’s decision to go with the label and feared that Ghost Reveries would somehow suffer as a result. Needless to say, the ever-open-minded Opeth members were less than happy with the closedmindedness of these fans. “At first, it sort of pissed us off. I mean look at us. We’ve been doing our own thing for fifteen years. We weren’t going to sign with Roadrunner Records _24 and suddenly turn into a nu-metal band, you know. I think people are stupid when they believe that a record label like Roadrunner Records can change an old band like us. Roadrunner Records isn’t going to tell us to have a rapper on the next album. We don’t even have producers involved when making music because we don’t trust anyone. Most of the criticism has come from a bunch of kids! (Laughs) In the end, we just gave up caring what those people thought.” Any lingering criticism for Opeth’s label change was soon cast aside with the release of Ghost Reveries; so much so that many are claiming the album is one of Opeth’s best in years. “The reviews have been awesome! It’s almost so good that it’s embarrassing! (Laughs) Fans seem to love the new album, and it’s hard to disagree with them because we think it’s really good too. The album is still sort of new to us, but I think in a couple of years Ghost Reveries is going to be considered one of our best albums, if not the best.” There are several reasons why Ghost Reveries stands out against Opeth’s last two releases (2002’s Deliverance and 2003’s Damnation), but if Lindgren were to nominate one key factor, it would be preparation. “We really took a different approach with Ghost Reveries. The idea for the last couple of albums was to be fully prepared and well rehearsed, but that really hasn’t happened until it came time to make this album. We really made sure this time that we had time to write the songs, and have them all well rehearsed before we went into the studio. That’s a big change from the last couple of albums, because they were recorded in a hurry. We would book a studio, start work and then run out of time before we finished. We were seriously lacking in sufficient time to do our best. We don’t blame anyone for the lack of preparation we did for past albums on anyone but ourselves! (Laughs) With Ghost Reveries, we actually did rehearse, and have everything prepared beforehand. We actually went into the studio with everybody knowing the songs, and knowing what they were doing. I think you can hear it in the outcome. It’s made the album stand out a little more, so I’m pretty happy that it turned out this good.” Although Wiberg has been a part of Opeth since the ‘Damnation’ tour, Ghost Reveries marks the first album he has recorded as an official member of the band, with his presence definitely felt with a greater Eastern/blues influence on the band’s trademark sound. “We definitely wanted Wiberg on the latest album from day one. We wanted to incorporate his style of playing into the music. Even though (guitarist/vocalist Mikael) Åkerfeldt just about writes all the material himself exclusively, everyone else participates, and that includes Wiberg as well. He came up with plenty of ideas for Ghost Reveries. I think that most metal bands that have a keyboard player merely have them playing walls of choirs or over-the-top solos. Wiberg comes from the ’70s style of keyboard players, which means he can actually play! (Laughs) We wanted to use all these sounds he can come up with. So that’s another big change that’s really heard within our sound. We’re always going to try and break the boundaries a little and push them a little more than we did on previous albums.” Turning to a subject more satisfying for Opeth, namely touring: Lindgren and company are currently holed up in Detroit midway through their current U.S. tour. “We’ve been touring here in the U.S. for quite a while now, and so far it’s been fine. We can’t wait to get back to Australia though. We have a great following there, and we’re excited to play our fans the new songs. If Australia was a little closer to Europe, I would like to move there. That’s how much I love Australia. Yes, it’s cheesy to say that, but every time we all go there, we always want to stay.” – Justin Donnelly Australian Tour 2006 April 20th – Perth, Capitol April 21st – Adelaide, The Barton Theatre (all ages) April 23rd – Melbourne, The Forum April 24th – Melbourne, The Forum April 25th – Sydney, Big Top At Luna Park (all ages) April 27th – Brisbane, The Arena (all ages) www.opeth.com K 25_ sical drinks: tween metaphorical mu be e tim g lon a is ars en ye inexorable of music fans to feel the ion rat ne ge e on for gh enou world without another to grow up in a for d an age ledd mi of Zoon was approach previous Nefilim album the t tha 96 19 in s wa It you in it. y returned to e last year that Carl McCo released and not until lat in flour. lf rse chelle Smith dusts he deliver Mourning Sun. Mi T _26 I t is a testament to the popularity that Fields of the Nephilim attained in the 1980s that in 2002 the band’s record label released a “reunion” album called Fallen, when there had in fact been no new recordings and Fallen comprised old demos and unreleased songs. After only three studio albums—Dawnrazor (1986), The Nephilim (1988), Elizium (1990)—and one album from Carl McCoy’s solo project The Nefilim (which veered toward industrial and death metal) in 1996 (Zoon), fans were left wanting more. Unsurprisingly, the new direction of the Nefilim was a disappointment to many followers, not only to those who liked their goth rock but to the band’s wider alternative audience. Earlier singles such as ‘Blue Water’, ‘Psychonaut’ and ‘Moonchild’ not only rated highly on alternative charts but made some impression on the mainstream pop charts, which amusingly forced England’s Tops of the Pops to play the video for the latter song (named after a novel written by Aleister Crowley) complete with its occult imagery. Mourning Sun then brings with it the weight of both longclutched hopes and unfulfilled expectations. Like Zoon, it is the product of McCoy’s vision alone, with former band members not involved and the identity of the actual musicians playing on the album (whom he calls “ghost musicians” rather than guest musicians) shrouded in mystery. Commenting on the likely transience of even these artists, McCoy says that the personnel involved in its creation are secondary to the music itself: “It is the chemical reaction of the notes and chords that create the choir. Individuals are important as long as presence and passion come across in the music and human performance has truly been captured.” Yet in the past, guest musicians have had a substantial influence of upon the band, with the sound of the more ethereal Elizium attributed in the Nephilim’s own press release to the influence of Jon Carin, tour keyboardist for Pink Floyd. suggesting that there is “no comparison, only progression”. McCoy purportedly produced Mourning Sun in a limited amount of time, in isolation in his mobile recording studio “The Ice Cage”. The album has only seven tracks, with one further bonus track on the first 25,000 copies, a cover version of ‘In the Year 2525’ (originally recorded by Zager and Evans in 1969 and later covered by Visage). Yet each is an epic, with the shortest track at almost six minutes and the longest, the title track, at over ten minutes. For this reason, there is perhaps little scope for listening to the songs on radio or in a club. Each song works with the next to create a truly cohesive “sound”, accumulating meaning and feeling across the length of the disc—a rarity in this age of iTunes single-download marketability. McCoy declares that “every track has to be listened to in the context of the album.” “The lyrics of Mourning Sun are the words of today that give me a glimpse of tomorrow. The whole thing is about looking forward as opposed to dwelling in the past.” There is clearly an aversion to nostalgia in McCoy’s approach to Fields of the Nephilim, and this urge to avoid being mired in history is also evident in the themes of the new album. “The lyrics of Mourning Sun are the words of today that give me a glimpse of tomorrow,” he says. “The whole thing is about looking forward as opposed to dwelling in the past.” And by this McCoy also intends to discourage the search for resemblances between the sound of earlier albums and Mourning Sun, Showing such musical influences as the soundscapes that accompanied horror films like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)—McCoy admiring their ability to “effect the mind much more than music alone”—Mourning Sun is reminiscent of a film score in its intensity, haunting incidental sounds and driving, disturbing rhythms. The filmic qualities of Fields of the Nephilim have also been historically borne out in the band’s appearance with the famous duster jackets, and McCoy’s “Dark Man” persona—a melange not only of Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western imagery, but also of Jack the Ripper, Baron Samedi (the loa, or spirit, of the dead in Haitian voodoo) and the caped figure of the Norse god Odin. “I just took whatever I wanted and constructed a complete mismatch, drawing things from different time periods and magical traditions,” McCoy says of his creation. Fields of the Nephilim also gained a reputation for spectacular sold-out performances, evidence of which remains on the live album Earth Inferno (1991). Given the mystery of the new Fields of the Nephilim populated by “ghosts”, the prospect of a tour more than twenty years after the band’s beginnings in 1983 is all the more intriguing. “Of course, we will be playing live,” McCoy promises, “and we’re looking forward to being on stage again.” If we heed the mystical call he associates with Mourning Sun, who knows what tomorrow will bring for McCoy, his ghostly band, and ourselves: “Let us witness the reincarnation of the Sun. Let us gather in the fields of light.” 27_ Distorted Festival 10 December 2005 : Brown Alley, Melbourne n0nplus Diary Distorted was all about the music, with more bands than you could cram on the back of a t-shirt, including international acts that you would never expect to see this far south, such as Scorn, Converter, and Architect. We were all buzzing as we tried to find our way into Brown Alley in Melbourne. The afternoon started off fairly low key as the festival was clearly saving the big acts for last, but there were some gems that made it worthwhile lounging around the stage with a beer. Someone recommended that I check out the Australian act n0nplus on the Null Hypothesis basis of the Gridlock t-shirt I was wearing. n0nplus’s laid back, darkly brooding, and intense sounds that melded together into beautifully lush rhythms stood up to the comparison. Also a pleasant surprise was Jetlag, the side project of Psyche, those masters of ‘80s electronic synthpop. Jetlag had a more analogue electroclash feel and ended on the darkest, dirtiest cover of Soft Cell’s ‘Martin’ that I’ve ever seen or heard. Between bands you could wander upstairs to pore over the boxes of CDs for sale on the mezzanine floor or venture up further stairs to chill out to the sounds in the sun-drenched top bar. One disappointment was the lack of information about who was playing when, so I’m unable to tell you who I saw playing up there, but it was great leaning back against the warm stone walls and watching dancers drift under the skylight and letting the music wash over you. Downstairs, the setting sun streamed through the stained glass windows showering Darrin Verhagen with shards of light. His project, E.P.A., set the bar for the rest of the bands. It built up slowly from almost nothing, to a crescendo of rhythmic powernoise, and then to a sonic firestorm of feedback over the course of an hour. His music was enhanced by distorted faces and hands reaching out of the darkness on the three large screens above him. After a while it dawned on me that all of the music was totally in sync with the visuals, which made it all the more frightening. The acts that followed paled in comparison with Verhagen’s raw emotional poison. The intensity of the night was turned up a notch with Enduser’s intriguing blend of ragga and psychotic breakcore. I swore I saw a white rabbit jumping amongst the lasers to his tunes. Mono No Aware’s 60 minutes of total beat driven madness also engendered a similar reaction from the audience. MNA wins the Being a one man juggernaut of insanity, the guy behind MNA was a bare-chested, sweating, windup toy on...something, and he got the dance floor pumping. Mono No Aware _28 Jetlag/Psyche Scorn Daniel Myer award for most mental, high energy performance of Distorted. Being a one man juggernaut of insanity, the guy behind MNA was a bare-chested, sweating, windup toy on...something, and he got the dance floor pumping. There was an air of excitement as Daniel Myer took the stage for Architect’s performance. At times his music was minimal, sometimes aggressive, but always crisply composed. The crowd went mad when Myer announced that the rest of his set would be Haujobb material and started into ‘Subsonic’. It was awesome to hear ‘Eye Over You’ performed in the flesh! From start to finish Converter whipped the crowd into a frenzied state, with pure grinding, rhythmic power that collapses buildings and makes you want to move until your heart stops. There’s nothing like being in a seething mass of people covered in sweat, and floating away on feedback and distorted rhythms and beats. By the end of the set, I was gasping for breath and my skin felt like it was on fire. Alas, we had to leave before Scorn performed, but those who stayed swear that it was worth the wait— dark, heavy sounds that seep into the mind and take you to another place with an intensity that could almost make you drown in the sound. It was perfect music to wind down at the end of a great day. While it is cool to hear music you like in a club, Distorted was an amazing chance to see these acts in the flesh. Some lucky individuals even got to meet the artists behind their favourite music. A big heads up to the guys behind Distorted for an amazing night. Who played? The Distorted line-up included: Scorn www.mickharris.net Converter www.ant-zen.com/converter Architect/Haujobb www.planetmyer.de Black Lung www.worldwentdown.com/imcc E.P.A home.mira.net/~dorobo/dorobo.html Bring it on next year! Mono No Aware – Justin Tall www.mononoaware.de K www.distorted.com Nonplus Photos by Todd www.frozenempiremedia.com/nonplus.htm Jetlag (Psyche) www.werocklikecrazy.com/jetlag Enduser www.sonicterror.net/enduser Zen Paradox http://themutagenserver.blogspot.com Killjoy www.painfreefoundsound.com Maladroit www.systemcorrupt.com Cambion Noistruct http://boris.dmusic.com Xian Defused Fusion www.defusedfusion.com.au Mechanised Convulsions http://mechcon.lost-records.com n0nplus www.frozenempiremedia.com/nonplus.htm Delta of Venus Null Hypothesis Vespine The Crystalline Effect Converter 29_ THE BiG DAY OUT January/February 2006 — Australia & New Zealand Wolfmother and M.I.A. got the bronzed brigade biting their bottom lips and dancing like diseased strippers early on—which, despite the horror of the image, is how we all move to the music we love. Franz Ferdinand Diary Melbourne: January 29 They’ve won. The idiots and the advertisers have won. On Sunday 29 January, the community gathered at the cliff’s edge once more to sing the killing chant, but this year the part of Sergeant Howie was played by Music, rather than Edward Woodward. Music: “I believe in the aural life eternal, as promised to us by the great bands of history!” The Big Day Out: “That is good, for believing what you do, we confer upon you a rare gift these days—a martyr’s death.” There are always different echelons of attendees at music festivals; entire geo-strata of subcultures rise and shift with the appearance of different bands on different stages. The large majority of Australian _30 festivals are financed by a legion of largely musicdisinterested but beer-enthused bronzed punters competing with a radial assortment of excited teenagers, diehards, tryhards, subculture mavens, music daytrippers, and the free list consisting of VIP tent refugees, journalists, bands, and fanatic coke addicts who somehow don’t fit into the first three categories. The move to Princes Park for this year provided some advantages for attendees, especially in terms of transport and space, but was accompanied by a consensus that if the organisers wanted to make some more money, then they perhaps should have found a way to put some ATMs on site. Being a smaller crowd, there was a more congenial atmosphere than in recent years, with large groups of friends being able to colonise patches of grass and assume their rightful position—strewn across every thoroughfare the park was offering. The presence of sponsorship signage and corporate promotion is sadly a growing part of the program at the BDO, yet tucked away under a row of cypress trees were a few tables of the usual socialist and environmental suspects, snoozing away under Henry Rollins sombreros and discussing Billy Bragg. During the day, models hired by Virgin Mobile were taking photographs of punters and then giving them a card, allowing them to download a picture of themselves from the Virgin Mobile website. Which, for only three dollars seems like a good deal, although as one young girl asked the Virgin rep—“how is it different from me taking a photo of myself with my cameraphone?” We can forego any analysis of this phenomenon, along with the inflated food and drink prices, as they were in 2006 as they always were: the best reasons not to go next year. The music, as it seemed to be for the organisers, was a secondary concern; a smattering of over-hyped but crowd-pleasing acts such as Wolfmother and M.I.A. got the bronzed brigade biting their bottom lips and dancing like diseased strippers early on—which, despite the horror of the image, is how we all move to the music we love. As the clouds darkened, The Mars Volta was as fractal, Cog as generic, Kings of Leon as bone-dry boring as imagined. A special mention must go to Mudvayne, being the only metal act on the lineup for a show famous for its spiky audiences; despite the contrast, the band managed to inject less energy Who played? The BDO line-up included: Iggy and the Stooges www.iggypop.com Franz Ferdinand www.franzferdinand.co.uk M.I.A www.miauk.com Too Many DJs www.soulwax.co.uk The White Stripes www.whitestripes.com The Mars Volta www.themarsvolta.com Iggy Pop The White Stripes into the event than a bald, sunburnt metalhead, who, beer in hand, managed to express what many could not quite become cognisant of. “This fucken sucks!” he yelled at full volume, on repeat, throughout the 45-minute set. Franz Ferdinand finally managed to raise the bar by undulating their haircuts through a set of polished adver-rock that gleamed with a production that sounded less like a nuanced live performance and more like their discography than seemed possible. All this limp and over-produced rock, in hindsight, probably only gave Iggy and the Stooges more power. The Lizard himself (60 next year) is far past the point of knowing how to convert and hold an audience. He exploded on to the stage, declaring with some authority that he was going to fuck every single one of us “in the asssssss”. Immediately following which, benighted and berserk versions of ‘I Wanna Be Your Dog’ and ‘TV Eye’ would be sent out to soothe the pain. The entire experience of the Big Day Out rested on the singularity of the moments between chorus and verse during the rest of the band’s maniac, life-giving set. During these minute breaks in the advertisingdriven story of The Rock You Like, Iggy Pop threw the mic stand into the crowd, launched himself after it, viciously punching young girls in the front row, to whom he bellowed “I’m gonna stab you!” between lyrics. As the sun went down on both Iggy and common sense, he brought up some fifty people from the front area to kick out the proverbial jams. He and the Stooges were completely alien, as ferocious as ever—the youngsters were embarrassingly bopping around in ironic Eisteddfod joy—“who is this guy?”, one would ask. Not quite the change-thirsty revolutionaries that gawked at Iggy 40 years ago and decided to, in the common parlance, start some shit. The resultant chaos was like watching Jeffrey Dahmer—no, actually, Iggy Pop needs no analogy— try to end his set with a Michael Jackson ‘Heal the World’ finale of swaying, similarly clothed cherubs. He hurried them offstage (read: pushed) and went back into the crowd, alternately screaming the lines of the last two songs—whatever they were—and for more microphone-punching of the young. The giant screen displayed not only Iggy, but hundreds of text messages from attendees, scrolling at the top Wolf Mother of the screen like a news channel crafted specifically to reduce hope. Messages such as “Royce takes it up the bum-bum!!!”, “Bring back Wolfmother!!!” were common, as were dozens of Chuck Norris jokes thanks to our old friend, the internet meme. The effect was distressing; what you were seeing with your own eyes, the