Siouxsie & The Banshees- Mirage
Mmm…Siouxsie
& The Banshees. The band that launched a thousand Goths. I suppose that
they have a lot to answer for. I really can’t be bothered into looking deep
into the history of Goth. Did it really start with the Banshees or was it a
home for disillusioned metal fans? I’ll bet that there’s a whole bunch of
theories and learned papers about it all; there’s probably even a chance to
study it at post-grad level at some second tier university.
Whichever way it
is and whatever the extent that goth has entered the mainstream-see the Twilight
books and films to catch a glimpse of how all-pervasive it’s become-it’s clear
to me that goth is one of those subcultures that will hang around for a long
time. There’s been thirty or so years of this nonsense and it shows no signs of
abating. What is really worrying is that it keeps switching from generation to
generation. Most sensible people who have a brief flirtation with goth; an odd dabble
with black nail varnish for example or a tendency to only wear black clothes
and big boots seem to grow out of it and after a few years spend their Sundays
trooping around Ikea for bookcases named Billy. (I wonder if Ikea do a range of
sofas called Eldritch; that would be ironic. Or maybe iconic. If they did they’d
only be made out of velvet and come in one colour.) Most people don’t hang
around in the goth environment for too long. It’s more of a rite of passage.
You see the odd few forty year olds desperately hanging on with their crimped
hair and bad tattoos but that’s like anything else-there’s still vestiges of 60-
year old mods whizzing around on scooters and even older teddy boys refusing to
hang up their crepe-soled shoes. But goth is something else altogether. It
seems to have gained a life of it’s own and just refuses to stop.
As sub-cultures go
though, I don’t actually mind goth too much. I generally feel a bit
paternalistic about it. It is ridiculous-there’s no doubt about that but as it’s
generally only a fleeting obsession for kids who move onto something else I don’t
think that it does much harm. If anything it does make me smile-goths seem to
take it all so seriously. I do have a bit of part to play in the inexorable
rise of goth though because I was one of the early contributors to the Banshees
coffers when I bought their first album. In my defence though, at the time I
couldn’t see what it would all lead to. I just thought I was buying an album
that had garnered rave reviews and was seen as “disquieting” and “unsettling”.
I’ve just listened to it once again merely as background for this piece and putting
aside the crystalline production work by Steve Lillywhite (which goes to show
that it is actually possible to polish a turd) it now just sounds daft.
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