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Castle Party Bolkow

Filed under: Events,Goth Stuff,Live Music,Uncategorized — doktorjohn July 26, 2013 @ 3:44 pm

Tower

Tower

Various Artists
Bolkow, Poland
July 11 – 14, 2013
By Doktor John

A Trip to the Not-So-Dark Side

This marked the 20th anniversary celebration of this event billed as the “Dark Alternative” music festival held annually in a remote town on southern Poland based in the ruins of a medieval castle and situated an hour and a half from Wroclaw (pronounced Fro-suave) the nearest city. It draws Goths of every age and imaginable wardrobe mainly from Poland, Central Europe or as far away as the U.K. to 3 days of music and camaraderie.Entrance We didn’t find any one other than ourselves who had come from the U.S.A. Live performances took place on a main stage in the courtyard below the imposing tower of the castle and at a gutted, abandoned church a few blocks away. There are two clubs in town where DJs serve up a rotating menu ranging from darkwave to techno.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
On the first night of the festival we were treated to a superb performance by the death metal band Kat (Polish for The Executioner), so accomplished and refined, that this crowd of Goths were for the moment transformed into head bangers. As the members of Kat took position, the eerie and thunderous strains of Mussorgsky’s “Night on Bald Mountain” boomed from speakers and swirling billows of smoke churned across the open air stage. Then out charged Roman Kostrzewski, the elder statesman of Polish heavy metal, his wild gray hair trailing around his grizzled face. He roared the lyrics in clear, articulate Polish to furious, speed-metal accompaniment and conducted the band with arm gestures and body language. Head-bangers in the crowd exploded into a brutal, violent mosh-pit, peopled by hulking Slavic giants and tiny, tattooed girls in Doc Martens.

Roman Kostrzewski & Kat

Roman Kostrzewski & Kat


Following them was the headliner band, Lacrimosa, an aptly named, morose Germanic group with alternating male and female vocalists singing mournful melodies to heavy, orchestral accompaniment including guitars, accordion, synthesizer and symphonic strings. Beautiful minor key melodies from Central European folk, plus hints of early 20th century Berlin cabaret gave Lacrimosa an aura of timelessness, transcending the realm of rock music. The rock scene and youth culture in Poland and Europe seem not to have lost touch with their ancient Celtic, Germanic and Slavic musical roots. They are happy to blend older musical traditions into their modern because, to a great extent, their tastes in music grow right out of their historic identities.

On the second day we attended sessions featuring local and regional music groups at the converted church now serving as a music venue.

Gathering outside the former evangelical church/venue

Gathering outside the former evangelical church/venue

Among the more noteworthy were hard-rockers All Sounds Allowed who warmed the crowd before the much-awaited performance by award winning band Blank Faces.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
As a fitting conclusion to their set, one of the band took up an actual metal grinder and worked it on some hard object— in rhythm to the music—showering orange sparks of metal debris all over himself, the stage and the front rows of spectators. Then, Blank Faces, fronted by shaven-headed, goateed demon, Jakub (Kuba) Avenarius—heavy on instrumentals, sparing on vocals—blew away all rivals just as they had done at a recent regional competition with their combination of symphonic dark metal and eerie arrangements that might suitably serve at the soundtrack for a horror movie.
Jakub A. and Blank Faces

Jakub Avenarius. and Blank Faces


The most noteworthy experience that night took place on the castle main stage provided by headliners of the day, Corvus Corax, a large, theatrical ensemble of costumed wild men in masks and kilts who blasted tribal, medieval and Celtic style anthems on bagpipes, drums, rattles and noise-makers. To me it was obviously a tongue-in-cheek, Renaissance-Faire put on, but many in the crowd took them quite seriously, singing the lyrics from memory with great gusto. Even those of us who thought the performance a bit of a spoof, however, still found it to be fun.Corvus Corax
The third afternoon the castle main stage hosted female-led Polish “cold-wave” Hatestory, who sang their stories of drinking, hangovers and cash shortage in old school, punk rock style. After Haterstory’s very excellent set, we were driven away from the main stage by Lolita Complex, a monotonous, self-conscious and uninspired group from Austria, who came across as a cliché or parody of themselves.

This proved to be all for the better, because walking down the hill into town we were treated to the sights of gorgeous and exotically attired Goths and steampunks, wearing every imaginable dark-themed costume, made up to extreme cosmetic excess, their hair dyed in the most intense and unnatural tints, coiffed into extravagant shapes. walkBlue hairbeautiful familyOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERApapal blessingGeminapink hair
Some of them gathered under a statue of Pope John Paul II. Others clustered around strolling celebrity musicians.

