Loki Lockwood has been a constant in the Melbourne music scene since the 80s, involved in both gothic and electronic genres. This has led to his creation of the label Spooky Records, as well as starting the Creepy Hollow studio. On top of all this, his most current project is the goth, electronic Velatine, where Lockwood has guest female vocalists join him on tracks. I can tell you now, Loki is one of the most genuine and unaffected people who loves what he does, so join us as we pick his succulent brains about his career, of course Velatine and why they are saying “FCK YOU ALL.”

Salutations Loki Lockwood and welcome to the hallowed halls of Onyx.

Thanks Adele, I’m honoured to be invited.

Loki, you have been based a long time in the Melbourne gothic/post-punk scene, Can you tell us about your early years and the bands you have been involved in?

I was consistently playing in bands from my late teens to my late 20s. I have nothing really to show from this era, most has been lost in time, very different to now where every event is tracked. One band I had was called Blackburn. Someone sent me a link of us playing on a RMIT-TV show or something like that, I think might be still floating around. I did a stint playing with Ollie Olsen for his Orchestra of Skin and Bone album alongside John Murphy [Drummer, later in Death In June]. Even this is a hard one to find, it was pre CD days so it came out on vinyl, it’s still the only format you can hear it on, fortunately I still have my copy. I was in my mid 20’s and a huge admirer of their music. I know there’s a big part of this music in Velatine, the electronics of Ollie and John’s work, the noise, discordance, percussive elements. When Ollie became the music director for Dogs in Space we all got dragged into that. Quite the experience. You’ll find me in there somewhere. After that I played guitar in another band Practical Folk Music, we played a lot of shows in Melbourne and Sydney with bands like Box The Jesuit and Lubricated Goat, there’s a split single with Hugo Race that came out in Germany and a track on a compilation. But as I said, most of these bands are lost to time which is a bit of a shame, some of it was quite fucking cool. After all that and more I was pretty much over playing in bands by the end of my 20s as they often imploded just as they were starting to get going.

Melbourne has always had a fairly strong alternative scene, so how has this impacted on you socially but more importantly, artistically?

The Melbourne scene, it’s incredibly strong artistically. It always has been. It’s always morphed from place to place to survive. All I ever wanted was to be around music in this life and as I had a fascination with sound I started mixing bands to make money, later this became studio work as well. I worked with a lot of really, really great people for a long time and so that was sort of why I stopped playing as well. I exposed myself to so much different stuff by mixing. I was always attracted to the dark side, and it seemed to be there for the finding. I worked with Rowland S Howard for many years doing his live sound, that angular guitar thing and lyrics is one influence. Ollie, for that electronic / noise stuff and merging genres. Spencer P. Jones for that garage sound and what a songwriter. Well they all wrote great songs. I guess I was also influenced by the ones combining electronic elements with conventional instruments that were on the periphery in Melbourne, I still get called up to do live sound for Snog. Any music I was doing was behind closed doors and I never really got it together to get anything out until recently. Largely because I was doing all this stuff for a lot of other people.

As an audio engineer, you have your own studio called Creepy Hollow, so who have you worked with in this capacity and is it really that creepy?

It was named Creepy Hollow when we moved into this place 10 or so years ago. The studio is in the attic rooms of the house, the walls are painted blood red, there’s paintings and posters and stuff on the wall that are special to me, the rest of the house has taxidermy, antique furniture and cats. When we got the place I was really hoping it was haunted, so the name sprang from that. It was built in 1929 and has a bit of The Amityville about it. We’re the second owners and I so wanted to be entertained by their spirits. No luck there I have to say. The studio was really built to do Velatine so it’s largely a private studio. But I mix records here and do a lot of mastering so it at least pays for itself. There’s a section of it that’s soundproofed so I can do guitars here and yeah it’s an awesome vibe. People really enjoy coming over and working here [if they’re allowed] and singers especially love working in this space.

In that vein, you also run the label Spooky Records. Why did you start up Spooky Records and tell us about the label?