only real attempt to use music to free people that day, was co-opted thoroughly and sold again back to us in that moment of double vision. Thankfully, VideoIggy wasn’t having a bar of it and the centre couldn’t hold him; cameramen frantic to find the screaming ghoul stalking menacingly amidst the throng gave the night an air of danger and collapse. The bald metalhead, now satiated, stood silently with both arms raised skyward in permanent rapture. The Big Day Out, now looking for a new permanent home, will be tested next year for a renewed focus on musical variety and resistance to corporate interests to maintain its good name. – Christian McCrea K www.bdo.com Photos by Angelica East 31_ Cold Meat Industry 4-5 February 2006: The CORner, Melbourne From the exquisitely precise production to the harrowingly effective audio/visual dynamics...the only complaint—other than the severe lack of performances Verhagen graces us with as Shinjuku/EPA— was that being on so early made him an extremely hard act to follow. Shinjuku Thief Diary Three Swedes walk into a pub...sounds like a bad joke, but in reality it ended up as one of those weekends you spend the rest of your life smugly informing those unfortunate acquaintances that missed it that they did, indeed, miss out. You had to be there, darling. Saturday 4th February, 2006 Speaking of which, I missed the opening act, Manticle. He assured me that in fact, I didn’t. Either way, I have nothing to offer. Next up, however, was Shinjuku Thief (Darrin Verhagen), who had plenty to offer and gave it in spades. From the exquisitely precise production to the harrowingly effective audio/ visual dynamics (most notable being the drowning girl sequence), the only complaint—other than the severe lack of performances Verhagen graces us with as Shinjuku/EPA— was that being on so early made him an extremely hard act to follow. And from what I overheard (my virgin ears!), left a lot of the audience hard as well. A mix of the likes of Download and Neubauten later, and Brighter Death Now (Roger Karmanik with Peter Andersson) had the smokers flocking back from the public bar and the distinctive sounds of CMI set in. Perhaps I was still high from the Shinjuku set, but BDN’s first set was rather prosaic. Droning Brighter Death Now _32 soundscapes were punctuated only by bass so intense that the few people left unsatisfied by Verhagen were soon dissatisfied no longer. Picking up the pace somewhat was Bocksholm (Peter Andersson and Peter Andersson—no, really) with bass so astonishingly deep my breasts were jiggling when stationary. I’ve found an entirely new level of praise for live reviews. Gosh. As good as I’d hoped for, with gritty atmospherics and meticulous sampling. Also featured what seemed to be a self-parodying Saturday Night Fever-esque dance routine from Lina. Another mass exodus to the smoking section later, and another mad dash back when raison d’être [Peter Andersson] wove an enthralling set. Featuring bleak minimalism with hypnotic structures, Andersson also used some interesting instruments, such as violin raison d’être Iggy Pop Deutsch Nepal bows over strips of metal. Unfortunately, it went a little over time and I had to bolt to work. visuals were reminiscent of watching the Windows XP screensaver. Sunday 5th February, 2006 The piece de resistance musically for Sunday by far was Deutsch Nepal. The other Peter Andersson (OK, fine. Lina Baby Doll. Happy?) broke tradition by sitting in front of the laptop atop a stool, and offered a slightly more interactive set whilst swigging beer. Mesmerising vocal chants overlaid at times an almost soporific, but consistently sinister, industrial framework. The carcinogen fanciers did their thing again, and were treated to an impromptu Death in June performance of what is an apparently freshly banned track. While cementing my bad habit of turning up just in time to miss the opening act, this time Isomer, I managed to catch most of Frozen Faces (Peter Andersson. No, the other one). Undeserving of the hangover I presented stage-wards, the cleanly produced industrial soundscapes proved soothing (ditto the vodka), as did the comparatively smaller audience size. Continuing their laptop leapfrog, the other Peter Andersson’s other project (lost yet?) Atomine Elektrine produced varied responses. While actual CMI fans seemed pleased with the live direction taken (not much of the feel of Elemental Severance present, in my opinion), one punter remarked that the For a grand finale we were treated to not only a far better, harsher, and infinitely more aggressive Brighter Death Now set, half of which was done in drag. Putting the Baby Doll back into, or rather onto, Lina—as he stroked his guitar like the udders his blonde milkmaid plaits were just begging for—was made only more surreal by Andersson running around in knickers humping his leg, and random crowd assaults. There were even balloons. The Family Friendly crew put on an exceptional festival, and, aside from a few minor technical hiccups here and there, the sound was great. I liked the Corner Hotel and its no-smoking policy for a venue choice, and the acts themselves have been too many years coming. But they finally have, and if you missed it— well, sucks to be you. – Aowyne Davies K www.coldmeat.se Photos by Angelica East Manticle Who played? raison d’être - Brighter Death Now - Deutsch Nepal + side projects of the above [http://www.coldmeat.se] Shinjuku Thief [home.pacific.net.au/~dorobo/shinjuku] Isomer [www.coldmeatinoz.com/isomer/index.html] Manticle [www.coldmeatinoz.com/manticle/front.html] Brighter Death Now 33_ DYLON MACHINE BLACK DYE YOUR DEAD THREADS Under the blue moon 17 September 2005: Newtown, Sydney Could Kill Blue Swoon! Festival Looks Diary Somehow in the year between September 2004 and 2005, Sydney’s Under the Blue Moon festival blossomed radically like one of those creepy overnight flowers, from a well-promoted late night shopping opportunity to a diligently planned festival, the first of its kind in Australia. Engineered with a motherload of patience and imagination by the spookier side of small business owners (not least of which, a particularly fabulous magazine that kicks butt on all the others), club organisers, artists, musicians, and active members of the dark alternative scene, in cooperation with local council and venues, the festival was packed with enough mischief to have you delay and lose your way, and be out half the night! Freaks and geeks found themselves on cemetery tours, making gargoyles, ogling hotties on the catwalk at the fashion parade, putting up booted toes to watch free zombie flicks while rummaging through festival show bags (theirs or someone else’s!), daring to learn something in a workshop, winning suspicious prizes, and let’s nae forget the shopping that left fair merchants dizzy and haggard for weeks afterward. Dead centre of the carousel of activities was the live music, faithfully organised and out in full battle dress, with String Theory, NOVAkILL, Angelspit, Mz Ann Thropik, IKON, and ANGELTHEORY— everything from well narky to good old goth-dulgence for the soldout shows. For anyone who had worn the right shoes and was not too overburdened with goodies to move further than the sushi bar, it was on to the double club event at the Newtown RSL ‘til three am (anyone who has never seen a corset and a poker machine in the same room, prepare to bend your head). Like most experiences, what made UtBM memorable were the people: the very gratifying black and sassy clad crowd who thronged outside the band venue and were draped and peppered around the street. Sniff hard enough and you could have caught a whiff of Leipzig. Undeniably the festival gave people under 18 the shamefully rare opportunity to display thorough creativity and enthusiasm, and the stake was driven well home with style and an abundance of DIY hair, costuming and makeup, and a commitment to as many spooky activities as possible. The pot is already being stirred for this year’s hoo-ha, planned for Saturday 9 September, so start saving and get your pointy boots or platforms polished up. Band submissions are being taken by Post Mortem Records (doa_records@hotmail.com, (02) 9565 1333), and keep an eye on www.underthebluemoon.org.au for updates on activities, accommodation, or getting your hands dirty! Kama C. Way 35_ Words by Mark T. Hewitt I know you’ve seen them before, amidst the endless rows of Steven King adaptations and Tremors sequels. I even know how your story goes. There you were at Ma and Pa’s local video store and you say, “Would you look at that, The Toxic Avenger. Now, there’s a movie I could hire.” Why, the cover art alone is like nothing you’ve ever seen before. You wonder, what lies inside? If you do nothing else for the rest of your life, you must hire this video. You’re hooked. Taking the decayed cover from the shelf you make your way to the counter. Fear swells. Abruptly you stop, aligning yourself with an aisle marked “old favourites”. “I can’t hire this,” you say to yourself. “What if it’s pornographic? What if old man video store tells my mother? What _36 if this hire goes on my permanent record, and I can’t get into the university of my choice?” Frantic, you conceal the VHS in the Martin Lawrence section, at ease that nobody will ever find it. Placing When Harry Met Sally on the counter, you pay for your video and leave the store. What have you done? Not only did you not hire perhaps the coolest movie you’re ever likely to see, but also you’ve selfishly stowed it away from the world forever. You curse yourself a coward and spend the rest of your days wondering what could possibly be on that tape, knowing full well it would far surpass any feeble fantasies. But you can’t blame yourself; you did what you thought what was right. You were wrong, but let’s not dwell on that. Let me tell you what you misse d out on and se e if we can’t do something abou The Toxic Avenge t it. r (1984) was on e of the first int renegade film ernational hits studio Troma from (incidentally, on independent film e of America’s studios). The fi oldest lm was heralde plot and farcical d for sex and violence its outrageous and skyrocketed the most belov to become one ed cult films of of all time. Since some of the mo then, Troma ha st fiendish actio s created n/adventure/hor for Troma know ror /comedies aroun s no single genr d, e and always giv dollar. It provid es you value for es entertainmen your t for all those crushing, circus souls who prefer freaks, and nake head d newscasters to and inoffensive sinking ocean lin Rob Reiner come ers dies. Want stars? film performance Troma boasts ea s from Academ rly y Award winning Bob Thornton, actors such as Kevin Costner, Billy and Marisa Tome Jackson— that i; why, even Samu ’s right, Jedi Ma el L. ster Mace Wind Def by Temptatio u—appeared in n (1990); and Troma’s fi lm ma and the quintes ke rs Pe te r Ja ck sential fan boy son, Trey Parke r, Quentin Tarantin Troma as early ins o all cite the wo pirations for their rks of res pe cti ve careers. Until now, fans of Troma have be en forced to se Starbucks-like vid arch in the shad eo chains in ea ows of rnest hope of fi might have relea nding anything sed in the last Troma decade. Well, for there, the wait all true believe is over. The right rs out eous folk at Stom a smorgasbord p Visual have rel of Troma titles eased of late. The follow the latest titles ing is a list of so to hit out shore me of s on gloriously revamped DVD. Luther the Geek (1990) is perhap s one of Troma but don’t dismi ’s less renowne ss this one, as it d films, boasts all the ha follows the heart llmarks of a cla felt tale of a yo ssic. It ung boy named mad when he wi Luther who is dri tnesses a circus ven freak bite the he Thirty years lat ad off a live ch er, armed with icken. his own razor-sh sets out on a blo arp metal teeth, Lu ody rampage th ther rough a rural Am film if only beca erican town. Se use it harbours e this a terrifically gory family can enjoy ending that the . whole Citizen Toxie: Th e Toxic Avenge r IV (2000) is everything you a perfect exam want out of a ple of Troma film. Jump dimensions, Toxie ing between pa is forced to go he rallel ad -to-head with his Noxie in a catacly smic battle to sa evil counterpart ve his hometown effects and as of Tromaville. Te much off-the-wa rrific ll humour as yo Toxie is a great u can handle, instalment into Citizen th e Toxic Avenge DVD extras inc r series and bo luding three co asts mmentaries, de length document leted scenes, a ary, and the op featuretion to insert th the original film e deleted scenes . into Around the same time that she wa s spending her by David Hasse days being chas lhoff on a beac ed h in California, Chosen One: Le Carmen Electra gend of the Rave was The n (1 998). At times, like a cable mo this film plays vie for the Playb out oy channel, but in the face of th the merging of e apocalypse, tig fantasy ht-fitting bodysu slow motion sex its, and the occa scene make this sional a film a guilty ple Scraped together asure. from two disastro us productions, (2004) is Troma Tales from the Cra ’s first foray int pper o digital filmma feature of its sa king and the ina rdonic Dog Pile ugural 95 do ctrine. Make no the most accomm mistake, even for odating Troma fanatic this film tough viewing, makes for more but what this ard than uous 90 minute and interesting s lacks in plot, characterisation story, s (you know, all the special featu th at movie nonsense res offered will keep you intere ) skipped forward sted long after to the credits. you have In addition to the DVD includ two commentary es a “behind-th tracks, e-scenes” hoste Lloyd Kaufman d by Troma co that explains th -creator e disastrous pro insightful look duction and ma into the world of kes for an Troma. Directed by Ka ufman himself, Te rro r Firmer (1999) gem from the Tro is yet another ma vaults. The plot follows the budget film comp terrorising of a any as a cross-dre lowssing, psychopa production by thic killer threa killing off the tens crew. To explain would most lik th e ely drive me ma story any furth er d, but rest assu provides the vie red, what lies wer with everyth within ing hilarious, cra addictive a Tro zy, and compuls ma fan could ho ively pe for. Once ag with a plethora ain, the DVD is of extras, but wh loaded at separates th may be the appe is disc from all arance of Trey Pa others rker and Matt St hermaphroditic one as the strug couple. gling So, there you have it, your ch ance to set th right what once e record straig was wronged. If ht. Put you’re tired of productions of Dr the glossy big eamWorks and Je budget rry Bruckheimer an the carnality of d relish in viewi fake blood, ex ng ploding heads, sidekicks covered obese crime fi in peanut butte ghting r, and not-so-inf nudity, then as requent moment swiftly as your ho s of rse will carry yo haste to your loc u, make the gre al DVD outlet an atest of d demand some Troma. K www.troma.com 37_ unter null It’s not often that a new artist emerges who attracts notice instantly. With the cult favourite EP Sick Fuck (or should I say Sick F*ck for those with sensitive ears), lots of ground has already been laid out for blood-splattered Erica Durnham, aka Unter Null. Jarod Collard gets the bloody lowdown. So … Sick Fuck, eh? “[It] was written more in response to some people I had to deal with in my life at the time. More or less just really rotten and corrupt people,” Durnham says. So no wild Dallas spurned lover type dramas? “Obviously, I wasn’t too happy at that time … [but] it wasn’t written about a lover that I was unhappy with.” Perhaps we’ll hear that venom on the next album! For me, the promotional shots of Durnham covered in blood I found overtly sexual and visceral, yet she does not wish to play on her sexuality. “Big deal, I’m female,” she says. “I’d rather the quality of my music speak for itself, not the fact that I’m a girl. If people find angry lyrics and fake blood attractive, then so be it.” “I’m really happy with the album [The Failure Epiphany] otherwise I wouldn’t have allowed its release. My absolute favourite element, though, was for me to be able to close that chapter in my life; it was the final catharsis for me.” And catharsis it has, in heavy EBM spades! K www.myspace.com/unternull iszoloscope Justin Tall bangs noise with Iszoloscope The music of Iszoloscope has been described as many things since Yann Faussier and Francois Benard threw down the DJ decks and started making their own music. Benard has since left the project but Faussier continues to expand his artistic repertoire. Every Iszoloscope release sounds markedly different from the last yet still retains a very specific feel. Faussier shapes sounds by playing with synths or samples without a specific direction, until he creates something that triggers an emotional reaction. He then builds a track around that specific sound (lately with Native Instrument’s Reaktor 4), sometimes restarting from scratch or even dropping the original sound from the final mix. Not only is Faussier’s approach to music organic, but he has a similar attitude to the electronic industrial music scene. He notices that trends will vary enormously, not just in time, but also depending on where you are in the world. “The only thing I can predict is that artists will continue to do what they or their labels wants them to do, while the audience will go to shows, and buy or download whatever they like.” The more experienced he becomes, the more he learns to respect everyone who pitches in, no matter what their ideas are. Iszoloscope sounds like a score for an avante garde film. Faussier even thinks of his work as a soundtrack and has collaborated with artists on several different projects that span outside music, including scoring a short film by Andrée Préfontaine, which was part of an art exhibit in Canada. Faussier would definitely like to spend more time working on other film scores in the future. K www.iszoloscope.net _38 ah cama sotz Justin Tall gets heretical with Herman Klapholz Ah Cama-Sotz combines western electronica and oriental mystical tribal sounds with a dash of sensuality. The different musical accents on each album make it difficult to pigeonhole Klapholz’s musical style. The recent release The Way to Heresy explores heresy vs. religion in structured format with a beginning, middle, and an outro “just like a book”. Klapholz has always been interested in history and mythology. However, recently he has experimented with different kinds of tribal feelings that he was able to blend with more “modern” influences. The recent live album Ghost in the Shadow is perfect for collectors who don’t have his older records. Klapholz actually loves playing live because each audience changes the dynamics of the performance. “Receiving positive input is an important factor,” he says. With an awareness of the way in which one musician on stage may not be very appealing to audiences, whenever possible he invites friends like Empusae or Mimetic to play with him. He also regards multimedia as a vital element for his performance. Throughout his career, Klapholz has maintained a reputation for collaborating with artists with an extensive catalogue of remixes and side projects. He feels remixing and collaborating are two distinct experiences: “For the remix projects, it gives you a different angle regarding sounds and mixing of one’s material… Collaboration has another point of view to my mind: it’s a different concept, different way of working…” But he acknowledges that when it is done well it can be a very satisfying experience. The work of Ah Cama-Sotz is both complex and engaging, requiring more than just a casual listen. Herman Klapholz demands that you take time to immerse yourself in his music. K www.iszoloscope.net dope stars inc. Michael Wolloghan persuades Victor Love to divulge the secrets of Italy’s own Dope Stars Inc. What’s in a name? A lot when it comes to the cyberpunk and gothic influenced Dope Stars Inc. “[It] represent the three aspects of our music and attitude,” says Love, when asked about the group’s moniker. “‘Dope’ represents the addictive aspect of our music: that is direct, catchy, and in-your-face. ‘Stars’ shows the rock ‘n’ roll glam attitude of the band. And ‘Inc.’ stands for the industrial corporative core.” The band first hooked up to work on demo versions in May 2003 in a dirty cellar beneath suburban Rome. After garnering the attention of fans and praise from the music press, Dope Stars Inc. signed with Trisol records. “Then we started to record for our debut album Neuromance working together with Thomas Rainer (L’âme Immortelle) and John Fryer (Nine Inch Nails, Lush, Cocteau Twins) as producers. In particular we tried to play with sounds and effects to underline in each song the various sides and influences included in our sound.” During the recording of Neuromance the band contacted other artists regarding remixing tracks for a bonus CD. “We received such big feedback that we filled the second disc with 15 remixes,” Love recalls. With a recent opening act performance for Apoptygma Berzerk, slots on European festivals such Wave Gotik Treffen, and the track ‘Make A Star’ being featured on the soundtrack of the horror movie Saw 2 (German version) along with Marilyn Manson, Skinny Puppy, and London After Midnight, we’re bound to hear more of these industrial rockers in the future. K www.dopestarsinc.com 39_ “Poor guy. Having the FBI up his ass for nine hours must have been bad.” _40 L eæther Strip was instrumental in shaping the European EBM sound, providing a slew of hard dancefloor releases. While a teaser EP, Carry Me, showed up five years ago, classic album Self Inflicted (1997) was the last Leæther Strip record we had … until now. Jarod Collard tackles Claus Larsen on the interview floor. How does one open an interview with Claus Larsen, other than by saying, “Welcome back—how does it feel?” “It feels amazing … I thought only a few of the old-school hardcore listeners would remember me. That is telling me that I actually made a mark with my earlier work.” He adds humorously: “That can make a shy boy proud.” And how proud exactly? “It made a grown man weep.” “Being back at the keyboard really opened a floodgate of inspiration. My mood was getting better with each day, and soon the people around me noticed a change in me. The old Claus was returning.” It has been nine years since the last album, but Claus has still managed to successfully invoke the nasty little spirit I affectionately call “Leæther Strip” with success. “Even though it has been years since Self Inflicted I feel that the new album is a natural step from the old album. It still has the—some call it ‘oldschool’—Strip sound, I think … since the Carry Me EP I didn’t write a note until the new album. It still felt like I never stopped, when I could see that this would end up with more than one song.” And the catalyst for that “one song”? “Seba from Alfa Matrix emailed me about a song for a compilation. I usually didn’t even open my mail anymore but I guess I had one of the few good days, and I opened it. I had a half-song on the PC that I could finish for that compilation. I thought it would stop some of the rumours of my death and shit.” Speaking of which, there has been an almost constant stream of rumours about Leæther Strip. “The last one I heard before my ‘return’ was that I got arrested and sat in a jail in America. I also heard that I was killed in a car accident. It was also fun to see when the MySpace site was put up to announce my comeback. Everyone was sure it was some idiot teasing the people. Then I posted a message myself and the reaction I got was amazing.” And our sweet Claus got terrorism-famous after a man in America was arrested for having written in his diary the name of LS’s current dancefloor favourite, ‘Suicide Bomber’—at an airport! “Poor guy. Having the FBI up his ass for nine hours must have been bad. With the rights they got after 9/11, I’m too scared to imagine what they put him through. I hope he doesn’t blame me, hehe.” So let’s talk more about the new album, After the Devastation—a chunky double album (and the limited edition includes a third disc!). Why a double? “All the songs on that album brought me back to ‘life’, both in a musical way and also in a mental way. So it would be a sin for me to split those songs up. If I couldn’t get it out this way all together I wouldn’t have released anything. So it’s my fault and not the label’s. All the songs have a thread that goes through them all and I didn’t want to break that.” And that thread still holds true to the angry Leæther Strip, covering current topics and ongoing themes while possibly being more intensely personal than before. At the same time, the new album is quite as hard-hitting as LS has been in the past. “Writing those songs really helped me get over my anger. It’s still there but the steam was let out. So the pressure is in the green area now. But there’s a lot of new stuff that will piss me off, I’m sure.” So welcome to the new, reborn Claus. “I still think I learn new things with each song, about the composing and production. I am still as hungry to learn as I was when I started out.” Which brings me to mention the cult-favourite side project, Klute (now Klutæ, to differentiate it from an unrelated drum-and-bass band), full of tongue-in-cheek and foot-in-mouth disease (can that really happen at the same time?). “The only reason I brought that pissant punk back was ’cause I had a ton of requests from the friends on MySpace. I tried making a few songs to see where it would go and … an album was made. It was like opening a can of worms. So it’s full of self-irony and humour. A must-have party album. After getting all my anger out it was nice with a bit of spontaneous fun and experiments. I didn’t blow up anything though, but it sure sounds like it.” So our dear old Leæther Strip is back, with a new outlook on life and music. “Hope you like it. And thanks for having me back again. I hope you guys will enjoy my stuff again.” Thanks Claus—it’s good to have you back. K www.myspace.com/leaetherstrip K www.myspace.com/klutae 41_ Infection Days: , and on the eve of ce the release of Coma sin ars ye o tw en be It’s d June 4, 2004 album The Truth (subtitle w ne the of se ea rel the from Perth’s Crimes e Story) Ellis Atherton Tru A . 05 20 , 15 ril Ap – about the reality ND’s Alexandra Nicholas FIE ls tel ry ma Pri the of d survival… behind passion, art, an “There is a certain amount of suffering in life that has to be endured for art to truly have longevity and meaning. When the suffering is over and one becom es reflective is when art’s ‘shades of grey’ rise to the fore, and become its most prized asset.” _42 the darlings of have never been considered and it’s been a EA: We erst think we ever und ’t I So don I as: and hol e, Nic Alexandra the the Perth music scen and m albu last also has got It the n n. p tow bit of a journey betwee will be. Perth is an indie-po the Primary of es Crim . well as ? e ase scen rele new a healthy metal e. The one t tha thes t ney ngs jour amo a re it’s choice, doesn’t really fit in anywhe Ellis Atherton: Given the eighteen the loyal support of is last on The nt n. cou ys take alwa not er can thing we I would have rath we do. We darkest period in my life the people in this town who “get” what months have been the “special our this to nts eful ume grat ly album doc have always been extreme without question. The new lved in invo g be. bein to e and tinu ly), con ical people” and period in my life (lyr process for these songs w for the WAMi festival the creation and the writing We kicked off with a sho lly. ona pers me for ting fron con doing a series of shows ly eme now has been extr re here in Perth, and are whe ents mom are e ther new album. We are really I will sit and listen, and at home in support of the , and hurt deep within, iety anx tunes have translated er, new ang the the way feel I can personal pleased with the very a It’s s. tear in t to get to Melbourne wai ace rise to the surf in the live arena. We can’t e torn my soul out with We are really looking g. thin our do to album and I feel like I hav and Sydney ds. my bare han forward to it. l now? member of Crimes of the feel about the old materia It is a credit to every t of wha AN: How do you t ligh in ts, exis still d Primary that the ban you listen to it much? I owe a huge debt of Do we have been through, and tunes once in a while, as we 4, 200 EA: I listen to a few of the its solidarity. In the Primary live shows, gratitude to the band for of es Crim in Europe with Coma but a refresher for the my had some huge openings fi ’t a don nd their way into them], simply because but Alpha and Com not like I despise It’s we couldn’t capitalise [on e. mor any h elf muc mys too CD player down, and I found a large my mind decided to shut the new album is (for me) l ward after undergoing the old songs, but pita hos k rding star reco a d in ishe up mpl ing wak g a more acco on my fragile brain. The step towards bein rding process that reco an emergency procedure and ing writ the real k artist. I thin but there was a very e, morphine was wonderful, m is much more intricat with once the drugs is behind the new albu tend con ure to ss ens to tine n emp take of n sense e care has bee ns, Crimes of the Primary and a great deal mor king and prewould wear off. As musicia had that everything we have done in trac pe Euro in s ning ope the but in saying , nce cha accepted the fact that to nothing heads down and began production has left of huge chances. dissolved, and we put our lot a take gs son new this, the work on rebuilding. to now? What up the AN: What are you listening sum ld cou you if : a musician? as AN: Art and life and son inspires you, as a per you say? relationship, what would are not afraid of who ple by peo fabrication without the EA: I am inspired llow hear. sha a is Art EA: how hard the truth is to I couldn’t write about the truth, no matter elf on this mys with influence of life (or death). est hon ally experienced personally. I think being brut something that I haven’t rating experience, and has suffering in life that album has been a libe of unt t amo ain cert a There is on of songs an edge tha ecti coll y this evit n really give to truly have long actually not I had e has to be endured for art icat fabr to able suffering is over and one I would not be my life. It has set a and meaning. When the des of grey” lived through this period in “sha art’s n whe is ve ecti future recordings. I for becomes refl er writ a as t. me standard for its most prized asse e about what lies nsiv rise to the fore, and become rehe app am excited, and also . -up line ent curr AN: Tell us about the ahead. members of the live the hard way? EA: The remaining founding AN: What did you learn n) erto Ath Ellis dle, Brin n Sea ht, Wrig you give, drew band (An ter how much of yourself Taylor (drums) decided to EA: That no mat you always to est clos have not changed. Brad e wer t ugh him the absolute best in those who you tho ally move on, and we all wish n you physically and emotion t Gatter is the new man want more, and whe Clin s. ose cho n the people whe time whatever he this at is it e mor the can’t give any Pete Rurak has been behind the drum kit, and show their true selves and who you value the most year and a half now. a r ove l wel for t aris guit bass sucking leeches that they d bloo the as d ose hip of Andrew and are exp ners part g ple know exactly who itin peo gwr son You ary n. The prim g duties always have bee itin gwr son n mai the . from myself is a shift you are. Fuck you all to hell nership has allowed the es of the Primary? on Coma. This new part on tly can ifi AN: Where to now for Crim open up sign sound of the band to a to some lost time. It amazes n the overall sound EA: Time now to pick up on this record and has take l. leve years since we released king two ovo n t-pr bee ugh tho me that it has deeper and much more the are based around live with s e e and intimat Coma. Short term plan I have become very clos h here in Perth, along created. Trut has it The t of tha nd port sou sup in the shows new writing style and you Sydney mid-2006. We g thin and any rne bou from erent with shows in Mel AN: ‘Grandad’ is quite diff t process for a couple tha ut ing Tell us a bit abo are already starting the writ have done in the past. ly release towards eful hop will we t tha gs of new son track! y we don’t know acit cap t wha In I doubt the saddest song the end of 2006. out with is d’ recording and nda live ‘Gra a EA: a yet, but were quite keen on with. It is an awful and have ever been involved er ayal. The hurt and ang DVD release. very personal story of betr that song, and, for me, AN: Advice to anyone starting out? te wro we n whe raw so were n before and rd in both the music hea rly clea y fairl been asked this questio I think that is dark EA: I have very a in with a level say born to t was g wha and the lyrics. The son never really know quite for itself. suggest from my aks can spe I g all son ss the gue y, I call ion. Lyri place. of convict ething, do it ne in Perth developed experience is if you are going to do som AN: How has the local sce . Do it like nce cha ces to thing ? How have audien properly. Don’t leave any since you guys started s ary’ Prim the it. of on s es end Crim your life dep adapted to the changes in e back to playing live? www.crimesoftheprimary.com K sound, and have you gon 43_ K K K KK K K K KK K K KK AB-NORMAL BEAUTY Stendhal Syndrome meets a Coke ad? Ab-Normal Beauty (with its curiously hyphenated title) is unrelenting, intelligent, and provides the perfect bookend to Dario Argento’s rape-revenge classic. An almost blanket rejection of previous generic requirements, AbNormal Beauty sits somewhere in the graphically violent thriller category rather than horror, providing the toe-curling shocks of films like Saw but without the overwhelming dumbness. Oxide Pang apparently had the idea for this film—a frustrated artist who becomes fascinated and ultimately only fulfilled creatively through the recording of death—before his research lead him to discover artists such as Joel Peter Witkin. He seemed surprised that this was already “a thing”. Don’t be fooled by the gratuitous music-video-on-Quaaludes aesthetics: Pang shows a constant and distinct flair for getting the otherwise “ungettable”. Shove Shimizu up your arse and bugger Nakata while you are doing it. Pang combines insane degrees of cognitive agility with a Cronulla-esque ability to portray the intensity and lunacy of a violent world. With boobs. From Siren Visual Entertainment. – Alexandra Heller-Nicholas IMMORTEL Immortel is first and foremost an enigmatic spectacle. It is a dreamlike sci-fi fable of futuristic worlds, the melding of humans and technology, and the existence of gods. It is Enki Bilal’s third film, but his first attempt to film an adaptation of his writing. Realising that Immortel is a tiny excerpt from a larger body of work is the key to enjoying this film, being part one of his Nikopol trilogy (La Foire aux Immortels, La Femme Piège and Froid Équateur). Immortel seems abstract—plot driven but not particularly linear—but with Bilal’s background starting from ‘70s sci-fi comic Metal Hurlant, this visual jerkiness is understandable. The plot brings together the god Horus, Nikopol (rebellion leader just out of jail), and a blue haired beautiful humanoid. There’s no big finale or resolution but with two more films in the trilogy up his sleeve why should we expect Bilel’s plot to unfold so quickly? Other reasons to watch: it is one of the first films to be made entirely with CGI, with the human parts all filmed in front of blue screen. Secondly, for music fans, Front 242 sideproject CodeR23 apparently showed clips from Immortel as visuals on its recent US tour. – Nic Toupee GUNSLINGER GIRL Ah, anime. A vast world of varying qualities and audiences— even the hardened critic would be in a spot to stake a claim that the world-conquering Japanese animation is not kinda cool. Gunslinger Girl is far from original—call it Nikita (or, for those who know the TV show, La Femme Nikita), but the story worked so well in other formats (and other languages, at that) that it seemed like a fair bet that it would work with cute girls with big hair and even bigger eyes. “They’ve been given a second chance at life,” goes the tagline, “but at what cost?” Aside from originality, the price seems worth it—and hell, we’re all postmodernism-friendly so we can deal with even Tarantino degrees of “recontextualisation”. Gunslinger Girl tells the story of the Social Welfare Agency, which uses cybernetic implants in terminal patients, turning them into balls-out killing machines. Adolescent Henrietta awakens as such a creature, and her handler José sets up the other side to the familiar story: can Henrietta win his affection? Can he control her? We may know by now how this plays out, but Gunslinger Girl is an eye-candy filled twist on the theme. From Madman – Emily Potter. GODZILLA – SON OF GODZILLA Until now, I had never realised that there was a hole in my life that could only be filled by watching a rubbery, baby Godzilla get smacked in the head with a rock thrown by a giant praying mantis. And this is only one of the strange pleasures waiting in 1967’s Son of Godzilla. The recent re-release of the original Godzilla (not the American version where Raymond Burr pops up to help explain away that kooky Japanese subtext) has lead to a new evaluation of the classic. Underneath the rubber suit, it’s all pretty grim. Godzilla may be a national hero, but he destroys Tokyo as often as he seems to protect it. He’s a big, scaly metaphor for science, the military, and mostly, the bomb. Where does that leave the cute, tiny, if-Ewoks-were-lizards that is baby Godzilla? See him use his sleeping father’s tail as a skipping rope! See him browbeaten into using his atomic breath for the first time! Aww. There’s also well-meaning scientists, a secret weather experiment, a hot-shot investigative journalist, a mysterious island girl and…well…no one really cares about the humans anyway. It’s all about the monsters. By the time the final battle between Godzilla and Kumonga the giant spider rolls around, the humans are long gone. The more serious subtext is supplanted by this crazy fun: incidental music like something out of the Brady Bunch and flat, theatrical sets in gorgeous ‘70s pastels. Even only minutes after the movie ends, it already feels like some mostly forgotten nonsensical dream. It’s a matter of scale. Godzilla is just too big to be constrained by genre, tone, politics, or human logic. Let alone any single movie: also just released is Godzilla Vs. Ebirah, Lobster from Another Time! Who can resist? From Madman. – Martyn Pedler _44 GOD TOLD ME QUIET DAYS TO DO IT IN CLICHY FASTER PUSSYCAT! KILL! KILL! For those of you not yet a member of the Faster Pussycat cult let me indoctrinate you. Tura Satana as Varla, Haji as Rosie, and Lori Williams as Billie are three hot go-go girls with a wild streak on the hunt for easy cash….driving hot vintage cars. Wearing figure hugging outfits that accentuate tiny waists and trademark Russ Meyer sanctioned top heavy action. Racing, fighting, terrorising the square youth of America and, finally, KILL KILL KILLING! Filmed in black and white in 1965, it has been lauded by feminists, film makers from John Waters to Quentin Tarantino, and watchers worldwide. So much so that there are fan clubs dedicated to the three pussycats, particularly the feisty gangleader Varla. This film is essential viewing that might not change your life but it will change your iconographical map of the last 30 years of cinema, not to mention answer a lot of music-sample riddles! For those already in the know, this DVD features some irresistible extras including commentary by Russ himself (before he passed away) and the three Pussycats, plus interviews and original trailers. Utterly recommended—purchase or peril coz this one goes up to 11! From Madman. – Nic Toupee I thought that the abdomen-withvagina motif was the exclusive terrain of David Cronenberg, but Larry Cohen’s 1976 low-budget horror soon-to-berediscovered classic God Told Me To Do It also contains such a wonderful body-ick moment; two, in fact! And that, actually, is just one of many deliriously delicious demented delights on display in this recently released, soon to be rediscovered cult classic DVD that almost defies description. But here goes: Tony Lo plays one of those hard boiled, no nonsense New York cops that were so prolific in the ‘70s, complete with the requisite character building “baggage”— this time, a serious case of Catholic guilt and God addiction. The bewilderingly eccentric narrative begins when a solitary sniper standing atop a water tower randomly picks off pedestrians on the New York City streets below, and offers the rationale “God told me to do it” seconds before gracefully swan diving into the pavement. Our intrepid detective then goes about solving the case in a fashion most peculiar for American movies: he asks questions, follows leads, and does a whole bunch of detective work as opposed to shooting up the joint until something gives. Very refreshing. What he uncovers, I’m sorry to say, is best left undisclosed within the confines of a review. There are enough twists and turns and plot aboutfaces in this one to make M. Night Shyamalamadingdong crap his pants and know the true feeling of shame. There are more themes, plot devices, and concepts going on in this film that most film makers can cram into their entire careers, everything from gritty urban detective action, blaxploitation happenings in seedy pool halls decorated liberally with hoes, religious fever as an infectious disease, gender bending and, yes, even alien conspiracies. If you, like me, find today’s modern horror to be knee deep in flashy remakes and Teen Soft Core Torturen porn, then this is one slice of cinema that you will want to scoff down with voracious zeal. From Blue Underground Distribution. – Matt O’Callaghan Clichy or cliché? This film is uncut and uncensored. It is a rediscovered print following its seizure and disappearance in 1970. It is an adaptation of a banned novel by celebrated libertine Henry Miller (of Tropic of Cancer