As the third night fell we returned to the castle where Icon of Coil turned the now-densely packed audience into a massive rhythmically swarming hive with electronic, techno-industrial grooves. Thus the crowd was ready to receive the ultimate headliners, VNV Nation, who came out just before midnight, going right into a beloved favorite, “Space and Time.”
VNV Nation
Electro-industrial, but at the same time uniquely heart-warming and sentimental, VNV’s set both energized and emotionally touched the audience. Frontman Ronan’s friendly patter was set against uplifting pieces from “Praise the Fallen,” “Ascension” and “Perpetual.” His exhorting the crowd to sing along was a bit distracting. Nevertheless, soaring synthesizers and hypnotic rhythms succeeded to uplift the overjoyed audience in a fitting conclusion to the live performances.

Front of the Hacienda Club

Front of the Hacienda Club

As on previous nights, the crowd regrouped at either of two clubs to snack, drink and dance until the early morning hours. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThere were many styles forthcoming from the DJs, but our favorite, called “80s Trash Batcave” was heavy on Joy Division, Cure and Depeche Mode. Poles are about 20 years behind Americans in that most everybody still smokes. But, catching up to the U.S., smoking is prohibited indoors, so the clubs are basically indoor/outdoor establishments. The staff and the patrons are extremely friendly and polite, never showing any signs of hostility. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
When the festival was over we visited the city of Wroclaw to view a huge, cylindrical, panoramic mural commemorating the victory of a rag-tag Polish peasant uprising, led by the American Revolutionary War hero, Thaddeus Kosciuszko, over the Imperial Russian Army. Their victory was short-lived, and Russians eventually crushed the rebellion, but not the spirit of the Polish nation.

On the streets of Wroclaw many wore Doc Marten-style boots and sported tattoos, piercings and punk hairdos in a rainbow of weird colors. All tee shirt statements were in English. Polish young people are remarkably fit-looking, healthy and athletic. Yes, even Goths and punks. In cities like Wroclaw and Warsaw, if you stop and do a 360º in any busy street or square, you are likely to spot a “10.”

Checking for a "10"

Checking for a “10”

Their good looks and outward optimistic appearance are in contrast to the hardened faces and bent frames of the elderly who unfortunately suffered through oppression and famine under Soviet authoritarian rule.

The experience at Castle Party Bolkow and everything we witnessed before and after it demonstrate Poland to be a nation happily awakening into the 21st Century from the nightmare of Communism.

Mr. Moonlight

Filed under: Live Music,Uncategorized — doktorjohn May 22, 2013 @ 7:33 pm

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Peter Murphy/ Webster Hall/

PM at Webster

By Doktor John

May 7, 2013

The Godfather of Gothic Rock made the unlucky thirteenth stop on his tour of the East Coast, with eight more North American towns to go before heading overseas for another 20 cities in Europe, and then returning to the states to perform at 12 West Coast venues. The theme was to perform mostly Bauhaus material with a few other songs thrown in for variety, thus the title, “Mr. Moonlight Tour.” Bauhaus broke up in 1983, splitting into Peter Murphy, solo-vocalist and Love & Rockets, composed of all the other members. Certain remarks PM has made over the years have suggested that he considers his ongoing solo project to represent the continuation of Bauhaus. Most would agree that L & R, has spun further off from the original style than has Murphy.

Rare reunion tours occurred in1998 and 2006, and Bauhaus even reunited to produce a proclaimed “final” album, “Go Away White,” in 2008. The reunion performances, with the full complement of Bauhaus original musicians have been rightly acclaimed to be spectacular. This tour however follows a different plan, with vocalist Peter Murphy being the only representative from the original band, backed now by studio accompanists. That arrangement seems to have fallen short of the standard set by the original line-up.

Black leather-clad PM came on stage and the show opened with the pounding, morose sound of “King Volcano,” then the more melodious “Kingdom’s Coming” and then back to the pounding beats of “Double Dare.” Next he went into “In The Flat Field,” the melody of which is recognizable to fans of PM’s solo work, wherein it is resurrected as “The Line Between The Devil’s Teeth.”

The intense pastel lighting in concentrated hues of magenta, indigo and lime combined with heavy stage fog made the musicians appear as ghostly silhouettes much of the time. Sometimes the lights went down altogether, and PM lurked, with a very bright diode flashlight in hand, from the bassist to the guitarist to his own face, dramatically highlighting and distorting their features with stark white light and deep bizarre shadows.
After “Silent Hedges” and “Kick In The Eye” next came “Adrenalin,” the one entry from the last reunion album, “Go Away White.” The morbid, funereal “Three Shadows” followed, in which he repeats the mantra that he – and we – “will always exist.”