I started the label with my partner Jasmine in 1999. At the time I think it was the impact of the grunge / Nirvana era. A lot of the independent labels got absorbed by the major labels hoping to find the next big grunge hit. There just seems to be a huge lack for much smaller artists who needed help to get their music out. We started putting the feelers out and really it was Spencer P Jones that got it all going. We found out he had a record that was unfinished. Tony Cohen was the engineer so we decided to take it on and this was our first release The Last Gasp. So I guess we were one of the forerunners of the new generation of independent labels. We did albums for Spencer P Jones, Drones, Six Ft Hick, Gentle Ben, Digger and the Pussycats, Link Meanies side project bands Bakelite Age, Sun
God Replica, the list goes on.

How hard is it finding balance and time for all these different roles that includes creating music?

It’s hard to say no to things but I’ve been lucky in that I have a part time job where I mentor students in the studios at RMIT, that helps handle the money side of life and allows more creative time these days, but I love writing so I just lock myself away most weekends and create.

Your most current project is the darkwave Velatine. How did you start up Velatine and who you have been working with?

It was something I always wanted to do, and as I said, I was doing it behind closed doors for so long. I discovered Ableton in 2018 after struggling with various modern programs for ages and I had an instant connection with it. It just opened up everything for me. It was like I could get the creativity out of my brain for the first time in years because of its fluency. When lockdown hit I’d been looking for women to work with, initially wanting them to do lyrics and and write vocal lines. As that became impossible I used the space to just get better at what I did, so I went down the road of making cinematic, gaming music which was the first record. Just hoping to build some sort of profile I guess while I was waiting for a singer to come along. That stretched into a second album and then after working with a few different women I came across Maggie Alley. By now I was writing the lyrics as well so we recorded a song together and it clicked. That expanded out into an album but then she wanted to concentrate on her own music so we played a show last year to celebrate it all and off she went. Late last year I was working on a song and for a second time reached out to Inga Liljeström, the first time I’d asked her, she was interested but not available. It just felt like she was the perfect voice for “Nothing To Do With You” and indeed she was, I’m immensely proud of that collaboration, and she’s so talented, I still feel the stars aligned.

Have to say that the last two singles have been pretty forthright in attitude. Can you talk us through the story behind “Nothing To Do With You?”

With “Nothing To Do With You” It’s about a friend I know, isolated at school by so-
called friends, even put down by her family who told her women were not smart enough to run a business. But she always knew what she wanted to do in life but no one would give her a chance. Over the years I’ve seen her work hard, save her money harder and then become that successful business woman she wanted to be. Years ago I remember her taking classes at Circus Oz, that’s where the imagery came from to create the narrative, there’s so much colour in a circus to draw from. As I write this I think back to all the so called outcasts that were hanging around the Seaview Ballroom. I can think of so many that continue to make their mark on the world in their chosen, mostly creative fields. Maybe that era taught us a lot about self belief, a punk rock attitude. I’m sure there’s a lot of that era in there as well. So I write with the idea that the listener might see
themselves in that story and make the story about them succeeding against all odds.

I had a little giggle at the new single “FCK YOU ALL,” especially with the death nell bells chiming and all this is actually about the mental health of artists such as musicians. What brought you to the point of writing this track?

A lot of my songs are really about optimism I guess. They’re often positioned within a negative context like with “Fck You All”. I thought I should explain it a bit when it was released. It was one song that developed quickly and the lyrics were really abstract. It’s the importance of self belief again, a reminder to myself this time, or maybe more for my friends, like Barb who helped on vocals. For those who go into battle with their own creativity. That whole “why bother” it’s a tough thing we play with.

I know it sounds like I’ve cracked it!! I’ve been looking at a lot of ways of how musicians can break through the noise. There’s just such an immense amount of music getting released and so I’ve focused a lot of energy on finding my audience. You can’t just put it out and expect people to find it, but then of course you release something, then you feel like no one has noticed it after putting in hours of work so you have to be resilient. In a way it’s a mantra to myself to hold fast believing in what I do, because I think if you deviate from being yourself, and copy music that has success you just become like everything else that’s around. Then you’re just some sort of phoney. So I’m creating music that I like, regardless of how much it’s noticed, I have to firmly believe in it and that’s the essence of the song. So yeah I’m telling myself to do this.

How would you describe your style of music and does composing come naturally?

