As part of their spooky season, Kentucky’s Who Saw Her Die? religiously drop in October a few singles, and the latest is another horror movie inspired release in the form of “Pleasure and Pain” and “One of Us.”

If you haven’t guessed before, “Pleasure and Pain” is exactly how a cenobite from Hellraiser is going to love you and this is the premise behind the single. The version the band have put up first is the EBM mix and I have to agree in their choice as it really has that classic sound of Hellraiser’s weird modern techno wonder, plus that wandering synth line, matched with the spiritual abyss in the vocals, that vary from seduction to anguished.

The second track goes a bit more old school in the way of The Body Snatchers in “One of Us.” It is a retelling of the motives of said snatching aliens, a morose dirge that is actually sympathetic of the horror baddies.

Even when October is done and dusted, there is always Halloween to be enjoyed for the rest of the year in tunes like this. To quote The Divinyls, ‘there’s a fine line between pleasure and pain,’ so why not choose both with Who Saw Her Die? They have such wonders to show you.

Pleasure and Pain | Who Saw Her Die?

Facebook

Somewhere in Victoria, Canada, you can imagine there are bears and elk but if in the woods, you might be jumped by the Skull Cultist, also known as Steve Saunders, man of rocking industrial beats. His latest album is named Hardcore Rituals.

The first track, “Chwiban Marwolaeth” sets the scene of something tribal and ancient, yet with the encroaching modern music bearing down. This is the lead up for you to drop into the title track “Hardcore Ritual,” and the magical mythos of a bygone era reverberate through the vocals and electronic tones. It builds and breaks down over and again. The cyberpunk influenced “Rivethammer” pounds and loops, revelling in the violence of the hammer. It is probably me, but I keep thinking I hear ‘timber‘ being yelled over and over again.

Mover” features the crystalline vocals of Gaby Gustafson, who is also know as Eva X along side Saunders, as the music strikes up a rapid pace, while the electronics rattle and throb to keep up. She is the angelic in comparison to his demonic, crying ‘die, die, die.’ Nicole Turner of Orthokeras is the guest vocalist on the “Floor Sadist,” and does anyone have to ask when or where we assume the position?! This track is a mixture of rhythmic noise and dark sexual overtones, which is instantly captivating and bewitching. The last track of the album, “Duskfall,” also features Turner’s vocals, which feels expansive and sounds futuristic

Hardcore Rituals has a grand total of eleven tracks and Skull Cultist keeps you guessing what style he is going to use next, though I like to think the main style is rhythmic industrial. Having the two ladies guest on tracks is a really nice additional, taking things up a notch and I have to say that I really did like “Floor Sadist.” Maybe it is that skull crushing crunchiness but it is very satisfying. In the end, there is a primordial brooding throughout, married to something that lurks within the shadows.

HARDCORE RITUALS | Skull Cultist (bandcamp.com)

Facebook

https://www.instagram.com/mrzoth/

Music | Eva X

Necrosignals | Orthokeras

Naarm (Melbourne) based Velatine are back with a third single in quick succession, called, “Orange to Black.” It feels like I just blinked after the previous single, but this goes to show how prolific Loki Lockwood is and he is showcasing yet another with female vocalist Nocturna.

The rhythm is both lethargic and rolling, yet constant, and it is joined by a trickling piano that dances around Nocturna’s singing. Her voice is cool and bluesy, with a certain enigmatic air, creating a bleak and beautiful gothic tribute to where everyone ends up in the end….as dust.

It really is a treat to hear so many different female vocalists performing with Velatine, and Nocturna really makes “Orange to Black” a brilliantly sultry experience. The video is a gothic delight, filmed in a cemetery giving the track a noire ambience. Finding the sombre allure at the end has never been so good.

Orange to Black | Velatine

Facebook

velatine – Link in Bio & Creator Tools | Beacons

VELATINE (@velatineinc) • Instagram photos and videos

In 2021, Finland’s Suzi Sabotage released the anthemic single “Nazi Goths, Fuck Off.” Three years later, on the label Strict Tempo have dropped a version, remixed by the UK’s The Cassandra Complex, and one has to wonder if this song is needed now more than ever with the frightening rise of right wing politics around the world and the insidious tendrils tainting the dark alternative scene.

