Stephen Mallinder and Chris Watson heading out on a ‘final tour;.
Absolutely on my list of post-punk legends I’ve not seen and need to:
https://thequietus.com/news/cabaret-voltaire-announce-final-uk-tour/
Birmingham date hurrah.
Musings on the byways of popular culture
Stephen Mallinder and Chris Watson heading out on a ‘final tour;.
Absolutely on my list of post-punk legends I’ve not seen and need to:
https://thequietus.com/news/cabaret-voltaire-announce-final-uk-tour/
Birmingham date hurrah.
Sad news about the one remaining active member of Cabaret Voltaire. I first heard them when I bought 2×45 in 1986. I was intrigued by the plain black cover, being deep into my goth phase at the time, and judging records by their covers, this was too cool not to buy, for its sheer beauty. The music inside was like nothing I’d heard before, but there were definite dark elements to it, and a wonderful rhythm to all the tracks. I guess Cabaret Voltaire were more influential than popular, and their music wasn’t easy listening. But give it a few spins and there’s as much beauty to discover in the music as in the packaging it comes in.
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/sep/21/cabaret-voltaire-richard-h-kirk-dies-aged-65
A reference to the WTF-ness of Trout Mask Replica in another thread has got me thinking – and that often means a thread in the Afterword. Aren’t you lucky?
Last week I went to an exhibition of Surrealism and very good it was too. Starting with the post WWI Dadaist movement, we were taken towards original works by Dali, Man Ray, Magritte and a film by Rene Clair. It was about two hours in another world and I can imagine that it must have been thrilling to be a part of it. However, I have this gnawing feeling of pragmatic cynicism like a devil on my shoulder, telling me that this was something constructed by well-off academics who seemed free of the need to work for a living.
Bill Bryson observed that an unusually large number of great writers, artists and poets were employed by their church – vicars who tended to have a nice domestic set-up with a parsonage all set up for them, usually with staff. It wasn’t until the 20th century when we started to educate en masse so that literacy was a basic standard rather than something available only to a privileged upper class. » Continue Reading.
