| Cathi Unsworth – author of Season of The Witch – made some unusual track choices for her new goth comp Dressed In Black. |
Dressed In Black: Goth Divas From The Darkside
The 19-track “Dressed In Black” compilation (out June 26 via Ace Records UK) was curated and annotated by Cathi Unsworth, author of the book Season Of The Witch: The Book of Goth – a woman who considers herself fortunate to have had Siouxsie Sioux, Lydia Lunch and Diamanda Galàs for role models while she was growing up. For further illumination in Cathi’s own words, read on.
| Cathi Unsworth |
“But at night, malcontent youth were united by forces of opposition, whose dissenting voices were aired across the land on John Peel’s Radio 1 show, set to the sound of slasher guitars, swirling fairground keyboards, loping basslines and percussion that recalled the echo of jackhammers or the march of insect feet. Here, punk’s unruly offspring distilled the dissonance of the times into a new kind of music. Flirting with the fetishist and taboo, drawing upon horror and science fiction imagery, they were the outlaw leaders of the greatest style tribe of the decade: the goths. Dressed in black, these kohl-eyed women voiced the alienation of their generation during the decade of the Cold War, the Miners’ Strike, privatisation and AIDS.
“Reflecting on all this while writing Season Of The Witch, I also began to realize how this music linked to previous generations of gothmothers, going back as least as far as the Industrial Revolution, probably much further. The oldest song you will hear here is Shirley Collins’ setting of ‘Death And The Lady’, which was collected just after World War II but has its roots in the global pandemic of 1348-49: the Black Death. Shirley has spent her long life researching and breathing fresh breath into songs that span time and cross oceans to form an alternative history of events recorded not by the victors of wars but the peasants counting the cost.“Poison Ivy Rorschach of the Cramps performed a similar service, when she and Lux Interior disinterred a crypt-full of long-forgotten hillbillies and bordello blues singers and re-recorded their songs at Sun Studios, where Elvis cut his first disc. Greek-American Diamanda Galàs, that greatest and most fearless defender of AIDS victims, drew upon the demotiki tradition of her forebears in the hills of Sparta. A teenage Lydia Lunch channelled Billie Holiday’s 1941 version of the notorious ‘Gloomy Sunday’ into big band jazz for the no wave New York of 1980. Perhaps the most distinctive female face of the 80s, Siouxsie Sioux was herself inspired by the enigmatic psychedelic seeress Julie Driscoll.
“To make sense of the absurd is genius enough. But to then cast the glamour of sublime music around those insights – I come back to my point about supernatural abilities. I hope you will find illumination within. You know the dress code.”
Check out the track listing for the Dressed In Black comp (which you can pre-order directly from Ace Records UK right here) followed by some interviews with Cathi Unsworth for her book Season Of The Witch: The Book of Goth.
Dressed In Black: Goth Divas From The Dark Side, 1941-2025
1. DO YOU TAKE THIS MAN? - DIAMANDA GALÁS WITH JOHN PAUL JONES
2. NIGHT SHIFT - SIOUXSIE & THE BANSHEES
3. CAT-HOUSE - DANIELLE DAX
4. SUBTERRANEAN WORLD (HOW LONG...?) - ANITA LANE WITH DIE HAUT
5. CISCO SUNSET - LYDIA LUNCH WITH ROWLAND S HOWARD
6. GARBAGEMAN - THE CRAMPS
7. ROAD TO NOWHERE - JUDY HENSKE
8. ODE TO BILLIE JOE - BOBBIE GENTRY
9. SEASON OF THE WITCH - JULIE DRISCOLL, BRIAN AUGER & THE TRINITY
10. AIN'T NO GRAVE - ANNA CALVI
11. DEATH AND THE LADY - SHIRLEY COLLINS
12. IDIOT MILK - M U M M Y
13. ICEBLINK LUCK - COCTEAU TWINS
14. ALL TOMORROW'S PARTIES - THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO
15. DRESSED IN BLACK - THE SHANGRI-LAS
16. GLOOMY SUNDAY - BILLIE HOLIDAY
17. KATIE CRUEL - KAREN DALTON
18. I PUT A SPELL ON YOU - NINA SIMONE
19. ÇA VA "LE DIABLE" - JULIETTE GRECO
Here are a couple of interviews with Cathi Unsworth discussing her book Season Of The Witch
No comments:
Post a Comment