fame). The DVD jacket sports a promising comment of condemnation from the Catholic Bishops Board of Review. But if you are expecting a triumph of liberation cinema, think again. The plot (such as it is) traces the pre-WW2 lifestyle of a pair of charmless middle-aged down and out bohemians and their incessant romping with no shortage of vacant nubile French ingénues. Although mercifully shot in grainy black and white, the story travels from one sex scene to the next with any potential for eroticism stripped by worse than average acting (from a string of nonprofessional actors) and a general lack of tact and suggestion. Miller’s style is famously uncompromising, but this mastery of the written word is no doubt difficult to translate to film and, in any event, offers limited shock value in the current (and increasingly feminist) age. The monochromatic photography and a number of interesting experimental filmic techniques (captions, jump cuts) save the film from being utterly appalling, but query whether enough is salvaged to imbue Quiet Days in Clichy with sufficient artistic merit to elevate it from mere banal semi-soft pornography. As for the country and western ditty which pervades the film, you will either love or hate it. An interview with the singer (Joe McDonald) is included in the extras, along with a featurette—‘Dirty Books, Dirty Movies: Barney Rosset on Henry Miller’. From Blue Underground. – Alicia Campos 45_ BURST ANGEL: DEATH’S ANGEL Pretty dumb shooty anime vixens in a Tokyo gone mad. Again. And why not?! – From Madman. Amber Hastings REQUIEM FROM THE DARKNESS: TURMOIL OF THE FLESH Anime ghost stories, alright! This highly stylised mega-gothic horror animation follows Momosuke Yamaoka, wannabe author (livejournal user name: momosuke_ yamaoka, we can assume) who travels around Japan with the intention of unveiling his life’s work, ‘The 100 Stories’. Hooking up with the mystically scampy (and kinda dumbly named) Mataichi the Tricker/Ongyo Master, Ogin the Puppeteer, and Nagamimi the Bird Caller, Yamaoka and his motley crew propel the story line forward with their simple task of “root(ing) out criminals and use various tricks to judge karmic debts.” Or something. Who cares: this looks awesome; the sound is big; the DVD quality is gobsmacking; and, most importantly, it contains some spectacular demons. From Madman. – Adrian Stephens. THE ORDEAL (CALVAIRE) The Ordeal is what you end up with when you cross French cinematography with Deliverance, Misery, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, complete with pig buggery. Marc Stevens (Laurent Lucas) is a small time singer heading south to perform in a Christmas gala when his van breaks down. He is led to Bartel Inn by Boris where the Inn owner, Bartel (Jackie Berroyer), instantly establishes a connection with Marc on the basis that he’s a comedian and a fellow performer. Marc is forced to stay at the Inn for a few days while he waits for Bartel to repair his car. Bartel’s obsessive need for companionship becomes increasingly evident as he emotionally blackmails Marc to sing for him by revealing the story of Gloria, his estranged wife who left him some years ago. The story suddenly turns into a bizarre case of mistaken identity as Bartel burns out Marc’s car, bludgeons him with the car’s battery, shaves his head (for his own protection from the town folk), and ties him up, all the while calling him “Gloria”. Just when we are led to believe Marc will be saved in a shower of bullets, things get weirder. The characters don’t really seem to show any signs of growth in the film, which steers it away from the usual sterile Hollywood approach to filmmaking. However, The Ordeal (or Calvaire in its native tongue) reveals the darker nature of human characteristics and begs the question … how far do we go for companionship? The lack of a female presence in this small town indicates something of a feministic calibre, yet the film’s brutal approach to sexual satisfaction reveals something far more sinister. Disappointingly, the film contains some rather weak Christian symbolism that lets it down. It also ends abruptly and in a somewhat unsatisfying manner. This is Belgian born Fabrice du Welz’s first feature film and is an impressive attempt. Filmed in Super 16, the French trademark for beautiful cinematography and inventive camera angles coupled with a dark and disturbing sense of humour is definitely evident and makes this film interesting to watch and disturbingly entertaining. – Kathryn Williams GHOST IN THE SHELL 2: INNOCENCE Much anime suffers the criticism that story and dialogue are secondary to visual trickery. However, 1995’s Ghost in the Shell is so mystical, so resolved, and so influential, that even after a decade of technological developments it remains a cornerstone of Japanese anime. It is to this high standard that the sequel Innocence (now available in an English language format) is undoubtedly measured. Innocence is set a few years following the events of the Ghost in the Shell, and sees a return to a world where cities are inhabited by a spectrum of humans, cyborgs, and purely robotic androids. “Humanity” is conferred to the extent that a physical form is inhabited by a soul (or “ghost”). Section 9 is a special operation force which investigates technology related crimes. The central investigation of the film involves a cyborg construction corporation and the gynoids it creates—wayward female sex dolls that kill their owners and themselves. With the protagonist of the original film (Major Motoko Kusanagi) now disappeared, Innocence focuses on her partner, Batou. The film continues the philosophical ponderings of its predecessor, exploring the themes of information networks and human-machine technologies. The script is packed with enough cryptic Confucianisms to warrant multiple viewings; quotes can be traced to sources as diverse as Buddha, Confucius, Descartes, Milton, and The Bible. Added to these references is the homage paid to surrealists Hans Bellmer and Raymond Roussel. With the backing of heavyweights Studio Ghibli and Production I.G., the 2 and 3D animation is not left wanting. Innocence portrays an impressively dark cyberpunk world. A haunting soundtrack adds depth to this mood. Ultimately, however, the absence of the compelling Major Motoko Kusanagi is strongly felt and the philosophical musings are fragmented, weighty, and wearisome. Nevertheless, fans (whilst having more satisfying recourse in the manga) and science fiction lovers will find plenty to please. Innocence delivers vastly more depth than the average anime. From Madman. – Alicia Campos 47_ SHADOW OF THE COLOSSUS [Sony] Playstation 2 THE MOVIES [Activision] PC DVD Minimum Specifications: Pentium 3 800Mhz or Athlon XP 1500+, 256MB RAM, 2.4Gb of free HDD space, DX 32MB 100% 9.0c compliant 3D graphics accelerator card, and 16bit sound card. Prepare to waste your life away in front of your crappy monitor that you wish was a 21” 3ms LCD monitor that cost you five grand, which you brought home in your classic black ‘57 Chevy with a supercharged 351 under the silver flying vampire bat ornamented hood. You are the modern day Bela Lugosi: living it up as a cult movie star in your luxury home, buying up kooky statues and weird furniture just because you can. Getting married to the most buxom blond co-star you ever had and then getting divorced because you felt that brunettes were more your thing. Demanding huge sums of money for the main role in the next blockbuster film to support you addiction to the most expensive imported finely cut cocaine from southern Peru. However, in The Movies your only addiction will be to caffeine because you won’t want to go to sleep before you have sorted out the drinking problem of one of your actors. The Movies is about living your wildest dreams as the owner and creator of a film studio and reaping piles of cash for making crappy B-grade films (and we all know that at least 90 per cent of all Hollywood films are B-grade). You start by building your studio from scratch, which includes the necessary buildings for you to recruit actors, directors, extras, crew members, and script writers. Then it’s just a matter of writing a script, building a set, and shooting the movie. Once the movie is finished it goes into production and is released, and then you begin to see the cash flowing in so you can build better sets and facilities. This in itself has enough potential to create a compelling game to keep you going for many hours, however The Movies involves much more than this. You have to keep your stars happy (and drugs and alcohol free), maintain the studio, research new film technology, and write better scripts to keep your studio at the top of the box office. It’s a lot to handle and can get frustrating at the awards ceremonies where you really get to see how shit you are doing. The best feature of the game is being able to write your own scripts and see them turn into crap films which you can view once they are finished and, God forbid, embarrass yourself even further by sharing them online. This is a lifetime of compelling management sim based gaming and hell of a lot of fun too. www. themoviesgame.com – Peter Hakuli Shadow of the Colossus is born from artistic vision. Spiritual sequel to the critically acclaimed ICO, this game is not merely technically accomplished and playable, but delivers a truly beautiful, unique interactive experience. It tells the story of a young warrior who has journeyed to a forbidden land in search of sixteen legendary giants. With only his loyal warhorse for company, he sets out to slay these noble creatures, in the hope that doing so will bring his love back from the dead. A brief opening sequence sees the hero enter an enormous temple and lay the body of a beautiful girl on a stone altar. You then mount up, and ride forth into the vast plains surrounding the structure. After a short gallop and a mountain climb, you arrive at the feet of your first opponent. You can fire a few shots from your bow, but it quickly becomes apparent that this will have no effect on the towering creature. What’s required is for you to charge in and grab hold of the giant’s hairy fetlocks, which leads to a heart-pounding climb up its torso while it shakes and tries to throw you off. Directed by your sword’s guiding light, you soon locate its weak spot at the back of its neck and send the first colossus crashing to the earth. Shadow of the Colossus is comprised only of boss fights, and thereby dispenses with game “filler” entirely. There are no waves of identikit minions to dispatch, expanding skill-trees, or convoluted, forgettable plotlines. You come across no one during your travels and the only character interaction is with your trusty steed. The control scheme is simple and intuitive. The dialogue is minimal. What this leaves is a focused, sublime gameplay experience, one which is emotionally engaging from the opening scenes. The environments for you to explore are breathtaking with mountains, cliffs, forests, deserts, and plains all bathed in gorgeous amber lighting effects. These periods of quiet isolation stand in contrast with the desperate, thrilling battles with the colossi, when the ground shakes and a bombastic score swells from the speakers. On a purely technical level, the game is extremely accomplished. The graphics are stunning, light and particle effects abound, the sound is spot-on and the controls are wonderfully responsive. With NTSC, progressive scan, and surround sound all supported, the better your set-up, the more you will appreciate what is on offer. Shadow of the Colossus is an amazingly polished, focused, and immersive experience. More than a “must-play game of the year”, this is a call to arms for those who believe interactive entertainment can be a compelling artistic medium. – Tom Wark Shadow of the Colossus is available now in a special edition digipack. PRINCE OF PERSIA – THE TWO THRONES [Ubisoft] PC, XBOX, PS2 Our prince has had a long, hard journey: through the emotional time twister that was ‘Sands of Time’, and then as the acrobatic argonaut in ‘Warrior Within’, to the trilogy triumphant that is ‘The Two Thrones’. You get a return to the story-telling elements that were a favourite in ‘Sands of Time’, coupled with all the free-form fighting of ‘Warrior Within’, and the new main feature called “speed kills”—in which you sneak up on your enemy and with some visual cues devastatingly slash, strangle, and maim your opponent without competition. So yeah, that’s fun. The plot, while wrapping the ongoing story up, ends a bit too cleanly for my liking. For, as fun as it is to play the “dark prince” jumping around and laying waste with your super-cool daggertail, story-wise it is quite a let down, except for the ultra cool bit at the end that is reminiscent of an old classic Prince of Persia game (not to spoil too much). So that’s fun too, but the game does feel a touch short compared to ‘Warrior Within’. And with no big plot cliff-hangers, it seemed a waste to be playing it on the PC when it’s obviously more of a console game. It was fun while it lasted, but I don’t feel the need to go back. www.princeofpersiagame.com – Jarod Collard 49_ DURAN DURAN Live in London 2005 (Deluxe Edition) LACRIMOSA As part of the ‘Revival’ tour, Duran Duran brought its show to Australia in 2004, and a year later the London show at the almost absurdly high capacity Wembley Arena was recorded in glorious totality for the sake of prosperity (and, one could argue, the desire to make a few bucks from what already appears to be a well-oiled nostalgia cash cow). But cynicism has little place here, even for a jaded FIEND writer— the sheer enthusiasm with which the ‘80s icons approach performance and the rapture with which it is gobbled up by the (mostly female) masses expose “the fab five” as what they are: some guys that took a bunch of drugs some years back and made some incredible pop music together who like hanging out, having fun, and playing some tunes. The sleek and polished exoticism of the early days may be replaced by Armani-clad forty-somethings playing to a big room full of mums, but this DVD—from ‘Rio’ to ‘Girls on Film’ to ‘The Chauffeur’ and (my favourite) ‘Careless Memories’—captures perfectly the upbeat glamour that Duran Duran represents, now as much as it ever did. From Liberation Music. – Adrian Stephens Musikkurzfilme [Hall of Sermon] If you like Lacrimosa for the band’s gothy gothy goth goth, you’ll drain the last bloody drops of this DVD (under the influence of lace and hairspray, of course). If you’re not familiar with Lacrimosa but find the DVD a feast you’ll become an instant fan of the band. Visually quite competently edited and allowing every indulgence from nipples, pointy boots, and suspenders right back to the graveyard and the mental hospital, the video clips vary while devotedly maintaining their über-vamp style. Unlike studio footage where you wonder why (or indeed if) the band spend anything at all on production, or find yourself bursting a brain cell to find some kind of story in the clip to justify its existence, these clips accompany and enrich the music, much like a good live performance. Traditional gothic woodcuts and drawings themed for the band and the specific tracks serve as bookends for the eleven clips. The four “making-of” clips are detailed and reveal some of the effects and definitely the hard work behind their production. Musikkurzefilme shows a mature commitment to detail in costuming, actual ability to play music and sing, artwork and design, and adherence to a decadent aesthetic. Essentially, if you’re even partly a believer, this is an excellent ghost story. – Kama C. Way _50 INTO THE DARKNESS VOL. 3 [Nightclub Records] I make no bones. I’m a fan of the Into the Darkness DVD series, partly because the series was one of the first gothic/electronic compilation DVDs, which is great because when you have to pony up even more dollars for a DVD than a CD, you feel smug knowing it will feature something you’ll be excited to see. Also, the audio and visual quality are strong, with lots of clear close-ups and different camera angles on and off stage, and none of the common there’s-a-TV-on-in-the-next-room sound often accompanying live footage. Of eleven clips from festivals around Europe (including M’era Luna), highlights are the Birthday Massacre’s ‘Horrorshow’ (check out all the umbrellas! An impressive mix of fandom and acclimatisation to lots of rain!), Fixmer/ McCarthy’s ‘Destroy’ which makes you want to roar and punch the air, and Deine Lakaien’s ‘Reincarnation’ for pure old-school class (“there are no goths in heaven, there are some goths on earth”). I’m sorry if you’re a fan or I’m missing something but extra points go to Qntal for squeamish glam and pagan glory, and to Welle: Erdball for being mesmerisingly odd and the only thing ever to induce flashbacks to Dr Strangelove. As for the studio clips, it’s exciting to see things that are not usually shown in Australia, but fortunately we like the music as the clips don’t bring much to the tracks and clearly not all people who can make music can act and neither can their friends. Most entertaining of the studio clips is Scream Silence’s ‘Creed’ with band members “hung” like dead puppets still managing to twang an upright bass or go for rock poses around their guitars. It’s uncanny but the best studio clip is Schelmish’s ‘Rabenballade’, an all-in swords/shields/maidens affair with an only slightly Monty Python feel and a simple well-acted storyline. – Kama C. Way SCOTT PILGRIM Bryan Lee O’Malley Scott Pilgrim is 23 years old. He plays bass in a garage rock band. He lives in a grotty oneroom flat with his gay friend. He’s sort of dating a high school girl. Then an Amazon.com courier girl starts using his dreams as a hyperspace shortcut on her delivery routes, and Scott falls for her. The only problem is: if he wants to go out with her, he has to fight her seven evil ex-boyfriends in a series of epic Street Fighter-style battles. Released as a series of graphic novels, the Scott Pilgrim comics are like indie rock meets Japanese video games. Like their eponymous hero, they’re energetic, enthusiastic, kind of sweet, and a little bit stupid. Mostly, though, they’re a lot of fun. Bryan Lee O’Malley’s art has a cartoony flair, and his dialogue has a lot of life in it. Sure, sometimes the plot isn’t a clear as it could be, but this is a comic with mountains of charm. www.scottpilgrim.com – David Witteveen FLIGHT OF THE NIGHTHAWKS (Book One of the ‘Darkwar’ saga) Raymond Feist [Voyager] The only thing the back of this book’s hard-cover sleeve says is that it is “distressingly addictive”, and that sums it up pretty well. I mean, once you get through the brilliant ‘Riftwar’ trilogy, then the great ‘Serpentwar’ quartet, the slightly off-track but still enjoyable ‘Conclave of Shadows’ trilogy, and then—if you’re a big fan—the eleven other Midkemia (the world these books are based in) books, and finally reach the first ‘Darkwar’ saga, the fourth in the series. So, after I take a breath, Flight of the Nighthawks held more interest for me than the previous saga. It is more engaged with the ongoing story and characters, not being involved so much in any one personal journey, but with the grand scheme of things (I don’t think I can explain the devious Feistian exposition of ten books right here in this review!), which is the part of these books that I really love. While most of the elements of Flight of the Nighthawks seem like they have been covered previously, I’m feeling good about it heading somewhere grand. Nakor will show us the way! – Jarod Collard SEBASTIAN Anne Bishop [Voyager] Anne Bishop is an established and accomplished fantasy fiction writer who already has two trilogies under her belt, being the ‘Black Jewels’ trilogy and the ‘Alainn’ trilogy, making this one— the ‘Ephemera’ trilogy—three for three! Sebastian is the first of this series and, not having read any prior novels by Bishop, I’m unable to comment on whether it is typical of her style or subject matter, but there’s certainly an original imagination at work here. Sebastian, a human/incubus crossbreed, is the central character of a strong core cast of characters, set in a fictional landscape called Ephemera—not just a place but an entire world connected not by seas or borders but by energy bridges with the capacity to change in accordance with the thoughts and hearts desires of its various inhabitants. Ephemera is pierced by a previously contained dark force and Sebastian and his cast of assistant characters are charged by destiny to battle the dark and set things right using forces both practical and mystical. The language is simple, at times perhaps even a little too simple, and my only real complaint is that Bishop sets her conceptual bar very high but the turn of phrase at a lower denominator, making this novel very available but perhaps just a little too digestible. As we know right from the start that this is a trilogy it should be no surprise that the book is only vaguely rounded off, leading straight into book two when it is released. – Nic Toupee ARKHAM HORROR [Fantasy Flight Games] Arkham Horror is a board game based on the Cthulhu Mythos stories of HP Lovecraft. Well, sort of. Lovecraft wrote ponderous tales about scholars and bookworms being driven slowly insane by incomprehensible alien gods. Arkham Horror is more two-fisted pulp action: flappers and private eyes brawl with tentacled monsters as they try to stop an ancient evil from awakening to destroy the town of Arkham. Players move around a map of the town, collecting weapons, magic, and clues while gateways to alien dimensions open at random, releasing monsters into the streets. For a simple concept, it’s a complicated game—there are twenty-one different card decks, for example, and piles of little counters. And the rulebook is badly laid out. But the artwork is great, and there’s plenty of flavour text to reinforce the mood. It’s not exactly true to Lovecraft’s slow, creeping horror. But there’s plenty of fun to be had in tackling shoggoths with a shotgun. www.fantasyflightgames.com/arkhamhorror.html – David Witteveen THE TINDER BOX Minette Walters [Allen and Unwin] If you thought Agatha Christie was class-conscious, prepare to face the literary snob wedgie that is Minette Walters. Yes, she may chain smoke and doesn’t wear tweed, but don’t be mistaken: Ms Walters views the poor and uneducated with precisely the same disdain and outright mistrust as her famous predecessor. But bugger me with an updated copy of the Who’s Who if—god damn it—her books are not utterly addictive, slightly perverse, and totally engrossing little murder mysteries. Dorset-based Walters frequently has her bestsellers made into television mini-series (such as The Sculptress, The Echo, The Scold’s Bridle), so if you miss reading this one its televisual representation will no doubt do the book adequate justice. – Amber Hastings 51_ THE HAND OF THE DEVIL Dean Vincent Carter [Random House] The Hand of the Devil is very much a first effort. As newcomer Dean Vincent Carter dives headlong into this schlock horror/thriller tale, he seems determined not to let clumsy storytelling or overwrought prose get in the way. Squarely aimed at fifteen to eighteen year olds, the novel plays out like a late-night B-movie. All the ingredients are here: an unfeasibly over-curious protagonist, an isolated locale and an ancient, unfathomable evil—this time in the form of an immortal mosquito. The book centers on a British journalist named Ashley Reeves, who is lured from the London office of his tabloid paper by the promise of a great story. Reeves sets out (alone, of course) to visit a remote island at the request of Reginald Mather, a crackpot recluse who claims to be in possession of a fabulous insect. Soon enough, Reeves is trapped on the island with nothing but a waterlogged mobile phone, being hunted by a mass-murdering doctor and a deadly insect-god. The Hand of the Devil plods along for its first half, as Carter offers up a dizzying amount of background information concerning his barely plausible plot. It’s all very straightforward, with seemingly supernatural elements being gradually revealed as just that. Things do pick up during the final act, but largely due to the depiction of gruesome acts of torture, which seem rather out of place in a novel for young adults. Aside from these few pages of character pontification on the subject of human suffering, the book delivers very little in the way of its promised “chills”. The Hand of the Devil would certainly make an appropriately macabre gift for your troubled, sulky younger cousin, but if you really care for the little tyke, track down a copy of The Dunwich Horror instead. – Tom Wark DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI: PAINTER AND POET Jan Marsh [Weidenfeld & Nicolson] Fans of Pre-Raphaelite poet and painter and “Romantic Victorian revolutionary” Rossetti couldn’t possibly ask for more in a biography, with Jan Marsh having rightly earned the title of the foremost biographer in the area. Half-British, halfItalian, Rossetti was one of the major forces behind the Pre-Raphaelite movement, and his beautiful and ethereal work was frequently tinged by a mystical eroticism (sparked, Marsh suggests, by two of the most famous Pre-Raphaelite women—Jane Morris and Lizzie Siddal, the latter of which died of a laudanum overdose). Rossetti died as an almost total recluse, and Marsh follows his life as one of the most fascinating and influential minds of the period right to the end in this beautifully presented 600-plus page tome. – Emily Potter HOW TO INSULT YOUR HOSTS IN MANY LANGUAGES Emma Burgess and David Salter [Allen and Unwin] Described as “all the bits your language teachers left out”, this short but precise book is effectively a user’s guide to getting your face punched in around the globe. There’s no dallying with half-arsed offense here—phrases are either blunt (“I hope you die” in French: “Vas crever”), crude (“titten” is the German word for “tits”), or outright (but hysterically) impolite (“How fascinating, I’ve never seen a country with so many peasants. Oh sorry, I didn’t realise they’re your royal family” loosely in Italian: “Interessae. Ill vostro paese ha molti contandini. O sono osservare la vostra famiglia reale?”) Sadly, this phrase is not listed in Danish. For the promiscuous, don’t worry, you haven’t been left out: the Spanish phrase “Gracias a ti, ahora me duele cuando meo” translates roughly to “Thanks to you, it now hurts when I wee.” The lonely planet may have just got lonelier, but there’s no argument from this side of the fence: it also got heaps funnier! – Adrian Stephens _52 THE LEFT HAND OF POWER Brenden Kluver [Zeus Publications] Try as I might, I couldn’t get much information on Brendan Kluver to back up my immediate assumption that this is his first novel. Apologies to Brenden if it’s a wrong turn, but The Left Hand of Power shows a combination of some great genre-mashing ideas and heavy, perhaps a little overwritten, expression that leads me to think Brendan is a scholar-turned-fiction-writer on his maiden voyage. A combination of occult fantasy and Chandler-esque detective fiction, it centres on veteran LA detective Dan Fields and his supernatural adversary Lucifer Rising, whose evil yet mysterious deeds result in murder at a performance at an LA casino. Dan is hired by the grieving widow to investigate the murder and then begins the race against time as he discovers that Lucifer Rising is actually an ancient Egyptian god incarnated who is trying to take over the planet! Along the way we have romantic interests, fencing, satanic rituals, and plenty of damsels in distress for good measure. It’s an entertaining tale that is well-conceived, however Brenden’s turn of phrase and the intensely laboured descriptions seem a little hesitant. Nevertheless, if dark gods vs. detectives with fencing and damsels appeals to you, give it a read. – Nic Toupee THE FLOODS: PLAYSCHOOL Colin Thompson [Random House] This book is about the wizard and witch school Quicklime College in Patagonia (the Floods’ school), and is the second book in the series about this strange family. My favorite part is when Orkward Warlock gets blown up into thousands of pieces. Plus I like the gargles— gargles are like gargoyles except they make loud gargling noises all the time.) The funniest thing about The Floods: Playschool is that there is three hundred and sixty five of everything at Quicklime’s except for the doors (there are only three hundred and sixty four of them) so somewhere there is a room without a door, though no one has ever managed to find it. I also liked the game Gristle Ball because Merlinmary threw the gristle ball (a ball of gristle embedded with nails) so hard it hit all the goals and smashed the toilet. There’s a special breeds class for children like Satanella (because she is a fox terrier), and their teacher is a dog. Warning: Don’t read this book unless you have read The Floods: Neighbours because you get to meet all the characters in the first story. – Ehlana Hakuli (8 years old) GOTHIC VISION—THREE CENTURIES OF HORROR, TERROR, AND FEAR Dani Cavallaro [Continuum] THE FILMS OF TIM BURTON Alison McMahon [Continuum] Tim Burton has had a curious relationship with the critical world—with work spanning from blockbuster to children’s film, with a strong nod towards art house somewhere along the way, few have attempted what Alison McMahon does with this book: to closely analyse Burton’s key films (such as Beetlejuice, Ed Wood, Batman, Edward Scissorhands, and Sleepy Hollow) in terms of how they function as a body of work, as creative products, and in reference to the broader film industry. Maybe a bit academic for the curious passer-by, but for film students or hardcore Burton fans this book is insightful, perceptive, and brings a new light to the work of one of the most delightful living American directors. – Adrian Stephens. If, as the internet so frequently seems to illustrate, the literary Gothic is increasingly blurred and confused with that loaded and distasteful concept of “goth fiction”, Cavallaro’s book couldn’t come at a better time to silence the sceptics. Covering a vast range of horror stories from the eighteenth century to now, Gothic Vision looks at the ideological implications of the Gothic, focusing on constant themes such as mental and bodily deterioration, the supernatural, and the monstrous. At the core of the work is the notion that fear is powerful trigger, a “ubiquitous phenomenon”, and the experience of terror can excite and suspend at the same time. Fascinating. – Adrian Stephens 53_ Rather drink cat pee q Kind of soggy like cat food qq Purr/hiss qqq Mmmm good like catnip qqqq Head explody brilliant fantastico! qqqqq ANGEL THEORY BLATHERSKITE Re-possession [GUP] CD Three Worlds [Self-release] CD My rule of thumb with any local band is that if it holds up against the international stalwarts then you know you’re on to something good. Angel Theory is one of the few EBM bands in Australia that can do just that and Charles Fenech doesn’t fall short on his sophomore release. Much of Repossession places me in a variety of environments: sometimes a dark room with the graceful melodies sliding over me (e.g. ‘Possession’, ‘Come with Me’), or sometimes on a big nasty club system your pelvis can’t ignore (‘Black and Blue’, ‘I Feel Disease’, ‘Descendant’). In my book, variety on an album is a very good thing (and I’d argue it’s lacking more and more these days), Re-possession is a journey of ups and downs which Fenech takes you on personally. Angel Theory has an incredible knack for creating classic EBM machine-sounding rhythms—add in those insatiable hooks and sweeping synth chords and you’re right there. – Aimee Sinclair qqqq1/2 Blatherskite’s Three Worlds is one of those dark releases that demands commitment from the listener. Edgy, vitriolic guitar riffs are complemented by heavy bass and gritty drumming. Blatherskite focuses heavily on texture and provides some ingenious and jaundiced tracks comparable with Tool. The sinister prog-rock stylings lift this band several notches above less engaging local acts and assemble all the elements for a promising future album. www.blatherskite.com.au – Michael Wolloghan qqq ASIA NOVA love like a veiled threat [Eibon Records] CD Asia Nova returns after the highly revered debut Burning the Blue Skies Black with another sprawling monolithic epic of an album, sweeping through ethno-infused ambient fields and on to wide plains of bloated droning atmospheres. Simply put, the sheer scope and depth displayed is quite staggering, where flute/wind instruments, tabla, percussion, and female vocals (utilised as an instrument), compliment the expansive tidal flows of ambient treated guitar textures and synth-led drones. Pushing well beyond any mere dark ambient tag, the entire atmosphere ascends into a spiralling core of spirituality—but not the Western world’s concept of spirituality, rather that of the Asiatic world (as reflected in the cover’s imagery). The sheer breadth and textural scope of this CD seems to be the direct result of the musical contributions of five individuals, meaning in the case of Asia Nova, five heads are certainly better than one! As massive and epic as this particular album is, it is actually the first instalment of a six-album series under the umbrella title turning the black skies blue again, which certainly begs the question of what musical heights might be scaled on subsequent instalments. Yet before this is formally answered by the group, this CD is absolutely fantastic place to begin. www.radiantslab.com/asianova – Richard Stevenson qqqq1/2 CHRISTIAN DEATH Death Club 1981–1993 [Cleopatra] DCD A CD and a DVD?! It’s Rozz-au-gogo, and to be honest it was going to take a hell of a lot for me to be disappointed with this release. The man who once declared “God forbid I end up going on a ‘Sound and Vision’ tour like David Bowie”, Christian Death’s frontman Rozz Williams lived, and died, true to his worth when he passed in April 1998. This release takes you back to the heyday of arguably the most important goth rock band of all time. The video footage is the true gem here— a whole live show (from January 1990) and a TV performance of ‘Romeo’s Distress’ and ‘Cavity – First Communion’ remind us again of exactly how precious the life (and band) we lost was. www.cleorecs. com – Amber Hastings qqqq JOHNNY CASH At Folsom Prison/At San Quentin [Sony] DCD The murkiness of these two recordings came at the virtual peak of The Man in Black’s popularity, and at a time when his off-stage lifestyle was also spiraling out of control (the recent film Walk the Line with Joaquin Phoenix explores this and other aspects of Cash’s fascinating life). This two-CD set—both live recordings of Cash playing in jails to prisoners—brings both albums together packaged for the first time in Australia on CD. At San Quentin was recorded in 1969, At Folsom Prison the year before, and together the recordings illustrate just how bleak and out of control Cash’s world was at the time. Key tracks on At San Quentin include ‘Darlin’, Companion’, and ‘A Boy Named Sue’, while At Folsom Prison’s highlight is easily the performance of ‘Folsom Prison Blues’. A lot of listeners new to Cash begin with tracks such as his cover of Nine Inch Nails’ ‘Hurt’—if you liked that and want more, this release is the perfect place to start. – Adrian Stephens qqqq CELEBRATION Celebration [4AD] CD Celebration’s vocalist Katrina Ford makes PJ Harvey sound like a washed-up has-been. Grunting, whining, moaning, howling demented tunes, and sometimes even sounding like she’s gasping for fucking air. Ford’s powerful vocals add depth to this somewhat unusual three piece music group is amazing. The first track on this new album, ‘War’, is upbeat, but not so much so that you want to bang your head against a wall just to numb the happy vibes. It’s a brilliant opener and sets the mood for the majority of the album. Track seven ‘Ancient Animals’ immediately draws you in with its slightly chamber-jazz/ Frankenstein oddity mixed in with dark undertones; ultimately it spits you right back out as soon as it hits the next track ‘Tonight’, which makes you want to drink absinthe all night long and dance around like a crazy motherfucker! Nearly all of the songs begin with a melancholy tone but become more upbeat and deep as the album progresses. The drums and keyboard sing sweetly and compliment Ford’s vocals throughout the whole album. Definitely a keeper! www.4ad. com – Tessa Drysdale qqqqq CESIUM_137 Intelligent Design [Metropolis] CD It’s great to see (or hear) the return of Cesium_137 with the new album Intelligent Design. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the evolution and growth of the band with its signature dark driving beats and pop structures overlaying a rich electro soundscape. Cesium has come along way since 1998 and the Advanced Decay album (with one of the best dark electro songs ever produced, ‘Regrets’). The new album appears to be more “user friendly” than the last, Elemental (still a great album), and reflects the growing confidence and popularity of this band. The single ‘Hollow’ is destined to be a dancefloor hit, but despite this Cesium has still yet to penetrate the Australian market. C’mon DJs, get behind them—it’s dance floor perfection! www.cesium137.com – Tavis Potts qqqq CLAN OF XYMOX Weak in My Knees [Pandaimonium] CDS Clan of Xymox returns with a fully packed single from the band’s forthcoming KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK _54 album, Breaking Point. This follows on in the style set by the last album, Farewell, with extremely danceable synthlines and soaring gothic guitar riffs overlaid with Ronny Moorings’ trademark dark and sensual vocals. The single comes with remixes from The Azoic, Dimitri, and Grendel, a new track called ‘Calling You Out’ and two remixes of the old classic, ‘Michelle’— one version re-recorded and the other, a gorgeous downbeat remix by Destroid. Finally, there’s also a music video. This is an absolute must-have for any Clan fan who can’t wait for the album.www. clanofxymox.com – Brent Donaldson qqqqq CONTROL The Means to an End [Eibon Records] CD The fifth official album for Control is again a showcase of the belligerent single mindedness of solo member Thomas Garrison’s approach to the power electronics genre—and by belligerent I mean that as the best of compliments. Whilst the basic formula has not drastically altered, the fact remains it is the aural dynamics and crystalline production is what turns Control’s style from good to great. To describe the formula for the uninitiated: Control presents an immensely raw sonic aesthetic constructed through droning loops, mechanised rhythmic patterns, savage noise, and manically screamed/ distortion obliterated vocals. But far from being a chaotic mess, the meticulously constructed compositions any set of unsuspecting speakers that dares play this too loud. Topically Control has not altered its tactics either, as evidenced through the track titles: ‘Hatred of Humans’, ‘Line to the Slaughter’, and ‘Wait to Die’. Given there is a limit to how much power electronics you can take in one sitting, cleverly many of these album tracks commence with relatively subtle droning textures to lull the listener into a false sense of security before quickly elevating into an all out sonic maelstrom, unrelenting in its sheer force and brutality. With the steadfast focus that Control has continued to display, a more than suitable axiom would be: when it ain’t broke don’t fix it. www.eibonrecords. com – Richard Stevenson qqqq DEATHSTARS Termination Bliss [Nuclear Blast] CD Termination Bliss heralds the triumphant return of Deathstars. This album is full of dark, accessible, and aggressive industrial metal tunes. If you are looking for contagious beats, gargantuan guitars, and heavy synths, this release is for you. Songs such as ‘Cyanide’, ‘Tongues’, and ‘Blitzkrieg’ highlight the tough and aggressive attitude we have come to expect from this Swedish band. Lovers of Rammstein, Gothminister, and Marilyn Manson will find this a generous offering: this is an unholy affair, yet a touch repetitive and a little over the top. However, this album overall is more confident and inspired than the last. It’s more of the same but satisfying nonetheless. www.deathstars.net – Michael Wolloghan qqq DECADENCE Where Do Broken Hearts Go? [Cold Meat Industry] CD This new album from Decadence is filled with honest lyrics, acoustic overtones, stewed into a sort of melancholy bliss. The first track on the album ‘Good Boys Go to Heaven’ starts off rather mournfully and dark but becomes lighter as the song progresses. Track four ‘Cold Winter Sun’ starts off acoustically with the beautiful vocals of Eyphrosyne Papamihalopoulou. Other tracks worth listening to include ‘Farewell to the Living’ and ‘Do Not Resist’. I found the artwork on this particular album to be erotic, dark, and sensual. The majority of songs evoked strong emotions, but I did find that as the album progressed it became a little boring and songs began to sound the same. Decadence has definitely done better work. However, if you’re a fan, then definitely add it to your collection. www.coldmeat.se – Tessa Drysdale qq1/2 DECODED FEEDBACK Combustion [Metropolis] CD Imagine Front Line Assembly with Ogre from Skinny Puppy with a throat disease on vocals and you pretty much have Decoded Feedback. The opening track ‘Combustion’ explodes in your face with some hard beats and typically industrial samples; it all moulds nicely into some very interesting and pleasing soundscapes. The highlights, unlike the first track, are surprisingly the slower, bleaker songs like ‘Monument’, ‘Supernova’, and the fabulous ‘Hyberia’. The only flaw in this CD is that the faster tracks tend to get a little repetitive and boring; however, this is made up for by the pure genius and diversity of the rest. I could easily listen to ‘Hyberia’ on repeat for hours on end. www. decodedfeedback.com – Peter Hakuli qqqq DIABLE AMOREUX Ringstone Round [Independent] CD Take a mix of Ween, Mr Floppy, goth ambient, and Eyes-Wide-Shut imagery, shake it all up, and you have something