Tag: Siouxsie and the Banshees

LISTEN: The Black Lips + Icky Blossoms, ‘Cowboy Knights’ Split 7”

Icky Blossoms don their best Banshees gear

Saddle Creek has shared a streaming version of Cowboy Knights, a split 7” single featuring exclusive cover songs from The Black Lips and Icky Blossoms. The Record Store Day release features surprisingly faithful renditions of Siouxsie and the Banshees (a synth-laced “Arabian Knights”) and that classic outlaw country pairing of Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings (the campfire-ready “Mamas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys”). Check out both songs below, right alongside the originals…

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LONG PLAYER OF THE DAY: Siouxsie and the Banshees, ‘The Scream’

Siouxsie and the Banshees - 'The Scream' album cover The Artist/Album: Siouxsie and the Banshees, The Scream (Polydor, 1978)

Our Review: Some pressings of Siouxsie and the Banshees’ debut album—including ours—are front-loaded with a Sofia Coppola-endorsed rendition of “Hong Kong Garden,” which is a little misleading. While that Top 10 single segued into the band’s straight-out-of-the-gate success quite nicely, The Scream is supposed to start with one—the warm-up wails of Siouxsie Sioux—then shift into spikier post-punk territory. All of which adds up to a highly influential album, as reflected in the sample banks of Massive Attack and the home listening habits of everyone from Shirley Manson to Morrissey.

Available At: Amazon · iTunes

Stream ‘The Scream’ in full via Spotify below…

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LONG PLAYER OF THE DAY: Siouxsie and the Banshees, ‘Juju’

The Artist/Album: Siouxsie and the Banshees, Juju (Polydor, 1981)

A Short Review: How we went decades without hearing this seminal post-punk LP defies all laws of human decency. Gothic in spirit—right down to its death march drums, crypt keeper chords and song titles like “Voodoo Dolly” and “Halloween”—Siouxsie and the Banshees’ fourth album sounds like it’s cloaked in cobwebs but never veers into sheer camp. If anything, it’s as contemporary and cutting as ever, from the galloping, gossamer grooves of “Spellbound” to the genuinely creepy crawl of “Nightshift,” a slow-burner that features the dead-eyed chorus “Fuck the mothers/ Kill the others/ Fuck the others/ Kill the mothers.”

That’s the thing, too: Siouxsie Sioux is at the peak or her powers here, hooting and hollering her way through a scorched, yet surprisingly melodic, minefield. “Peek-a-Boo” this is not.

Available At: Amazon · iTunes · Spotify

Check out some classic videos from this album below…

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PRIMER: Blessure Grave’s ’13 Essential Gloom and Doom Albums’, From The Cure To Christian Death

Maybe it’s Hot Topic’s fault. No, that’s not it. How about our severely-fucked state of affairs, from the economy to the environment to the music industry itself? Come to think of it, that might explain why monochromatic shades of industrial, goth and dark-wave music continue to creep into the cool kid crowd, making them suddenly want to wear Doc Martens and explore leather-bound editions of Rimbaud and Baudelaire. Or at the very least, try and find the ‘deeper meaning’ in the one-note serial killer scores of Salem.

Which leads us to Judged By Twelve Carried By Six, the oppressive post-punk debut of Blessure Grave, a San Diego band that shared a split 7-inch with Cold Cave last year for a reason: both artists make bleak-but-strangely beautiful nods to the black-lit bands ‘goth kids’ have gotten into without fail since the early ’80s, from the cultish nightcrawler cuts of Bauhaus to the outer limits of Christian Death, Killing Joke and Death In June.

There’s a couple key differences with Blessure Grave, though. For one thing, they possess the focus Cold Cave lacks, making for a discomforting listen that plays out like one long death grip. (Cold Cave, on the other hand, bounce between nihilistic noise and minor-keyed synth-pop from track to track.) To put it in terms we can all understand, songs like “The Cycle” and “In the First Place” sound like a pitched-down Interpol, as if Carlos D won a coin toss in the studio and assumed the songwriting duties for the group’s fourth album. This is music you curl up in a ball to; music you play in the dark without dashes of irony; music that’s, well, a genuine downer. Which is to say it isn’t for everyone, but if you have the slightest interest in a suitable soundtrack for our darkest days, read on, as frontman T. Grave shares a definitive guide to “thirteen essential goth, industrial and post punk albums for those into gloom and doom.”

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