‘Far-right ideologies are not compatible with goth. Goth is rebellion against the mainstream and celebration of diversity – whereas Nazis and conservatives advocate for rigid conformity, which makes them at war against what goth is all about.

The goth movement has always taken pride in being a safe haven for people from all backgrounds, and if Nazis are made [to] feel welcome, it will become dangerous for people of colour, LGBTQ, women, and just anyone who doesn’t harbour fascist views.

So let’s show Nazi “goths” the door and keep our scene safe.’Suzi Sabotage

Rodney Orpheus of The Cassandra Complex has created a sense of urgency with the pulsating synths, which are like light against the stark vocals from Sabotage, plunging in a knife that exposes the reality.

For people that say that gothic/post-punk music is not meant for protesting and voicing dissent, we have to say what bin have you been living in?!  “Nazi Goths, Fuck Off‘ is still relevant, now with extra polish and always enjoyable.

Suzi Sabotage – Nazi Goths, Fuck Off (The Cassandra Complex Remix) | Suzi Sabotage | Strict Tempo

Facebook – Suzi Sabotage

Music | Suzi Sabotage

Suzi Sabotage (@suzisabotage) • Instagram photos and videos

Music | The Cassandra Complex

Facebook – The Cassandra Complex

Facebook – Strict Tempo

⛓️STRICT TEMPO⛓️ (@strict__tempo) • Instagram photos and videos

Run To Sleep is a very, very new band and their debut single is the industrial “Purity of Sin.” Based in Naarm (Melbourne), this is the project of Jarrad Robertson (guitar) and Michael Johnson (modular synth), and if the name Robertson is a bit familiar, you might remember he is also is member of the dark, gothy rock group Sea Lungs.

The guitar is the focus, however it is the electronics that paint the tone. Heavy and fuzzed out bass like intonations, often breaking down into bleating miasmas of sound, whilst the delicate guitar sinews its way across the wasteland, almost apologetic for the abrasiveness.

There is something very early Sisters of Mercy about this track and I am talking the first EPs. Though an instrumental, it struck me that it is kind of in this vein due to the stark drum machine in sync with the melodic guitar, and the big difference being the heavy concentration of synths. This might be called darkwave industrial and I have to say I am quite enjoying Run To Sleep already.

Purity Of Sin | Run To Sleep (bandcamp.com)

For many of us, we cannot think of early 80s British post-punk/gothic, without including Leeds band, Red Lorry Yellow Lorry (RLYL). They were an amazing juggernaut, with other key bands such as Sisters of Mercy and The March Violets, giving us dark, guitar driven songs of nihilism from an era that was seeing a great deal of social upheaval, and also a music scene spewing forth a slew of new styles. Something Lorries fans having been holding out for was another studio album. We knew there was one in the wings, but no one, including the band, knew if it was going to see the light of day, having been recorded ten years ago. Not only is that album, Some Kind of Paradise, due for release, there is also the bonus of an EP Driving Black, that is out in December. However, for now, the first single has been dropped, which is also called “Driving Black (Ding’s Remix)“. It has been thirty-three years since the last Red Lorry Yellow Lorry single and all this goodness is being brought to you via COP International.

Chris Reed’s vocals are unmistakable with that biting edge of venom matched with near derision, that brokers no arguments, for it is what it is. The percussion is savage between the drums (Martin Henderson) and bass (Simon Archer), that sets the stage for the driving guitars of Reed and David Wolfenden.

The Ding is Simon ‘Ding’ Archer, music bassist for RLYL as well as being a music producer in his own right. There is a coarseness that grates over your skin with “Driving Black,” as it is with most music in the past from The Lorries. I think this is due to the fact that the song is so real.. as in you feel it in your bones and it resonates in your head, becoming another integral piece of fabric in memories, because it is a great and gritty rock song. It isn’t long now for those of us who have loved Red Lorry Yellow Lorry and I am beyond excited knowing that the journey isn’t quite over yet.

Driving Black | Red Lorry Yellow Lorry (bandcamp.com)

Facebook

red-lorry-yellow-lorry.com

Music | Red Lorry Yellow Lorry (bandcamp.com) – COP International

Facebook – COP International

UK record label, We Are Horror Records, have released the debut single for psychobilly band Midnight Feature, which is called “From The Grave.” Following in the great tradition of horror rockabilly groups, the band has four members with amazing names. There is Joshua Alucard (vocals/guitar), Markus Aticus (bass), Dr. Richard K. Straker (guitar) and THE BRAIN (drum machine). Well, okay, technically the drum machine isn’t alive, but after all, it is a horror outfit.