approximating this bizarre little album. It freaked me out enough over my morning coffee, made me laugh (the first track is called ‘Wizard of New Zealand’!), gave me a headache, and then started again. Certainly an art-rock themed sonic experiment, comic laced with sadness and despair, and an out of tone falsetto singing voice combined with sombre piano, strings, and dark samples. Umm, yeah. Make what thou will of this one. Part piss-take, part serious—it’s a trip. www.geocities.com/ diableamoreux/ – Tavis Potts qqq THE DOUBLE Loose in the Air [Matador/Remote Control] CD Loose in the Air is the latest album from Brooklyn-based four-piece The Double, and is described as an “eerie, paranoid album steeped in a hyperawareness of the impermanence of things.” Although The Double cites many avant garde influences, and is obviously trying to break away from mainstream music, there is little to distinguish this band. Progressive rock bands with microtonal art-guitar and keyboards can either produce albums of eloquence with hints of urban cool, or they don’t. If this had the right tone and sweeping sublime simplicity, it would work. However, it lacks emotional pull and there’s too much meandering arty fluff. Maybe if you are searching for an alternative to mainstream noise music this release may elicit mild interest, but it isn’t compelling enough. www.thedoublethedouble.com – Michael Wolloghan qq kitty classic DEPECHE MODE Violator [Sire] CD The turning point of the band’s career, Depeche Mode’s seventh studio album Violator revealed a new-found sophistication. This is the album on which songwriter Martin Gore refined his catchy pop simplicity, and Alan Wilder’s production developed a new, hidden complexity giving the band a more textured, evocative sound. The album’s opening track ‘World in My Eyes’ heralds this new direction: Dave Gahan sings “Let me take you on a trip ... /around the world and back.” Synths sing in distorted response to his smooth baritone. Gore’s signature keyboard riffs work in place of guitar breaks until the song’s climax, when Gore’s falsetto harmonies give depth to Gahan’s voice. This sets the scene for the rest of the album—aural layering growing the sound. ‘Personal Jesus’ is the band’s defining moment. Notable for being the first appearance of a guitar in a Depeche Mode song, ‘Personal Jesus’ drives at you — the featured guitar and drums still mediated by a synthpop sensibility. Wilder’s ornamentations do not overstep their mark, providing the necessary backdrop to make this an instant classic. From here the Depeche Mode guitar sound was born, and features heavily throughout following albums. ‘Halo’ starts out hiding its hook, until it can’t possibly bear it anymore and transforms into an elaborate symphony at its first chorus. A balance between organic and electronic elements, this is the first hint of the kind of gravitas that would be later demonstrated on Depeche Mode’s follow-up to Violator, Songs of Faith and Devotion. The Depeche Mode classic ‘Enjoy the Silence’ exemplifies one of the consistently appealing aspects of Gore’s lyrics—his ability to take utterly naive lines (“All I ever wanted/All I ever needed/Is here in my arms”) and make us take them seriously. Sure it’s the very spectre of those new romantic shackles that Depeche Mode has never been able to shake, but its near-perfect construction demands you meet it on its terms. That is the very essence of Violator—caught between two worlds but so critically diligent that it transcends its awkward ancestry. - Alex Hammond Next issue: A divergence—PJ Harvey, Depeche Mode, Nick Cave, Nine Inch Nails—the secret history of 1990s producer extraordinaire, Flood. 55_ kitty rates the noise EMPTY Abandon All Hope [Independent] CD EP Formerly known as Tron, Empty has independently released an online EP called Abandon All Hope. This is a very atmospheric piece of work that feels like cool relaxing music to stick on while recovering on a Sunday afternoon after a huge weekend at the clubs. The vocoder on the vocals works very well with the band’s style of music, with tastefully placed samples and guitar tracks. One could easily place Empty on the same level as a project like mind. in.a.box. Empty is a very intelligent outfit and is one of the best electronic groups to come out of Australia, sharing the company of the likes of Angel Theory, Tankt, and Resurrection Eve. www.emptyoffline.com – Peter Hakuli qqqq FILM SCHOOL Self-Titled [Beggars Banquet] CD Not to be fazed by the burgeoning field of electronic music, the Beggars Banquet team has continued to tirelessly search the land for somewhat more traditional formulas. The direct result of such humanitarian campaigns is the signing a fresh young band, offering a familiar sound of a golden era. Fans of the post-punk movement take heed, for what lies beneath is an ample helping of Cure crooning and song structures, adding a dose of Joy Division for good measure. Brimming with melancholy, not without a few up-tempo moments and often displaying a desperate nature. There’s absolutely no disguising the band’s influences in this candid selftitled snapshot; LA’s Film School bares all for the camera in a delightfully engrossing manner. The five lads at Film School graduate with honours. www. filmschoolmusic.com – Jarrod Taylor qqq GALERIE SCHALLSCHUTZ Montauk Project [Tesco Organisation] CD Montauk Project’s inspiration is drawn from the covert electromagnetic mind/ time control experiments allegedly undertaken during the 1970s and 1980s at a disused Air Force radar base located (you guessed it) in Montauk, Long Island, New York. Galerie Schallschutz delves deep into such subject matter and, although there are few audible sound bites or dialogue samples to reinforce such themes, the sinister toned experimental electronic atmospheres are an effective audio counterpoint to suggest that the album itself forms the soundtrack of such experiments being carried out. Equally important to thematic content are the further allegations that the Montauk facility is still being utilised for: “research and experimentation into interdimensional technology, quantum and particle _56 physics, black hole simulation, super powerful electrical and electromagnetic fields, weather control, psychtronics (interfacing mind and machine), particle beam technology (HAARP transmissions), and electronic and drug based mind control.” By extending beyond typical characteristics that might be coined as dark ambience, where this album consolidates its strengths is via the unusual juxtaposition of waves of sound, digitised drones, glitched static, mechanical rhythms, and fragmented electronics. Similarly with less focus on presenting sound as individual tracks, the album flows together as a collective whole, forging through one track to the next, bridging segments of bristling tension through to calmer respite. Whilst such topical inspiration could have quite easily come off as being somewhat clichéd, Galerie Schallschutz has effectively tackled it to commendable result. www.galerieschallschutz.de – Richard Stevenson qqqq HEADSCAN Pattern Recognition [Artoffact] CD After launching its debut on Artoffact records in 2001, Headscan re-emerged with a second LP in the dying days of 2005 on Alfa-Matrix. It would appear no coincidence that the futuristic, dancefloor driven music, containing elements of techno and trance, was picked up by the European label, known affectionately by insiders as “the Matrix”. The two men (Claude Charnier and Christian Poerleau) behind this perfect balance of dark electro have spent the last three years aiming to expose a musical movement that entwines man’s soul to machine. Headscan effectively projects us to a tangible destination of cybernetic symptoms and human intuitions, conveyed with a pulsing beat, analogue infusions, and a brooding cinematic background. Stated simply, Pattern Recognition is a masterpiece, genuinely addictive, and undeniably absorbing. Get yourself connected to “the matrix” magic of Headscan today. Jarrod Taylor – www. headscan.ca qqqqq INERTIA Decade of Machines [Cleopatra] DCD One has to pity Inertia, for this double disc best-of serves only to underscore its members’ status as underwhelming EBM journeymen and women. Sure, the group has been around for over a decade now, and sure, Gary Numan may have once mentioned Inertia in passing, but is there anyone who really considers themselves a rabid Inertia fan? The songs are competent but unremarkable, and the only spark of recognition comes when you realise that a particular song is familiar because it was some anonymoussounding inclusion on a compilation you’ve heard before. Ultimately it’s a sad indictment when the most memorable track on disc one is Inertia’s cover of the Broadway hit ‘Shakalaka Baby’. The second disc contains remixes from the likes of Funker Vogt, Das Ich, Psyche, Swarf, Noisex, and other luminaries, but the unremarkable nature of the source material leads to equally unremarkable results. www.inertia.gs – Abby Helasdottir qq INITIAL PRAYER The Last Men in Europe [Corrosive Growth Industries] CD Initial Prayer is a two man project that creates a refreshingly rudimentary kind of dark experimental rock. The opening track ‘White Waters’ is a tumultuous piece of atmosphere produced with rasping guitars, like a Descendants of Cain intro, while ‘All Hope Fails’ introduces stilted rhythms that recur in ‘We Serve’ and ‘The Longest Journey’. ‘In Defence’ is more conventional and recalls the Sisterhood or Gangwar, and the ambience surfaces again in ‘Prelude’, the synthesised ‘Beyond Good and Evil’, and the gentle piano of ‘Fourth Law’. Initial Prayer’s approach is in the spirit of Mothburner or Leviathan in that it refuses to be limited by traditional approaches to genre. www.corrosivegrowthindustries. com – James Lowry JANOSCH MOLDAU Redeemer [Janosch Moldau Records] CD Christian electro-pop at its finest. The media release doesn’t quite reveal the intent, but after the track listing, the lyrics, the cross on the inside cover … well … it’s kind of obvious. Janosch in an interview says, “I do not really believe in the church, nor do I attend church services anymore. But faith plays an important role in my life.” Well that’s what they also say at Hillsong and at the local Kingdom Hall, Janosch. An album that has song titles such as ‘Baptized’, ‘My Father’, ‘Redeemer’, and ‘Real Christianity’, and lyrics that are infused with Christian messages is a Christian themed album no matter how you spin it. Okay, so I’m being harsh. But I really don’t appreciate being marketed one thing and then listening to another. It is what it is. I cannot and will not separate the music from the underlying message. www.janoschmoldau.com – Tavis Potts minus qqqqq KLUTAE Sinners [Alfa Matrix] CD EP “We are sinners and we will all burn in hell.” Fuck yeah! The new Klutae (previously Klute, side project of Leæther Strip) EP has party-music-fromcheese-hell written all over it. It’s not a huge stretch from the much forgotten, yet loveable experimental EBM/Metal crossover of ‘Tequila Slama’—the tongue is in the same cheek. It’s hard, fast, loud, and obnoxious, with its heavy electronics and guitars having the best of fun—the crazy kind! Just take the innocuous track (for example) that starts with the female sample of “gay stereotypes” which leads into a kicking rhythm and a cheesy chorus that screams “I’m a fat faggot in a leather jacket” and I don’t think I can possibly give you a clearer picture of just how cool and old school this shit is. www.myspace.com/ klutae – Jarod Collard qqqq LEAETHER STRIP After the Devastation [Alfa Matrix] CD Oh, there you are Claus Larson! Welcome back! Wondering where you were. After the Devastation could have been a (typical Leaetherstrip) political metaphor but is more likely a (typical Leaetherstrip) personal one. After a hiatus in the wilderness, Claus has released a double CD of new material and has a foot in both keeping an old well-tested sound and a new exploratory side. Listening to both CDs certainly reveals a tension between the two sides. ‘Shame of a Nation’ and ‘Slam’ show the hard industrial electro edge and sound that made Larson a household industrial name, while the new sounds of ‘A Boy’ and ‘Homophobia’ reveal a personal and intelligent song writer. After the Devastation is a brilliant and engaging new release and one that is faithful to its roots but brave enough to do something different. Enjoy. www.myspace.com/leaetherstrip – Tavis Potts qqq1/2 M87 Noctilucent Threnody [Supernal] CD Founded by Welsh guitarist-composer Huw Davies, M87 releases are, believe it or not, composed entirely on Huw’s extensive guitar collection. An experienced musician, Davies spent a lot of time experimenting with how he could translate his expertise to purely ambient electronica. The results are a real testament to “experimentation”. I was dumbfounded that guitars could be used to make this stuff, Godflesh notwithstanding! Inspired by astrophysics and related subjects, Noctilucent Threnody is an aural attempt to capture the energy cycle of an “Event Horizon” (e.g. “a black hole—my phrase du jour). The sonics are minimal and change slowly: delicate, deep-space washes of ethereal sound-waves that encompass seven lengthy pieces. The aim of the project was to produce music suitable for documentaries on interstellar phenomena, and in that sense it has succeeded, but apart from background music, or headphone listening on nitrous oxide, there’s not much else to this release. www.supernalmusic.com – Ben Conant qqq1/2 SNOG Crash Crash [Psy-Harmonics] CDS With a recent “best of” under the hood, and a penchant for spaghetti western ballads, I was pleasantly surprised by SNOG’s new electro take with ‘Crash Crash’. Truly in league with the cheekiest anti-establishment back catalogue the assault is a refreshing fun sound and cartoon image. With big bass line, crisp beats, and vocals that you just know are giving you that priceless Wayne Newton-esque smile, this old SNOG fan is well pleased. The fun doesn’t just stop on the single track, with b-sides ‘Turn On Your Brain Baby’ and ‘King of Hate’ (I could have sworn this was a Johnny Cash cover!), which make this single a very rewarding lead up to the forthcoming album SNOG_vs. The Faecal Juggernaut of Mass Culture. The title track remixes tend not to add much more to the original (well, maybe a bit more cheese!) but let’s all lighten up a little as we celebrate how crap the establishment is. – Jarod Collard qqqq N0NPLUS THE PROTAGONIST Keep Me Here [Frozen Empire Media] CDEP Songs of Experience [Cold Meat Industry] CD This 6 track EP from new Australian act n0nplus follows on from the selfreleased Still EP. This act supported Iszoloscope when he recently played in Sydney, and listening to this (yeah, I missed the gig) it’s easy to see why. There’s something really special about this disc. It’s noisy and disturbed, yet simultaneously eerily calm: a bit like Izsoloscope, in a sense. Each track melds perfectly into the next—take any single track away and it ceases to be as powerful. ‘Existingwish’ is brilliant in its simplicity. There’s almost nothing to it, but sometimes almost nothing can be breathtakingly powerful. There’s really nothing here to pack a dancefloor—the beats are probably a bit too “cut up” and disjointed for that. ‘Of the In Visible’ would go closest, but there’s certainly plenty of food for thought in these sounds. And I seriously mean that. This is music to absorb, to digest, to think about, to let roll around inside your skull for days. I am really regretting not going to the Distorted festival. Do it again! And when’s the next gig? www. frozenempiremedia.com/nonplus.htm – Jay Annabel qqqq Since releasing his first album as The Protagonist, A Rebours in 1998, Magnus Sundstrom has been busy with his own label, Fin de Siècle Media, which has released material by Shinjuku Thief and Negru Voda, among others. Sundstrom has also remixed work by L’ame Imortelle and Statemachine, and devoted time to his industrial side-project Des Esseintes. 2005 saw Sundstrom turn his attention back to the neo-classical, with two releases from The Protagonist; the Interim EP, and the latest, Songs of Experience. The latter is a collection of material heavily inspired by some of the great English and French poets. Like Silent Love of Death’s album The Poet’s Senses, Songs of Experience draws material from the works of Blake (album title and ‘The Sick Rose’ which also appears on the CMI sampler Flowers Made of Snow), Shakespeare (‘Strife’ features excerpts from Romeo and Juliet read by Thomas Pettersson of Ordo Rosario Equilibrio), Baudelaire (his ‘La Fin De La Journee’ is recited by Marjorie Stievenart in the original French), and Donne (‘Sermon’). ‘Hesperia’ and ‘Spirits of the Dead’ have previously appeared on compilations, while ‘Strife’ and a version of ‘La Fin De La Journee’ can be found on the Interim EP. Much of the older material has been reworked and, with the new songs, creates a cohesive album, darker than the debut, full of commanding percussion, which is both majestic and ominous. http://protagonist.coldmeat. se/ – James Lowry NUN Hope [Substream] Digital CD single Polish band Nun’s latest single ‘Hope’ is a nondescript female-fronted eurosynthpop track that is indistinguishable from any other dance track played on commercial radio stations. The single comes with a remix and three other tracks that have appeared on earlier compilations. Well produced, but lacking any real depth, this is for people who like their music nice, pretty, and safe; for anyone else, there really is no Hope. Is there anything here to make the ‘Hope’ single stand out from the rest of the pack? No, there’s Nun. www.nunelectro.com – Brent Donaldson q RESURRECTION EVE Ascension [GUP] CD Elegant is always the word that best describes Resurrection Eve for me. Complex sound and dynamics that sonically range across the electronic spectrum while still holding a strict song structure and with perfect operatic vocals. Ascension continues exactly where previous album Rapture left off, and is meant to be taken in the context of a continuation of that release rather than as a new landmark album. Ascension never gets dull, with such openly emotional lyrics and subtle electronics. One listen takes you through Life, Love, Death, Despair, and, finally, Hope (which, coincidentally are also song titles). Every time I listen, I pull out different songs that I want to highlight. In the end I just have to say it’s an excellent third album, and even more special when I play it back to back with Rapture in one sitting. – Aimee Sinclair qqqq1/2 ROTERSAND Dare to Live [Dependent] CD EP This one took me a while. I absolutely love the Rotersand albums (Truth is Fanatic and Welcome to Goodbye) and had big expectations for this EP, but initially I was disappointed—luckily for me I persevered. It was actually the super catchy, yet kitsch sound of ‘Drop Your Edukation’ that finally sold me and put the whole shebang into perspective. After that, turning the album’s ballads (‘By the Waters’ and ‘Almost Wasted’) into dancefloor hits didn’t seem like a bad idea, and adding extra dynamics to the established dancefloor hits worked even better. So I dare you—dare to live—and buy Rotersand. www. rotersand.net – Jarod Collard qqq SEPHIROTH Draconian Poetry [Cold Meat Industry] CD After Sephiroth’s debut Cathedron in 1999, Ulf Soderberg’s next chapter has finally arrived and continues his style. Soderberg uses lush orchestral passages and thundering tribal percussion to lead the listener into a dark ancient world. There has always been a dreamlike, brooding quality to Soderberg’s works, and this is no exception. While Draconian Poetry is both beautiful and compelling, I would, however, have liked to have seen more of a musical progression given that there is a six year gap between this and Cathedron. http://sephiroth.coldmeat.se – Justin Tall qqqq SPETSNAZ Totalitär [Out of Line] CD The Swedish EBM duo of Stefan Nilsson and Pontus Stalberg has always been quick to distance itself from the “futurepop” appellation, producing instead militaristic, dancefloor maschinen musik. Openly citing Nitzer Ebb, Front 242, and Die Krupps as major influences, the musical aesthetic present in Spetsnaz is the hallmark of the original Electronic Body Music sound. The drumpatterns are pounding, almost physically abusive; masculine vocals yell defiance past dry and stripped-back electronics. With each track as much a statement as a song, Spetsnaz communicates more with a kind of purism than mere emulation. ‘Autonomy’ and ‘You’ present themselves as the strongest of Totalitär’s 13 songs. In a constructive sense, the production is simple, but definitely raw. Like punk, and the early days of EBM, musical statements tended to be simpler, relying on honesty and a well-defined stance over elegance in production. If I have any criticisms, it would be that Spetsnaz is moving ahead largely on the wave of one idea. I would encourage the duo to break a few moulds. Check the lupine samples on ‘Reign of Wolves’, though there is certainly evidence of originality. I would love to see