I don’t even know what my style of music is. You said Darkwave, I guess elements from there, it’s a cross genre thing, there’s influences coming in from all directions. Post-Punk, Gothic, especially surrounding the darkness of the lyrics. Industrial Music, Industrial Noise, Orchestral, Electronica. It’s those genres I’m most keen on and so I smash them together and mess with them. Composing is a very natural thing for me, I’ve written hundreds of
pieces of music in the last five years but of course not many will ever see the light of day. I’ve learnt that inspiration is actually hard fucking work. Then you have the lyrics to deal with. Once again, hard work, it’s lots of writing for me to get a song really expressing what it should be and I’m still learning the art. But I love that I’m always learning, always discovering the new.

I am always interested in what bands and acts influenced artists, so who influenced you, Loki?

The big influence is gotta be when I was young seeing a lot of bands at the Seaview Ballroom and other venues around Melbourne. Bands like The Cure, New Order, Gun Club, Birthday Party, The Creatures. All very raw music at its heart. Most weren’t great musicians when they started, but they made great music and became accomplished over time. I think it is probably the biggest influence. I wouldn’t say I’m a great player but I’m a good composer and of course your youth is a huge influence, so it sort of reflects back on the earlier question about what Melbourne is to an artist. These influences really map out the rest of your life in a way.

Who do you find yourself listening to these days?

Right now I’m listening to a lot of music on Spotify, I’m a new convert and that really feeds back to the rising above the noise thing that I’ve been looking at. Many of my peers gave out the message to hate Spotify, how it doesn’t pay artists so it was something I had no idea about. I finally set up my artist profile at the start of the year. They gave me a free trial and I just totally loved it. It’s the new radio, new discoveries, a place where musicians can own their own product and share it with the world and use that power to benefit their art. It’s something we really can’t challenge, you know, how much is paid out, but there’s artists who are totally using it to make an impact and even become self-sufficient. If you look at it in a different light it’s not as bad as people say. Fuck, it’s always been hard to make a living from music but the old school gatekeepers have lost their power because of this, that’s got to be a good thing. So I’m really trying to find a lot of new stuff in the sort of area where Velatine might fit. You find this stuff, you reach out to the artists and make connections and build community. I’ve got a playlist I’ve just started with lots of these finds and hope that I can engage people, to not only listen to what I do, but others making similar music. So it’s mostly electronic stuff, all of the darker genres, and heavy with female artists whose voices and composition blow my mind. Otherwise I’ll smash out an old favourite like some Laibach, Ministry or Siouxsie and the Banshees, that sort of stuff.

If money was no issue, what sort of video would you make for the track “FCK YOU ALL” and is there anyone you would have in it?

Probably some sort of parody of the “I’m Rich” hip hop clip, why is this a thing to aspire to? I just don’t get it? And I’m sure most of these artists are going into debt with their record labels to portray this shit!!! In mine we’d be travelling in beautiful old black Mercedes Limos. My friends and I, dressed to the nines partying by the pool of some amazing manor house, and women treated with respect, not as objects.

What is next for Loki Lockwood and Velatine?

The plan is to release a single every 2 – 3 months for the time being, most likely with a different singer each time. I’ve got 2 tracks done and these also have re-mixes that take the song in a different direction. I’ve also got a lot of material written ready to record so hopefully you’ll start to see more from Velatine.

On that note, spoilers sweetie… the next single is called “Orange To Black,” and you can’t get more Halloween than that!

Music | Velatine (bandcamp.com)

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http://www.velatine.com/

http://www.spookyrecords.com/

Norway’s Mayflower Madame is back with a new single called “Paint It All in Blue.” This is the second single off the yet to be released new album, Insight, out on the Night Cult Records label.

Photo by Astrid Serck

Looking at the cover, there is a hand with a wedding ring and the lyrics most definitely allude to a relationship where someone has given everything to another and it hasn’t been a healthy partnership. Their signature dark and heavy bass is present with the flowing dreamgaze guitars. The vocals reverberate sublimely as we are drawn into the song.

It is interesting that hands seem to feature so prominently visually for Mayflower Madame and it makes me wonder if it is about the act of holding onto a person or an ideal and the pleasure or pain that this can cause. “Paint It All in Blue” is blissful post-punk, holding you in a sea of forlorn and of course this is a beautiful thing.

Paint It All in Blue (single) | Mayflower Madame (bandcamp.com)

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Markus Majdalani and Johan Eckerström are the duo that make up Sweden’s darkwave act Hatif. In 2022, they debuted their album Everything Is Repetition and there you can find the track “City Beneath the City,” which has been given a music visualiser.

