From the Introduction ...

'Whatever you think Gothic is, it includes the opposite as well.

"Patrick McGrath", ran the review of
Martha Peake in The Observer, "may be the greatest Gothic
novelist ever". It's not a form of approbation every writer of fiction would welcome - to be declared the
modern master of an hysterical, stereotyped and adolescent genre which lacks even the identifiers that
grant coherence, and a modicum of critical interest, to science fiction, or detective stories. Within the
rigidities of their forms, these literary types can be recognised, bent, and made use of. Gothic literature
was like that once, but much has happened since Charles Maturin dotted the last full stop on the final
page of
Melmoth the Wanderer: Gothic has become more a mood, a tendency, than a genre. How can
you recognise that? How can you delineate and study it?'
Exuviae
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From the listings ...

'Siouxsie & the Banshees
British band. Formed in 1976 to play at one relentlessly incoherent outing, the Banshees accidentally persisted to
become one of the most enduring offspring of the punk revolution; together with Joy Division and Bauhaus, they
were the progenitors of Goth pop music, but became more central to the tradition than either, thanks to an
unmatched ability to process and reuse fragments from the Gothic past with stylish panache and combine them
with their glam-rock enthusiasms for Bowie and the Velvet Underground. The creative core of Siouxsie Sioux
(Janet Susan Ballion), Steve Severin (Steven Bailey) and, after a break-up and reorganisation in 1979, drummer
Budgie (Peter Clark) remained constant with several changes in the rest of the line-up. They have become a
touchstone for modern Gothic: in 1992, for instance, Tim Burton courted them to provide a theme song for
Batman Returns.'

'Sioux's personality was dominant from the start, in both the Banshees' style and subject-matter. A bookish
drop-out energised by reservoirs of childhood rage, her mezzo wail could articulate menace, mischief, regret, or
pure anger, and her love of creepy old movies led to echoes of Hitchcock and
The Spiral Staircase appearing in the
early singles. There were also themes of madness, violence, prostitution, and very ambiguous politics which could
combine a tribute to an anti-Nazi campaigner ('Mittageisen') with a vicious, subtle, and daring assault on the
state of Israel and victim-Judaism generally. A similar breadth was evident in the music, signalled by the first
single which matched 'Hong Kong Garden''s sparkly cod-Chinese pop driven by punk thump with the B-side
'Voices', a painfully abstract howl. It was followed by albums characterised by eerie, echoey misanthropy (
The
Scream
, 1979); deeply unpleasant, aurally muffled supernaturalism (Juju, 1981); 'sub-hippie drivel' (A Kiss in the
Dreamhouse
, 1982); a flawed but bold selection of covers (Through the Looking Glass, 1987); and finally
shimmering glam, sometimes triumphant and occasionally crass. In her side-project with husband Budgie, The
Creatures, Sioux has been even bolder, incorporating percussive elements, central-American and Hispanic
tradition, and dance music. The Banshees' most popular recording is still the compilation of early singles released
in 1982,
Once Upon a Time, and justly so: the sequence of tight, superbly controlled compositions inscribes a
mighty scratch across the face of popular music, vicious, raging, and silkily seductive. It remains a more powerful
single statement than anything else  managed by their peers or successors or, arguably, themselves.'

'Eclecticism also characterised Sioux's dress style. She graduated dizzily from combining Sally Bowles in
Cabaret
with Droog makeup from A Clockwork Orange to imitating Theda Bara and the early screen vamps, and thus
reached back to the origins of Goth fashion. Showing a remarkable aptitude for extracting the Gothic potential
from a wide range of cultural and historical signifiers, she appeared as a geisha, a Hawaiian princess, a virgin
saint, and Louise Brooks, and together with Bauhaus's Peter Murphy exerted a decisive influence on Goth style.'

'In the band's whole career the keynotes, set by Sioux herself, were flamboyance, a truly majestic degree of elitism
and pretention, and a wicked sense of humour. These characteristics always set the Banshees well above a Goth
movement they inspired yet affected to spurn. They called it a day in 1995, but reunited for a tour in 2002;
characteristically Sioux selected Hitchcock's theme music, 'Funeral March of a Marionette', to serenade the
audience on their way out of the Shepherds Bush Empire.'
Brass of Sir Ralph Hamsterley, Oddington Church
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