some hands up for remixes: Jonathann Cast? David Caretta? Flood? Good work from this pair—I look forward to hearing its potential unfold. www.spetsnaz.se – Ben Conant qqq1/2 STERIL 400 Years of Electronic Music [Artoffact] CD I tried, peoples, I really tried. I listened to this around the house. I listened to it in the car. I even took it to the gym. But I just couldn’t get into it. It sounds to me like Steril has shoved a ton of EBM and industrial clichés into a blender, shuffled them around randomly, added a few guest vocalists, and released whatever old crap came out the other end. I’m aware this is a kind of “best of”, but even so, there is no continuity whatsoever, no sense that K K K K K KKK 57_ K kitty rates the noise fast, and in-your-face, and … it’s a rap. This is where it threw me—how could they do rap and pull it of so well? The only other time I have ever been pleased with a rap was Front Line Assembly’s ‘Victim of a Criminal’. You get your standard CD single inclusions such as original version of ‘Stand Up’ along with an extended version and a remix. Stromkern also seems to be trying to revive the idea of the b-side because ‘Can’t Believe’ only seems to appear on this single, and it’s a pretty decent track too. Maybe they will release a bsides and rarities album at some stage? www.stromkern.com – Peter Hakuli qqqq1/2 SWITCHBLADE SYMPHONY SUICIDE COMMANDO Bind, Torture, Kill [Dependent] CD The quiet unassuming Belgian is back to kick some (insert expletives) arse! It bangs; it clangs, squeals, and screams. EBM heavyweight Johan Van Roy is my personal favourite cathartic teddy bear and from the first song ‘Bind, Torture, Kill’ there’s added intensity above that of the previous (excellent) album Axis of Evil. From the high energy tracks of ‘Meschenfresser’ and ‘Godsend’, to the frantic ‘Massaker’ and (not so) subtle EBM roots of ‘F*** You Bitch’, you get it all. We’re not talking new themes, or groundbreaking new music, just more distorted electronics that your mother tried to warn you about at its best and most evil. Sure to mash up dancefloors and angst ridden teenage boys’ rooms everywhere! www.suicidecommando.be – Jarod Collard qqqq1/2 one is listening to a coherent body of work. The rather unmistakable voice of X Marks the Pedwalk’s genius Sevren NiArb features on ‘No Remission’—this is the highlight of the disc, solely because it sounds like an old XMTP track from the glory days of the mid-‘90s. Musically, ‘Egoist’ sounds like a dull rehash of the worst of Funker Vogt (with a different vocalist), and then Steril throws in a big distorted guitar riff. Sorry, but yawn. And I simply cannot find the words to describe ‘Temper’. Oh, wait, yes I can— total shite. I mean, this is even worse than Cesium137. This is unsalvageable. www.ewetel.net/~manfred.tasler/ mainus.htm – Jay Annabel q (for the XMTP rip-off track). STORMFAGEL Den Nalkande Stormen [Cold Meat Industry] CD Imagine, if you will, a wolf stalking a fair maiden through a darkened forest: that’s the feeling that one gets when listening to the latest effort by Andreas Neidhardt. Eva Mag would make a good maiden, except she cannot sing in tune. The album begins predictably enough with a standard neo-folk ballad and progresses through the obligatory militant pieces at an uninspiring pace, like Blood Axis without the ambition. The violins, woodwinds, and horns create some nice moments, but Stormfagel just falls short of the mark. www.stormfagel. com – Justin Tall qq1/2 _58 STREAM OF PASSION Embrace the Storm [SPK] CD After Dutch guitarist, composer, and producer Arjen Anthony Lucassen had finished his highly successful Ayreon rock opera ‘The Human Equation’ last year, he wanted to do two things: showcase the many talents of Mexican singer Marcela Bovio, and form a band for the first time in 10 years. The result is Stream of Passion and the album Embrace the Storm. Marcela, who also wrote the lyrics, sings her themes of madness, love, and the loss of innocence in Spanish and English. Her voice seamlessly intertwines with the diverse musical elements of the songs. ‘The Human Equation’ is progressive rock which alternates dark, heavy tracks with lighter, more delicate songs. The mostly deep and heavy bass lines and Brian May like guitar solos are balanced with almost jazzy ambience of the piano and evocative violin interludes. The music is powerful, sweeping, and beautiful all at once. Anyone who is into atmospheric gothic metal bands with powerful female vocals will enjoy this debut album by Stream of Passion. www.streamofpassion.com – Montag Wegner qqq STROMKERN Stand Up [Dependent] CD Single ‘Stand Up’ is the first single to be released from Stromkern’s new album Light it Up. It immediately grabs you and shakes you around; it’s hard, it’s Serpentine Gallery (Deluxe Edition) [Cleopatra] DCD One of the great goth releases of the 1990s, Serpentine Gallery made the crossover from club dance floor to lounge room almost seamlessly—I am sure I heard this CD at just as many parties as I did glary nights out. ‘Dollhouse’ and ‘Gutter Glitter’ made the stunning Tina and Susan dark household names, providing anthems for graveyard trash ragdolls and jaded old scene has-beens alike to frock and roll to. This beautifully repackaged digipack is joined by a second bonus disc of extra material, including the video for ‘Clown’ and a radio interview. If this is an old favourite, this upgrade is well worth your effort. If you’ve somehow missed these guys, you are in for a rare treat. www.cleorecs.com – Amber Hastings qqqq1/2 THE SYNTHETIC DREAM FOUNDATION Tendrils of Pretty [Mythic] CD Self-described as a “multimedia surrealist artist” TSDF is essentially a solo project with neo-classical tendencies; the only outside assistance spills from the lips of angels. Some voices are recognisable, for example, Summer Bowman (Machine in the Garden) is heard on ‘Auf Dem See’, while others are from sources untapped. The music floats gracefully from electronic to melancholic synth work into a piano interlude, eventually travelling full circle. What begins as a dance floor assault is deconstructed into an entirely different habitat that has gracefully rebuilt itself. A cerebral journey of sounds charted by haunting female voices that often transcend the electronic rhythms they appear amongst, arousing a bleak fantasy of disembodied beauty lost in a utopia gone wrong. Marking a particular highlight of this disc is an impossible task; from start to finish Tendrils of Pretty belongs as one. www.tsdf.net – Jarrod Taylor qqqq SYSTEM OF A DOWN Hypnotise [Columbia] CD This is why we can’t have nice things. www.systemofadown.com – Christian McCrea TACTILE Bipolar Explorer [Else Product] CD Originally scheduled to be issued on Coil’s Eskaton imprint, the eventual release of this album from John Everall’s Tactile comes close to a year after the death of Jhonn Balance, to whom it is dedicated. It is hard, if admittedly lazy, not to draw comparisons between Tactile and the more sonically esoteric moments of Coil, with the album’s exploration of pure sound manipulation echoing Coil’s Black Light District experiments. Electronic pulses and tones comprise much of ten tracks, very varying, though rare, degrees of musicality. The use of entirely analogue devices and recording gives the material a rough immediacy which contrasts with the clinical digitalism of other artists mining a similar vein. In the end, what is produced here is not ground-breaking, but is still an engaging investigation of sound. www. geocities.com/jahsev/tactpage.html – Abby Helasdottir qqq TERRORITMO Premonitions [Hau Ruk] CD Premonitions is the fourth release for Terroritmo and forms a conceptual release, focusing on, firstly, the realities perceived between sleeping and awakened states, and, secondly, interpretations of the symbolism inherit within various dreams. Interestingly, the sleeve notes indicate that some portions of tracks were recorded immediately after waking in an attempt to capture the essence of the preceding dream, whilst others were recorded in the small hours in an endeavour to move close to a sleep induced state. Armed with an extensive list of instruments (traditional, home made, and found objects) Terroritmo sets about achieving its aims, with the resultant musical explorations presenting quite old school ritualistic experimental atmospheres. Dissonant percussive rhythms, tribal beats, hazy electronic whines, and chanted vocals all congregate in loose semi-improvisational patterns. On one hand the more subtle tracks work rather well in appropriating the lucidity of nightmarish dreamscapes, whilst the heavier percussive pieces alternately move towards a tribal industrial sphere. Across eight tracks and a 62 minute passage of time, Terroritmo has created an interesting album, certainly commendable, but unfortunately not essential listening. www.terroritmo.com – Richard Stevenson qqq UNTER NULL The Failure Epiphany [Alfa-Matrix] CD There can be no better recent example of successful industrial marketing than Unter Null, with this debut album preceded by two well-received compilation tracks and lots of hype (and bloody promo photos) touting Erica Dunham as a female Suicide Commando. So is the furore deserved? All press kit hyperbole aside, The Failure Epiphany is a richly textured and varied album, with more space and atmosphere than much of what emerges from the unabashed scions of Johan Van Roy. And it is this that separates it from its contemporaries, placing the usual distorted kick/snare, post-trance leads, and whisper/growl vocals in a more considered and musical context. With that said, though, it is the dancefloor tracks that grab the attention, with the already established ‘Sick Fuck’ and the title track both standing out with their hyperactive synth leads and solid drum lines. http://unternull.biohazardmusic. com – Abby Helasdottir qqqq people with bad eye makeup. Don’t let those bozos tell you you’re the next Evanescence. You have every potential to live up to the legacy of stadium rock and inject some energy into what is essentially a dying art, and I’ll come see you guys play live if you promise to not bring your press agent. You have to get a new logo. I can whip one up if you like. You’ve also proudly proclaimed that you toured with Nickelback. Please don’t. All the best with getting stupidly famous and appearing on an action movie soundtrack on a million dollar contract. Sincerely, –The World PS – The fact you look like Alexei Sayle in a wheelchair? Hot. Your drummer looks like Joan Jett’s angry sister? Hot. Lose the press-release game and kick out the jams already. www.thewhiteroommusic. com.au VIGILANTE ZEITGEIST The Heroes’ Code [Black Rain] CD Horoscope [Self Release] CDEP Chile’s Vigilante has created a CD that feels almost like you are listening to a mash of Funker Vogt with Pantera. The band’s influences are clearly in the vein of Feindflug and Die Krupps, with chunky metal guitars, hard industrial beats, and electronic grooves. The stand out track is ‘One Good Reason’, which is also featured on the CD as a video that proves how hairy these guys really are. This track could easily become a dancefloor filler, due to its fast pace and hard beat—it’s also pretty catchy. Tracks such as ‘Still Alive’, ‘Survive’, and ‘Humanity’ all elaborate on the same formula of doom and gloom accompanied by hard electronics and guitar chunkyness. Given time, Vigilante has the potential to become something great. A solid and impressive first release. www.blackrain.de – Peter Hakuli qqq1/2 Sydney’s Zeitgeist may be ten years old but this release (that leads up to the band’s next full-length album, Love, Horror, Adult Themes) has just the right level of freshness and kick to make you really sit up and listen. The opening track is the album version of ‘Horoscope’, a dark and sensual guitar anthem with just enough of the band’s slightly mystical edge to give it an exotic flavour. The smooth, almost ethereal female vocals are seamlessly re-adapted into the six remixes of the track that make up the bulk of the CD. While some remixes are relatively bogstandard electro dance fodder, others open the original track up to a whole new mode of perception. Something for everyone here, be you a fan of electro or rock (or, of course, both): a perfect sampler which promises to be a sign of where this band will go in the next ten years. www.zeitgeistaustralia.com – Adrian Stephens qqqq THE WHITE ROOM Enemies Closer [Roadrunner] CD Dear Mr The White Room and friends at Roadrunner, Fire whoever writes your press material. Your music is genuinely leagues ahead of lengthy tales of some punk exboyfriend who wrote some email to you, and links to bloody MySpace pages. There is absolutely no reason why a band that sounds as tightly produced and potent as you guys needs to have such shit-poor cover art and bad press writing getting in the way of a forceful rock presence. I gave away my copy of the last Queens of the Stone Age album, but I’m keeping this four-track sampler of your forthcoming album, which I’m told you’ll call 11th Hour. So perhaps this is how you are. I beg of you, stop using MySpace to “spread the word” because, as many bands are finding out, it’s not a modern way of gaining a fan-base, it’s a quagmire of VARIOUS A Goth Electro Tribute to Depeche Mode [Cleopatra] CD Which, of course, begs the question: isn’t Depeche Mode itself an electro goth tribute to Depeche Mode? Of course it is, but there are a few good reasons why this release isn’t quite totally redundant. First and foremost is the simple fact that Depeche Mode writes really dark freaking music, and the selection of tracks on this album—‘Stripped’, ‘Lie to Me’, and ‘In Your Room’ are just random examples— illustrate this perfectly. The real surprise of this CD, however, is the success of the girlier interpretations. Shiny Toy Guns’ female voxed ‘Stripped’ is supercute in a dark, pornographic way, and Tina Root (ex-Switchblade Symphony) gives an old school goth edge to ‘Never Let Me Down Again’, given a curious twist by her simultaneously innocent but kinda wicked voice. Other highlights: Pseudocider’s brilliant ‘But Not Tonight’ (my favourite Depeche song), and Freezepop’s electroclashy ‘Photographic’. Lowlights: Soil and Eclipse, Talla 2XLC. Points to Implant and Orphans of Infamy for trying. Final word: Razed in Black—fuck off and die. www.cleorecs. com – Alexandra Nicholas qqq VARIOUS Cryonica Tanz Vol. 4 [Cryonica Music] DCD Cryonica Tans is dubbed “an electro/ industrial compilation” and, without fighting about definitions, this release is organised loosely into two categories over two CDs. Perhaps this is oversimplifying, but CD two made me want to shake the china off the shelves and CD one made me feel like I was dusting it piece by piece. The CDrone-Defect mix of Unter Null’s ‘Sick Fuck’ is the best I’ve heard of this track and Interface’s ‘Age of Computers’ is a nice synth-pop anthem, but apart from these the end of each track grudgingly arrived and I was still waiting for something to happen. By contrast, CD two reminded me that I hadn’t hit the dance floor in forever, with both broody choruses and music to go to war by, the exceptions being O.V.N.I and Ayria, who perhaps belong more in the china-dusting category. Overall the highlight tracks were from Militant Cheerleaders on the Move, Monochrome, Spiritual Reality, Mind:State, and Knifeladder. Worth buying? Yes, if you like dancefloor electro/industrial you’ll easily find ten tracks on here that are worth owning. www.cryonica.com – Kama C. Way qqq VARIOUS Septic VI [Dependent] CD Usually when a compilation series starts to hit double digits (or, in this case, double Roman numerals) you should start worrying, but Septic has always been unique. Not a collection to only focus on the huge bands, every Septic compilation never fails, giving huge kudos and highlighting new acts like no other series can. Comprised almost entirely of exclusive tracks or remixes, you’ll find yourself racing out for the albums linked to every song and then still coming back to your sweet old Septic mumma. Big heads-up goes to the exclusive new Covenant ‘The Men (Remix)’, which won’t leave my brain cells alone. The rest of this compilation is all fresh, original, exciting, and varied: Juno Reactor, mind.in.a.box (a personal favourite!), Flesh Field, Seabound, Stromkern, Dismantled, Pride and Fall, Klangstabil, Edge of Dawn, Insekt, Schwefelgelb, Fractured, Encephalon, and Controlled Collapse. This CD is quality and quantity. www.dependent.de – Jarod Collard qqqq1/2 The World’s Greatest ‘80s Tribute to Madonna [Tributized] CD If A Flock of Seagulls covering ‘This Used to be My Playground’ is your idea of a good time, then by all means, go ahead. All I envisage is Bill Paxton’s character from A League of Their Own with a blond pompadour playing a keytar, and there’s little space between that image and the urge to kill. Music for those people who think irony is two things from their cultural past rutting in the corner, instead of just capitalism taking the aggregate odds that we’ll buy something with a name we recognise. With my breathless rant over, there are actually some rich covers on this Viking-like raid of the intellectual property of everybody’s favourite famed Jewish mystic and star of the Hollywood smash Swept Away. Bigod 20’s dismantling of ‘Like a Prayer’ is dumb enough to make it danceable again, Dead or Alive do the impossible and improve on ‘Why’s it so Hard’, while Switchblade Symphony’s absurdly dry take on ‘Lucky Star’ is memorable. Cleopatra’s imprint Tributized has put out dozens of goth and rock tribute albums, ranging from luminaries Hoobastank, Godsmack, Cheap Trick, and Styx to the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Prince. The mildly brilliant tribute to Prince was notable for containing impressive versions of all the important hallmarks of his career with the exception of ‘Pussy Control’, but here, Madonna’s catalogue is skewed to avoid both the often-covered but never improved-upon ‘Frozen’ and the cheerfully manic ‘La Isla Bonita’. www.cleorecs.com – Christian McCrea 59_ Scanning Darkly label profile: kommando 6 Picture this: A small electro night in Augsburg, somewhere in Bavaria, in a town smaller than Canberra. Running from 1996-2000, a series of electro parties “Electric Nacht” were hosted by K6 founder Brigitte (Beta Evers), and headlined those who were to become K6’s key artists: Dystronic, Slick Rogers, Tecroc, Der Unsichtbare and Greg Gravity. Other artists gracing the centre labels of K6 include Manasyt (Detroit),Ra- X (Holland),and Alexander Norinh from, yep—Melbourne. Eventually, the night was wrapped up when label matters began to take priority. K6 producers have done outside works, too: Tecroc has released on Anthony Rother’s Datapunk label, Beta has an EP on Holland’s infamous Creme Organisation. The new Beta Evers 12” single “Eruption” is out, their 20th release, along with a split single, Der Unsichtbare and C.Kent, “Echtzeitreise”. And an interesting tidbit: Kommando 6 takes its name from the comic-hero of the same name, a shadowy figure fighting a guerilla war against multinational companies, and written by Beta herself. Think about it. Unfortunately, it’s no longer in print... And their mission, after they chose to accept it? As put by K6 themselves, “To give our small local electro scene a platform to present itself. Our message was “...Here is a place which is not very known in Germany like the “cult-city” Berlin (just for instance), but here is something going on for years”. I asked Brigitte what makes K6 so unique in the electro scene. She says, “We want to go a step foward and don’t want to re-produce known styles and sounds. Record distributors have difficulties with our music. Often we are told stuff like: “Your music isn’t real electro, and isn’t real ‘80s electro”. It is progressive electro—hard to define and therefore difficult to promote to people who have a straight taste”. Their releases do cut some of the definitive electro sounds, but forget disco or euro synth pop. It’s all raw and dark, suggestive of the dystopian, and the (perhaps deliberately?) isolated. _60 Thoughtful and lyrical, but jamming with a dark, spooky energy that few hallowed European labels have managed (or desired) to hold onto. But there is something else occurring here. Releases such as the Black Spider Clan’s “Underworlds” has vocals I haven’t heard the likes of since the Batcave, threaded through sampled drumkits. The deep, booming voice of Tecroc’s “Brainiac” EP heralds futuristic battles for survival somewhere in deep space. 