The song eerily rings true of current events, countries enduring a state of war where the streets, houses, schools and everything people have ever known are obliterated in air strikes, searching for family and trying to survive. A man on a loop, walks down a street, surrounded by debris, towards the light while you listen to the dulcet tones of Hatif, “City Beneath the City” is a great track to revisit, and if this is your first time listening to Hatif, then you should check out their album.

Music | Hatif (bandcamp.com)

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Some of my favourite bands are based in the ephemeral shoegaze sound, and I am going to thrust before you Talking to Shadows, a four piece from Baltimore, who Onyx last reviewed when they released the single “Soma.” Band members, Cat, Ron, Greg and Alex, dropped the single “Valentina” on the 26th of June.

If you haven’t had a chance to listen to Cat’s singing, then you are missing out. Smooth and evocative, that only enhances the dreamlike quality, swirling around your ears along with the guitars. There is that wall of guitar noise that lifts you up and takes you away….all of it wrenching a little at your heart.

It would be a shame to try and dissect the lyrics, which have both a visceral pain and at the same time utterly poetic, meaning you should just sit back and just lose yourself in the dark depths of that which is “Valentina.” Cat and the lads are influenced by possibly the most wonderful dreamy guitar group ever in Cocteau Twins and it shows. No, they aren’t Liz Fraser and Co., but then I would be disappointed if they were a carbon copy, and this is Talking to Shadows making their own beautiful music.

Valentina | Talking to Shadows (bandcamp.com)

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Polish industrial rock band Inside Her dropped the new single “Nikt Stąd Nie Wyjdzie Żywy” in May…….. yep, unless you speak Polish, you might kill yourself saying this title which more or less translates to no one will get out of here alive. The track features the vocals of Justyna Gryka and this is the second single off the soon to be released second album.

And it all started with a beat and the rumblings of a bass guitar, before the track leaps out at you. There is the introduction to the deep male vocals followed by a female whisper above, and surprisingly the synths are so light within the within the heavy crush of guitar. Gryka plays between demure and power singing, slipping easily between modes, holding her own, while the guitars soar from harsh to classical metal. Always there is that bass guitar. These guys remind me a lot of Germany’s Eisbrecher musically but Inside Her definitely pushing their own sound.

it starts with the feet | inside her (bandcamp.com)

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Tāmaki Makaurau lays in the Land of the Long White Cloud, aka Aotearoa, aka New Zealand and is also the home base for the three piece punk rock band BURDENZ, who have released their debut single “CULTZ.” Members Jimmy Coldham (vocals, guitar), Alex Ross Smith (bass, backing vocals) and Alex Gallagher (drums) are also involved in bands such as NUGGIEZ, Coffin Club, Jang, Shotgun the Couch and Soul Stroke.

The guitars rumble, soar and dominate in “CULTZ,” winding and fluctuating along with the equally eviscerating vocals searing the air without compromise. They drop into a false lull before once again descending into the vortex of instrument versus man.

Loud and unashamedly balls to the wall punk rock, not over produced and BURDENZ really know how to play. “CULTZ” is a pretty cool debut single from the fertile music scene that is bubbling away in New Zealand.

CULTZ | BURDENZ (bandcamp.com)

https://instagram.com/burdenz.band

South Australian’s Brave Mistakes is now a fully fledged band, going from a solo project originally, created by a guy who thought he would challenge himself in putting out one song a month. That is pretty good going and says a lot about the character and song writing abilities of lead singer Garrett Cooper.

The vocals are very reminiscent of a soul filled Brian Ferry, combined with bitter sweet lyrics of love , because as we all know that love can hurt just as much as it can fix broken hearts. There is a wonderful play between the guitars that swirls into your ears, with the drums underpinning it all.

Aching Enough” definitely draws on the alternative Australian sound, and you hear the reverberations of guitar bands such as The Hummingbirds, The Huxton Creepers, The Triffids or even The Screaming Tribesmen. This one really does pull at the heartstrings and there is a longing, leaving us waiting for more.

