




Debaser wrote:My friend Kelvin used to work in Red Rhino and Mr Eldritch had been in to speak to Tony Someoneorother. Any how, as he was leaving my mate (who used to be the drummer in Delta 5) calls out across the crowded shop
"Oi Eldritch, if you ever decide to get rid of that drum machine give me a call"
The reply apparently was
"if you ever learn to keep time, give me a call"
Memphis Rich wrote:You should be so lucky
The Mentalist wrote:Memphis Rich wrote:You should be so lucky
plus that emocion that sticks two fingers up which hasn't been invented yet
Do you always wear black?
Not at all. Traditionally, we very often wear shirts of the most flamboyant colour and design. We certainly wear less black than all the other pop acts we can think of (and we can think of plenty). You shouldn't be that bothered anyway. What we wear is designed to be practical and/or entertain us, and we're far more interested in songs than fashion statements.
Apart from anything else, if we'd made fashion statements we'd probably have had the same short career as every other bunch of fashion victims. If anything, it would be sensible to deliberately avoid being fashionable anywhere, although we're not sure what that would look like, and we couldn't be bothered anyway. You have to remember that we live and work in different countries with very differing ideas of fashion, and we think global. White, for example, is a funereal colour in Japan and certain other Asian countries. Any attempt to make a fashion statement would be misinterpreted in nine tenths of the world. In nine tenths of Newcastle, it's a fashion felony to wear any kind of shirt at all, so I might as well settle for a skimpy little white number, or something in dayglo yellow. Nurse prefers Hawaiian.
A TV station or a magazine or a citizen with a particularly desperate agenda might insist on parsing statements that we're not actually making, exaggerating the importance of the occasional black sock, or reviewing clothes that we're not actually wearing; you don't have to make the same mistake.
If the songs are too difficult to concentrate on, or you're simply so sad that you have to draw substantive conclusions from what we wear, you should at least ignore those morons who need to discuss the kind of capes we wear. Because we've never worn any. The best thing would be to ignore us as well. Go find a band which is all about clothing. There are plenty of them.
i think it's images like this that give people the "wrong" impression:markfiend wrote:Eldritch wrote:...ignore those morons who need to discuss the kind of capes we wear. Because we've never worn any...
Quiff it isn't for an essay though I almost had to write a 5 page paper on Chernobyl because of it. I wanted to know if he had directly said these things because I am putting it in a PowerPoint presentation and i was talking about the Gothic Rock genre and his views on it in one of my slides. Thanks for the help!Quiff Boy wrote:he's disowned the "scene" several times, saying things along the lines of: (and i'm paraphrasing terribly here - they're really not direct quotes!!)
i dont understand why they have latched on to what we do
we wore black for 3 months and they've turned it into an entire scene
i dont see how what i do has in common with that
etc
there's probably even something on the sisters websites faqs about it ("faqs of the boring kind", probably)
and he frequently insults them from the stage - the last time i recall was during the mera luna gig earlier this year where he called them "clowns"
if it's for an essay though, you'd probably be better getting direct quotes. have a trawl through the official site, and then check out some of the last few years' interviews on youtube. it tends to crop up every other interview
And at Leamington Spa whilst the guitarists are faffing around he addressed us as "clowns,and non-clowns"Quiff Boy wrote:
and he frequently insults them from the stage - the last time i recall was during the mera luna gig earlier this year where he called them "clowns"