303’s occasionally make welcome and twisted appearances. Electro-driven releases harken to way-out zombie films, monolithic and post-apocalyptic wastelands, wrecked spaceships. Add a few evil robots, too. It fits. Brigitte comments “Kommando 6 always tried to feature electromusic, which doesn’t fit into straight categories. Not that we don’t like “typical” electro, but for our label we are more interested in releasing something which is a “melting-pot” of various styles or a crossover between the ‘80s and the 2K, instead of licensing/rereleasing stuff from the ‘80s (what more and more labels in Europe do lately)”. Hard to define, difficult for those who need obvious maps of the terrain. K6 don’t push ideals in the form of fashion, with the rampant lifestyle and marketing jargon that often seems to shout over the top of what is and was primarily a “music” scene (if a reminder there need be). It just is. It’s there, dark, beautiful, and moody. Sometimes v i o l e n t , sometimes playful, many times both. P e r s o n a l statements from kindred spirits to fewer and fewer in a time when “Electro” is a marketing handle for clubs filling up with Paris Hilton wannabees, ‘80s fashion-kiddies, and obvious, polite blueprints of a less approachable, often terse, and always shadowy music wave...Tourists beware... Kommando 6 vinyl www.kommando6. de is available through Slap Records www.slaprecords.net TOP 10 SONGS 1. Apoptygma Berzerk - In this Together [Single / Gun] 2. Rotersand - Exterminate Annihilate Destroy [Single / Dependent] 3. Blutengel - The Oxidising Angel [The Oxidising Angel / Metropolis] 4. Mesh - Crash [Single / Königskinder Schallplatten] 5. Assemblage 23 - Let The Wind Erase Me [Single / Metropolis] 6. Dreamside, The - Open Your Eyes [Spin Moon Magic / Dancing Ferret] 7. VNV Nation - Chrome [Matter + Form / Metropolis] 8. Deine Lakaien - Over + Done [Single / Chrome] 9. Suicide Commando - Godsend [Extended / Dependent] 10. Leæther Strip - Suicide Bombers [Extended / Alfa Matrix] TOP 10 ALBUMS 1. Rotersand - Welcome to Goodbye [Dependent] 2. Combichrist - Everybody Hates You [Metropolis] 3. Apoptygma Berzerk - You And Me Against The World [Gun] 4. Blutengel - The Oxidising Angel [Metropolis] 5. Neuroticfish - Gelb [Dancing Ferret] 6. God Module - Viscera [Metropolis] 7. Mesh - We Collide [Königskinder Schallplatten] 8. Assemblage 23 - Storm [Metropolis] 9. Pride and Fall - Elements of Silence [Dependent] 10. Hocico - Wrack + Ruin [Metropolis] The Australasian Darkwave Charts [ADC] is based upon playlists of DJs from radio and nightclubs all over Australasia (including New Zealand and Southeast Asia). The ADC is an unbiased third party chart that collects and reports the received data. ALL music played in the sources are valid, mostly staying within the electronic gothic, industrial and darkwave genres. This chart is collated purely for the promotional purposes of the Darkwave scene(s) in Australasia. The ADC is proudly sponsored by GROUND UNDER PRODUCTIONS www.gup. net.au and FIEND Magazine www.fiend-magazine.com AKERCOCKE Words That Go Unspoken, Deeds That Go Undone [Earache] CD For me to enjoy a metal album, it has to move beyond Cookie Monster vocals and shredding guitars, and I like this new effort by British goat throwers Akercocke. The death metal growls and shrieks of earlier albums are tempered with an artistic vision and melodic power that borders on ‘70s prog rock. Opeth-style clean vocals and Middle Eastern flavours spice up the brew. Words That Go Unspoken is a sweeping artistic endeavour that the more open-minded of you will love, while others will write it off as being pretentious. Personally I think it’s a winner. www.akercocke.com – Justin Tall qqqq CIRCLE OF DEAD CHILDREN Zero Comfort Margin [Earache/Willowtip] MCD The fifth release from this Pittsburgh four-piece sees CODC continue its grinding, savage sound from 2003’s Human Harvest. This MCD is an uncompromising slab of loose, politically charged grindcore that batters you into submission from the first track. Shunning the technical approach of the band’s peers, CODC instead provides a more primitive sound with sludgy guitars, blasting drums, and some of the most putrid vocals ever recorded in order to hammer home the point over fifteen tracks (breaking only for electronic interludes and some killer samples). There is however one flaw, and unfortunately, it’s a large one: The production is awful. With muffled sounds and different mix levels for certain tracks, it does lose a lot of its potential power. But in saying that, if an album can overcome such a flaw and still come out on top, it’s a show of true talent, as CODC has shown with this release. www.circleofdeadchildren. net – Ben Parker qqqq DARK AGES Twilight of Europe [Supernal] CD Formed in 2004, Dark Ages is the ambient project of Roman Saenko, lead singer and founder of Ukrainian black metal band Hate Forest. The 11-track CD is a malefic sojourn into the dark side of Middle Ages Europe, exploring themes encapsulated in titles such as ‘Dungeons’, ‘Rise and Fall of Empires’, and ‘Breath of the Black Plague’. Generally, when black metal artists grab hold of electronics equipment, the result is something akin to a band of Hobbits lost in spider-infested woods (not that there’s anything wrong with that!). However, if the truth be told, Twilight of Europe feels incomplete. The pieces lack variation, and don’t stray very far from simple two-three note loops. For what it’s worth, it could work in snippet form, as incidental music for film for example, but the tracks really do not stand out by themselves. I liked the premise: the aesthetic of the release is certainly brooding and driven by a worthy ideal. I would listen avidly to future releases for signs of development and complexity in what really is a great concept, but for now, it sounds a little contrived and fails to follow through its ideas and designs. www.supernalmusic.com – Ben Conant qqq EPHEL DUATH Pain Necessary to Know [Earache] CD An interesting album indeed. These Italians have always challenged the conformity of music and here they take a large leap yet again. Essentially a mixture of soft jazz with bursts of extremity, Ephel Duath has cancelled the notion of the main hook riff and chosen to explore the freedom of contemporary music, with funky, Bungle-esque bass lines, minimal vocals, and songs that interlink very well. As an album that does not conform to straightforward listening, it could easily be written off as being too twitchy, random, and unfocused, yet herein lays the challenge. Multiple listenings provide a unique and unsettled landscape with surprises at every turn, enveloping you in an entire album rather than individual tracks. Shapeless, entertainingly disorientating, and definitely worth a good listen. www.ephelduath.net – Ben Parker qqq MISTRESS Self-titled/ II: The Chronovisor [Earache] CD Earache has re-released these two albums by Brit boys Mistress, who have made somewhat of a name for themselves for being somewhat unclassifiable. Which is absolutely not true; Mistress simply doesn’t adhere to a style in the sense that metal fans can compartmentalise in their (very doomy) iPods. The raw aggression of this sort of sludgy riff-driven metal is rarely interesting, but both of these releases combine hostility with its classic mixer, stupidity, and more than make the grade. There is enough volatility and energy in most of their shorter songs to warrant a toast of your favoured (metallic) libation. Singer Dave Cunt is the one and the same who fronts Anaal Nathrakh, perhaps the only metal band dedicated to the films of John Boorman. There seems to be a comedic streak that’s left unresolved in Mistress; the band recently appeared on British game show Never Mind the Buzzcocks with a choirboy and the abortionistically unfunny Bill Bailey (from Black Books, the comedy series for lobotomy patients before we had Little Britain), which is a deep black mark against its name. In the positive column, a song called ‘Wanker Colony’ and plenty of good classic death/black covers. To quote the denizens of the long-missed Sounds of the Apocalypse on 3CR: “This band has more chops than a barbie at an abattoir.” Either album fulfils that all-important subtext of much metal; it’s good music to beat non-metallers up to. Allegedly. www. earache.com – Christian McCrea MORNING Hour of Joy [Black Lotus] CD The Netherlands: a fucking depressing place, but there’s still no call for this sort of thing. Given that this chickup-front-brothers-at-the-back gawth rock outfit is pretty young, we could forgive the fact that the band seems to be unaware of its heritage and chalk up this album to being signed too quickly. Except Morning has been belting out this “Diet Evanescence” for about six years. There are some passable moments, such as the choice of Queen’s ‘The Show Must Go On’ as a cover, until you listen to it. Freddie Mercury’s ghost was planning revenge on the Netherlands until he realised how redundant it would be. This is the sonic equivalent of deviantART, which coincidentally, is where you’ll find the band’s fans. www.black-lotus-recs.com – Christian McCrea 61_ _62 “The last thing you expect from someone coming to kill you is a smile on their face” – David Lloyd By Adrian Stephens As tempting as it may be to Big Up V for Vendetta for its post-September 11 terrorism “alert (but not alarmed)” nous, the original graphic novel by Alan Moore (From Hell, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen) and David Lloyd was a true product of the Eighties. But that decade was hardly a stranger to the “T” word, as those who recall Silke Bischoff as more than just a band name will no doubt attest. The graphic novel was, according to Lloyd, a topical concern. “Our attitude towards Margaret Thatcher’s ultraconservative government was one of the driving forces behind the fascist British police state we created in Vendetta,” he says. “The destruction of this system was V’s primary reason for existence.” At the core of V for Vendetta, of course, is a message that is more broadly applicable. “The principal message of the original is that every individual has the right to be an individual, and the right—and duty—to resist being forced into conformism,” Lloyd explains. “V resists by directly attacking government installations and murdering the regime’s supporters. So it’s not just a story about a battle against an evil tyranny, but a story about terrorism and whether terrorism can ever be justified—and that’s something we have to try to understand if we’re ever to solve the problem of it in the real world.” Directed by first-timer James McTeigue but written and produced by Andy and Larry “Matrix trilogy” Wachowski, the original script did not deviate (as many have felt other Moore film adaptations have) too dramatically from the initial work. But the final product, McTeigue points out, is ultimately quite different from this devoutly loyal first script. “Their original version was a really good adaptation, but it was almost a blow-forblow retelling of the graphic novel. We thought it would be good to move the story forward in time, setting the flashback portion in the 1990s and projecting the present-day timeline into the future around 2020.” He adds, “The graphic novel is quite sprawling and has a lot of characters … Some of those characters had to be amalgamated or taken out, but all the while we made sure we were adhering to the themes and integrity of the graphic novel.” Lloyd, at least, doesn’t mind; “It always felt like an idea that could be transposed to other forms of media. In any of my work, the only expectation and desire is that the spirit and key elements are retained and the same essential message is captured.” While the female protagonist of the film, Evey Hammond (played by Natalie Portman, hornbagged up with a shaved head and almost making up for the whole Star Wars travesty), has had numerous alterations to her character, diehards can relax: V himself is still central, still overwhelming and still slightly unhinged. “In the film, V is described as an idea rather than a person,” Portman says. “One of the reasons he is so invincible is because you can kill a man, but an idea can’t be killed. So V represents truth, resistance and individualism. But his vengeance taints his political idealism.” Hugo Weaving, who plays the title role, adds, “V wants to continue what Guy Fawkes and the plotters of 5 November weren’t able to do … He wants to blow up the Houses of Parliament because he believes, as they believed, that they have become a symbol of tyranny.” He continues, “He’s a very complex and ambiguous man … He’s been imprisoned and tortured, mentally and physically abused. And that has created this vengeful angel, if you like. He’s an assassin, but also a very cultured and educated man who believes strongly in individual freedom.” Ultimately, it is Fawkes himself who lies at the centre of this tale. An English soldier, Fawkes led the infamous failed Gunpowder Plot in 1605 which attempted to not only assassinate King James I of England, but to blow up the entire House of Lords and wipe out both houses of parliament, which were meeting for a joint session. The plan never came to fruition and Fawkes was tortured and executed for attempted murder and treason. The fifth of November is still celebrated with fireworks throughout the United Kingdom and even in some parts of Australia today to commemorate Fawkes’ capture. “Guy Fawkes was a kind of early anarchist,” Lloyd says. “He seemed to be the perfect inspiration for V.” Fawkes’ influence on the film is not only apparent in the story but in the film’s unique look. McTeigue’s goal was for V to be a sort of “cross between the actual Guy Fawkes character and a gunslinger”, and the famous Guy Fawkes mask gives the look of Weaving’s character its impact. “Guy Fawkes masks have a kind of eerie look because of their smile,” says Lloyd. “It makes the character look bizarre and threatening at the same time—the last thing you expect from someone coming to kill you is a smile on their face.” Starring in a film but not being seen could bother the ego of some rising starlets perhaps, but for Weaving it was an acting challenge. “You need to convey a lot through voice, but there are also small, fluid movements you can use that help give the mask a life it might not otherwise have had”, he says. “It was also a question of trying to work out what the mask says in different light and with various shadings.” A British/German co-production, V for Vendetta was predominantly shot just outside of Berlin, with key scenes filmed at the legendary Babelsberg Studios (where another dystopian science fiction film, Fritz Lang’s 1927 classic Metropolis, was also shot). The film’s climactic outdoor sequence through Westminster, however, was shot on location—word has it that 14 different government departments had to be negotiated with over nine months to get permission to access the famous location. “We tried to create a London that is very recognisable, yet frozen by having become this totalitarian state,” says production designer Owen Paterson. “England has become quite soulless”. www.vforvendetta.com 63_ FIEND magazine is now available via yearly subscription! A subscription will get you 4 issues of FIEND Magazine, including postage to you anywhere in Australia. As an added bonus, we are giving you your choice of the following: One short sleeved FIEND logo t-shirt [FT01 only] OR One GUP label band CD. The very best of Australian goth or industrial comes straight to you from the label that is delivering the brightest stars of the dark alternative genre to salivating foreign markets. You get to choose from: Stark: Brave New Desire www.thesurgicalsuite.com Angel Theory: Fatal Condition www.angeltheory.com Resurrection Eve: Rapture www.resurrectioneve.com Simply fill in the form on page 64 and send it to us with a cheque or money order made out to Ground Under Productions, or credit card information and you will receive a copy of the most interesting and least-Britney magazine in the entire universe. Alternatively, subscriptions are available online via our secure server – just visit www.fiend-magazine. com or www.shop.gup.net.au to subscribe electronically. Remember to tell us whether you would like a GUP label CD or a FIEND t-shirt, and tell us the exact title of the CD you are after or the exact size of the t-shirt and your choice of colour print. COD E: F PAD 01 For a measly $50AUD a year, you will get the latest FIEND Magazine hot off the press delivered right to your doorstep. How can you refuse? Want the world to know you’re a FIEND? Have we got the gear for you! Prices includes GST and P + H in Australia FIEND MOUSE PAD Red mouse pad with black print. “Believe me, if I could eat you I would not for a moment hesitate” $10 SHORT-SLEEVE GIRLY TEE Black cotton with raglan sleeves. Red print, Sizes: 10, 12, 14 $35 CODE: FBAG01 CODE: FT04 CODE: FT01 SHORT-SLEEVE TEE Black cotton. Red print, Sizes: S, L, XL $30 IMAGE : JASMIN TULK FIEND RECORD/LAPTOP BAG Logo in your choice of red, silver or glow-in-the-dark. Dimensions 33cm x 33cm. 9cm wide. Adjustable shoulder strap. Carry handle. Large front flap with velcro fastener and an internal pocket. $34 Ordering info next pages _64 SUBSCRIPTIONS: $50AUD a year plus a free t-shirt or CD Please indicate which issue you would like to start your subscription with: 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 09 10 11 T-SHIRT SIZE _____________ [please tick] I’d like the free: GUP CD ALBUM ______________________ MERCHANDISE / BACK ISSUES: Circle your dream FIEND stuff ISSUE 01 TSHIRT FITTED FIEND BAG RED 02 10 03 04 12 14 SILVER 05 06 07 SMALL REGULAR GLOW-IN-DARK 09 LARGE PRICE 10 X-LARGE MOUSE PAD NAME ADDRESS POSTCODE PHONE / EMAIL PAYMENT OPTIONS VISA MASTERCARD NAME ON CARD CARD NUMBER EXP. DATE SIGNATURE TOTAL BANK CHEQUE / MONEY ORDER Please make out all cheques and money orders to GROUND UNDER PRODUCTIONS. CODE: FMAG09 FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE SIX collide, a perfect circle, placebo, the tea party, neil gaiman, anne rice, coil, devilish presley, lights of euphoria, bill henson, pyjama girl, klinik, interlace, real life, stark, steve aylett, illustrated family doctor, dead inside the chrysalis, andy warhol T OU CODE: FMAG08 FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE FIVE nightwish, the cure, muse, rammstein, nightwish, lemony snicket, shaun of the dead, dr who, assemblage 23, edvard munch, black lung, dark jester, the mercy cage, pzycho bitch, black tape for a blue girl, dresden dolls, the faint, jordan reyne, bad christmas, mortiis, marianne de pierres FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE SEVEN mz ann thropik, new order, icon of coil, tori amos, fixmer / mccarthy, flesh field, interpol, birthday massacre, him, virgin prunes, tankt, ikon, velvet acid christ, hunter s. thompson, anthony bourdain, amityville, takashi miike, degrassi junior high, herschell gordon lewis, mark ryden, alternative toys LD FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE FOUR diamanda galás, morrissey, ministry, opeth, elvira, dario argento, suicide commando, batrisha, man ray, the black dahlia, front 242, android lust, philip brophy, cancerbox, paradoxx, zeitgeist, ikon, writhe + shine, chopping block, halloween, ultraviolet, hubert selby jr. CODE: FMAG07 CODE: FMAG06 CODE: FMAG03 FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE THREE (BONUS CD) nick cave, korn, kmfdm, die form, raison d’être, suicide girls, buffy, poppy z. brite, shag, eddie campbell, :wumpscut:, shinjuku thief, van helsing, carmel bird, caravaggio, seabound, in the nursery, collide, neuropa CODE: FMAG05 CODE: FMAG02 FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE TWO the creatures, evanescence, killing joke, duran duran, h. r. giger, front line assembly, league of gentlemen, kim wilkins, hammer horror, converter, rotersand, the real invader zim, stelarc, glittershy, nathan j, rotersand, converter, duran duran, angel theory, virgin black, massiv in mensch CODE: FMAG04 CODE: FMAG01 FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE ONE nina hagen, chopper read, type o negative, emily the strange, clan of xymox, dame darcy, venetian snares, a l mccann, crimes of the primary, zombie flicks, linde ivimey, razed in black, crimes of the primary, tourettes, novakill, wolfgang grasse, glenn barr FIEND magazine 11/60 Langridge St Collingwood VIC 3066 Australia P: 61 3 9419 3631 F: 61 3 9495 6624 www.fiend-magazine.com SO the backissues $ FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE EIGHT goldfrapp, nine inch nails, horrorpops, tim burton, billy corgan, diamanda galás, mind.in.a.box, jack the ripper, rotersand, wendy where, grendel, ayria, novakill, immaculata, zombie ghost train, intrasonic, dazy chain, wave gotik treffen, christos tsiolkas, alpha state, viona ielgems, diary of dreams FIEND MAGAZINE - ISSUE NINE angelspit, depeche mode, laibach, neil gaiman, funker vogt, kate bush, terry gilliam, franz ferdinand, snog, scorn, angel theory, psyche, bret easton ellis, resurrection eve, preaching to the perverted, converter 65_ GARY NUMAN JAGGED Jagged is one of the darkest and most electronic albums of Numan’s career, re-wiring the apocalyptic synth pop of Down In The Park into something equally unique and powerful. ‘Put simply, if you’re a fan of the bands he’s influenced, you’ll love what Numan is doing now.’ Kerrang. LACUNA COIL ARE READY TO UNVEIL THEIR HOTLY ANTICIPATED RELEASE KARMACODE “ARTIST TO WATCH. ETHEREAL, ENTRANCING AND HAUNTING, THIS IS TIMELY YET TIMELESS MUSIC.” ROLLING STONE (USA) INSTORES APRIL 3RD MIXED BY RONALD PRENT (RAMMSTEIN, H.I.M.)