Aching Enough | Brave Mistakes (bandcamp.com)

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Minneapolis based band, autumn, have been honing their post-punk music since their three member inception back in 1994. Julie Plante (vocals), Neil McKay (guitars/programming) and Jeff Leyda (bass) released their new single “catacombs,” in May, with William Faith (Bellwether Syndicate) recording, mixing, mastering and producing at 13 Studio. This track is off the new soon to be released album, songs about dying, out on Sett Records.

There is something warm and inviting in the tone of the guitars, rich and deep. Julie Plante is quite mesmerising as their lead singer and she sings you a song of love but in the end everything dies, and it all feels so fleeting. Sometimes memory is all we have and that we live on in the memories of others..

This song really hits on many of the big themes still circulating in our lives right now, but it really came together during the COVID lockdown time. I knew my dad was nearing the end of his life, and I was finding myself really trying to make my peace with this fragile world and my own limited time in it. I was also really dealing with solitude in a way I hadn’t ever before: recognizing that we are each born alone and will ultimately die alone, and yet we are never alone… Much of the video footage was shot up north in the woods in the coldest part of winter, and that too felt right to me. The starkness of a northern winter landscape has always spoken volumes to me of the thin line between life and death.” – Plante

The music video is beautifully shot by Faith, between a snow laden forest and the group playing together. Bones might reside in “catacombs,” but those remains hold stories of lives with great loves and this track is genuinely a lovely gothic ode to life from autumn.

catacombs | autumn-us (bandcamp.com)

http://autumn-us.com/

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When creating music, is the artist doing it for themselves to induce joy or for the audience, who may not be so receptive or critical? The latest track from Melbourne’s Velatine delves into this quagmire, delightfully called “FCK YOU ALL,” out on the Spooky Records label.

This is not some punk song, as this is doom coming to get you with death tolling bells and Lockwood is joined on vocals by Barb Dwyer. There is a more industrial tone to the electronics and indeed the chorus is a resounding ‘fuck you all.’

The commentary of the lyrics is about the toll of being an artistic type in the alternative genre, where it can be a thankless slog to gain recognition, often leading to mental health issues, then relying on substances like alcohol and drugs to get that kick. This is a much darker and harsher sound for Velatine, if that is possible for a goth project, and it is accompanied by a music video, shot in black and white by Mark Bakaitis , as the duo stalk through the night-time streets of Melbourne with no fucks given. And honestly, I think we all need to occasionally let off steam and say “FCK YOU ALL.”

FCK YOU ALL | Velatine (bandcamp.com)

https://www.facebook.com/Velatine

We are going to talk about Swedish act Against I. The three piece has a new EP out, ironically called Destruction Lullaby, though to be quite frank, at seven tracks, this really could be called a full length album. Released on the Twisted Flesh Recordings label, my only warning is to prepare your ears to be bombarded with heavy industrial metal.

And so begins the assault with bludgeoning drum blasts, as the call to the dispossessed and rejected to take back what is theirs rings out with Croona’s vocals pile driving into the screaming guitars in “Dark divine.” The electronic angelic crowd stand testament to the apocalyptic destruction of “World in ruin,” a combination of classical meets metal, that is raised into the stratosphere by the synths.

The sacrifice” is a walk into damnation, raw and bleeding from the shadow of a broken soul, claustrophobic and clinging like a oily film to the skin. Following this is the ode to a million ways to die, the track “Death defined,” with the slamming drums and hum of slashing guitar, all the while Croona goes full demonic.

The concept of reality can be just as cruel as your worst nightmare is explored in “A violent dream,” and this track points to a far more metal background, with soaring guitar and an inexplicable Nordic intent. There is a always a “Calm before the storm” and it is the same with this track, because when it hits, it is with righteous fury, which leaves us bared for the title track “Destruction lullaby,” with the winding synths and stomping beats while the vocals vie for dominance with the guitar.

Maybe it is time to give the monsieurs three, that being Mathias Back, Anders Ström and Fredrik Keith Croona, a little recognition and a listen if you haven’t before. There is no calm before the storm. There is only the storm, that is full of metal shards bound in shocking electronic power, driving rhythms and vocals of a madman unbound in a world where everything has gone to hell. This is Against I and they will pummel you to sleep with their Destruction Lullaby, a sonorous head beating.

Destruction Lullaby | Against I | Twisted Flesh Recordings (bandcamp.com)

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