You are greeted with the famous line from Frankenstein (1931), ie ‘It’s Alive!!,’ so you already know you are going to be on a winner. You are then hit by the, frankly, coercively silken crooning vocals of Alucard, the wonder axe wielding and devastatingly thumping bass… oh, and of course The Brain keeping that undead heart beating.

It seems these lads have been brought up on a diet of Hammer Horror and B Grade black & white horror, which I admit are my favourite types. All this lends itself to the imagery of both dead and undead ladies, such as vampires and reanimated corpses, whom we all know make the best goth girls. I love this track. It moves and shakes, incorporating all the best things about the horror punk genre. A great tune and a well wicked sense of humour. Is it gothabilly or is it psychobilly? Eh, I will let you be the judge, but I really hope people pick up on Midnight Feature and give “From The Grave” a listen.

Facebook

Midnight Feature (@_midnightfeature) • Instagram photos and videos

Music | We Are Horror Records (bandcamp.com)

Facebook – We Are Horror Records

We Are Horror Records (@wearehorrorrecords) • Instagram photos and videos

Kentucky based, Who Saw Her DIe?, have started the spooky season with their latest track “Shadow Man.” Stephen Beasey and Brian Cain make up the Louisville post-punk/darkwave duo.

From the oddly, almost out of place tinny rhythms, to the discordant beginning, there is already an air of foreboding, further played upon with the not quite monotone vocals. They snap out of this with the far more menacing chorus of this very anguished and troubled individual. All is dark and brooding.

I am not going to say this could be about the demented killers in the slasher thrillers, but they don’t sound far off it. Indeed, “The Shadow Man” might be lurking just around that corner waiting and with a soundtrack like this, with its unhinged lyrics and crazed vocals. well it is shaping up to be a pretty good Halloween. What do you expect from a band named after an Italian 70s horror movie? More of this hopefully.

Shadow Man | Who Saw Her Die? (bandcamp.com)

Facebook

Mea Fisher may no longer be a vocalist for Lords Of Acid, but she is back with her new project Me And My Nightmare, and what better way to celebrate than by dropping the single, “Devil Inside” featuring the vocals of En Esch (Slick Idiot<PIG>Pigface, ex-KMFDM) Just when you thought your industrial dreams were fulfilled, Danny Lohner, guitarist for Nine Inch Nails just happens to be on the track as well.

Techno inspired synths and rhythms complement the purring vocals of Fisher, when she isn’t letting that devil out in the chorus. Esch brings the demonic to Fisher’s fallen angelic, with his gravelled vocals, and Lohner’s guitar work drives home the grittiness below the sheen of the electronics.

There are also two remixes that go with the single, including one by Sebastian Komor (Icon Of Coil, Strategic Command, Zombie Girl). I can see Fisher going from strength to strength, if this is the calibre she is serving up. Have to admit I did first first think of the INXS song of the same name at first, though no fear as this is a completely different beast or should that be devil? Come join Me And My Nightmare and find the sensual “Devil Inside.”

Devil Inside (Ft. En Esch) | Me And My Nightmare (bandcamp.com)

Facebook

Me And My Nightmare | Electrifying EDM and Dirty-Pop Fusion

Swedes Hatif have released a new single called “Broken Bucket,” which is the first track off the next to be dropped album, on the Town And Towers Records label.

The lilting guitar swaps at will with the intense synths, which sprinkle everything with their illumination. The vocals are sonorous and call us to the lyrics, where you can hear a message that is about broken systems and the turmoil that follows, destroying all before it.

The line ‘from the thought to the pull of in your index finger, from the plan to the act never stop to linger‘ in the chorus is exceptionally powerful. That act of pulling the trigger on a weapon has ripple effects that can be far reaching. The more I hear Hatif, the more they feel like a really exotic reincarnation of fellow Swedes, Covenant, and I think their stance in using music to take a stand is both compelling and wholly enjoyable. Don’t be the “Broken Bucket” for it holds nothing and this song means everything.

Broken Bucket | Hatif (bandcamp.com)

Facebook

Hatif (@hatifband) • Instagram photos and videos