Midway through the set they performed the undisputed number-one-all-time Gothic rock favorite, “Bela Lugosi’s Dead,” followed by “The Passion of Lovers,” “She’s In Parties” and “Stigmata Martyr.”

Poor audio quality and painful feedback detracted further from what was already a mediocre delivery. Many of these songs bore little resemblance to the original Bauhaus favorites owing to an overly bombastic instrumental accompaniment that drowned out the melodies and overwhelmed PM’s obviously under-performing vocals. Whether it was allergies, a cold or fatigue, PM’s voice was hoarse and weak, although intermittently redeemed by his sheer courage and supreme effort. Despite not feeling well and the announcement of passing of his mother-in-law earlier the same day, PM held little back as he performed his unique and signature gothic ballet on stage, bowing low, flapping his arms as if some kind of soaring bird of prey or prancing around with one hand on hip and elbow jutting provocatively.
Covering the melodious Dead Can Dance song, “Severance,” provided a welcome relief from the relentlessly discordant, jagged and ear-splitting Bauhaus repertoire, which we all love, but from which we can nonetheless benefit by taking a break. After a chaotic rendering of “Burning From The Inside,” they took a momentary intermission, then promptly returned to finish off with two covers that the Bauhaus has made their own: T. Rexs “Telegram Sam” and Bowies “Ziggy Stardust.”

While this was not the best performance ever of either Peter Murphy or the Bauhaus oeuvre, it stands as a heroic recapitulation of one of the cornerstones of our musical and cultural era, a celebration and a statement of the Gothic and the punk underground subculture that arose in the early 80s and overturned all the rules of rhythm and melody, and, by extension, of style, fashion and even behavior that are so discussed, analyzed and dissected today.

The Steampunk World’s Fair

Filed under: Events,Uncategorized — doktorjohn May 21, 2013 @ 3:17 am

May 17, 18 and 19, 2013
Piscataway, NJ

By Doktor John
Steampunk Fashion for blog

The Steampunk World’s Fair was held the weekend of May 17, 18 and 19 in Piscataway NJ and drew a crowd of participants large enough to fill two adjacent hotels – Embassy Suites and the Radisson – and any number of surrounding motels in the area. Steampunk, whether or not it remains under the mainstream radar, is huge. It is huge in the following it attracts and huge in the level of zeal of its fans. It is also almost boundless in the concepts and interests it encompasses.

Too beautiesChrismele

Steampunk, for those who have yet to become familiar with the term, is an elaborate branch of geekdom, that derives its main inspiration from the unfulfilled science fiction of the past. The writings of Jules Verne (1828 – 1905) are seminal, with recurring themes drawn from “Journey To The Center Of The Earth,” “Around the World In Eighty Days” and “Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under The Sea.” Thus, airships, blimps, balloons as well as diving gear, giant squids and octopi have a revered place in the aesthetic of Steampunk.

The retro-futuristic angle of Steampunk owes a great deal to H.G. Wells (1866 – 1946) whose book “The Time Machine” introduces the concept of time-travel, putting that notion at the disposal of Steampunks who imagine an escape, both backwards into the 19th century and forwards into the distant future of technology.

The event took place at those two adjacent hotels, with the large, paved space in between them serving as a “midway” on which were hoisted large tents for vendors and exhibitors, called The Goblin Market, as well as huge performance and gathering spaces. Merchandise stands hawked incredibly creative artworks, personal adornments and home or office furnishings which featured the signature style of Steampunk, namely faux-antique, improbably engineered contraptions with elaborate mechanisms, featuring gears and sprockets, such as ray-guns, submarines, airships and deep-sea creatures. Likewise, the street level suites in both hotels were filled with vendors selling such Steampunk necessities as walking sticks, corsets, top hats and brass-accented jewelry.Chris

Events took place day and night, including a fashion show wherein convention-goers who chose to do so could display their often wildly individualistic, yet always thematic costumes, attired like characters in an R-rated version of Willy Wonka-meets-Game of Thrones. There were burlesque shows with unconventionally large female and uninhibited male strippers; fire-jugglers; a workshop on Bartitsu (walking-stick self-defense); ballroom dancing lessons, etc.

voltaireUs at SPWF
There was an absinthe-tasting event hosted by Goth celebrity Voltaire, whose wit remained dry despite swigs of rum between samples of the absinthe, and who performed his sarcastically-worded anti-folk favorites solo at a midnight show accompanying himself on a guitar. Music was everywhere, interesting and genre-bending. Emperor Norton’s Stationary Marching Band captured an outdoor audience with their rambunctious blend of brass, wind, string, accordion and drum performance featuring an occasional lapse into acrobatics by vagabond-attired but highly accomplished musicians. A totally fascinating show was put on by San Diego-based combo Steam Powered Giraffe, a bizarre musical group that accompanied their very interesting and listenable songs with robotic affectations, wearing metal-face make-up and performing comic routines in a manner reminiscent of Blue Man Group. An electric cellist performed on the mainstage and offered 17 hours of her music for sale on a USB storage device. A beautiful female vocalist from the duo Frenchy & The Punk was accompanied by a young man who set new standards for mastery of the guitar. metal faces

Just as this account barely scratches the surface of musical acts at the Fair, the rest of this review comes nowhere near cataloging the imaginative and exhausting diversity of events and ongoing exhibits at kiosks, tables and concession stands or the assortment of individuals just wandering the grounds displaying their outlandish costume or hand-manufactured thingamajig.

It is impossible to set the boundaries of Steampunk at this time. The movement includes so many tributaries including historical re-enactment, eccentric musical styles, costumery, 19th century literature, sci-fi, fantasy and interests ranging from the low-tech, high design age of steam to Victorian parlor games, that it is beyond the scope of this report or any attempt to tie it all together. It is easier to compare Steampunk to the general category of geek interests —such as devotion to comic books, anime, computer games, role-playing, etc.—rather than to define it in its entirety. In fact I observed evidence that there were elements of overlap among these various subcultures. Its adherents are generally intellectual, intensely and obsessively committed devotees who are unwilling to settle for plain, vanilla reality, so instead avail themselves of this alternate world with all its fantasy identities, aesthetics, ideology and mutual self-acceptance.female steampunkwinged SP

Bravo to the organizer, Jeff Mach and minions for putting this all together for the Steampunk Worlds Fair 2013!

Chronologie at Lillie’s Times Square

Filed under: Events,Uncategorized — doktorjohn January 17, 2013 @ 3:06 pm

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Halloween 2012

Filed under: Events,Friends & Family,Uncategorized — doktorjohn October 30, 2012 @ 11:21 pm

Your host, Mr. Steampunk
a.k.a “Steampop”

A zoomed-in close-up of that special tie

The ever-enlightening John Trause in a “mirror mask”

Hostess Marzena serving her favorite guest, the eminent author, John Trause

Erudite Joel Allegretti

Steve photographer, Laura Drager as Prince

Two Hughes boys


My boys, the jolly Alexander and Ian

Bishop “Ghost”

“Iron Chef” Marianne serves herself Fabulous Fare

Literary lecturers

Dissertation on Hurricane “Sandy” Preparedness

Peter CAPTURED BY AN OBAMA ZOMBIE!

Karen, Jozep and —————-Myke Hideous

Piano vandals Christopher and Viriatu

Goth Reunion, DJ Xian Engel and his fans

Our Gang

Miguel, Lisa, Artie, etc

Marty thought it was a “come-as-you-are party. Myke wanted us to know he has been working out

Dance floor crowd, Eiman, Michele, Diane, John, Marzena, & Joel

Supergirl moderates a theological debate between a gloom-metal bishop (Ghost) and a lay Franciscan

Music-room denizens

Egyptian deities in Peter Jaworowski and Madame X, Alda Xavier

Doktor John’s 2012 Animated Piano-Top Halloween Presepe

Filed under: Uncategorized — doktorjohn October 13, 2012 @ 11:57 am

Click on the link below to view animated display

Doktor John's 2012 Piano-top Halloween Presepewatch?v=dFkrfveU-aM&feature=plcp

BlkVampire Aquarian edition

Filed under: Live Music,Uncategorized — doktorjohn July 29, 2012 @ 2:39 pm

blkvampires.jpg

21st Wave Gotik Treffen

Filed under: Events,Goth Stuff,Uncategorized — doktorjohn June 13, 2012 @ 9:07 pm

Appears in the June 13 issue of

The Aquarian


[Please continue reading above, right before continung below these two next photos]

Greenveil at Incantation

Filed under: Events,Goth Stuff,Live Music,Uncategorized — doktorjohn May 16, 2012 @ 5:48 pm

Review as it appears in

The Aquarian

Filed under: Uncategorized — doktorjohn December 3, 2011 @ 3:19 pm
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