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edition October/November/December 2024
free ofcharge, not for sale
aboo
music & subcultmagazine
quarterly publishedmusic magazine
48
LLUMEN- AHRAYEPH
IRDORATH- PARTIKUL -UKSUBS
THECURE: SONGSOFALOSTWORLD
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aboo
contents
music &moviemagazine
01 LLLUMMEN
© PIETER COUSSEMENT
04 Interview LLUMEN
08 Interview PARTIKUL
10
Reviews
12 Interview IRDORATH
16.
Interview UK SUBS
18 Interview AHRAYEPH
21 ReviewTHE CURE: Songs Of A Lost
World
22 Reviews
24. Reviews
25. Reviews
27 Calendar
Want to support your sene & contribute to our magazine? English, Dutch, French, German …
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music &moviemagazine
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PHOTOGRAPHERS
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WRITERS
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Dimi BRANDS
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Peter DOLPHEN
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Hamis HIREK
Kurt INGELS
Xavier KRUTH
Lena DAUTEL
Tom PLOVIE
Dany QUETIN
Hayley CLX
- 3 -
colophon
WRITERS (continued)
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Llumen has released their third album ‘The Breaking
Waves’ in May. It has become an exceptionally strong
future pop album, which revolves around the ebb and
flowof life, and which is interspersed with the personal
experiences ofmastermind Pieter Coussement, ranging
from his difficult recovery from two minor heart attacks
years ago, to the struggle with psychological problems
and the suicide of his own brother.
Yet ‘The BreakingWaves’ is not just a deeply sad record
full of serious reflections. It is also an extremely
successful electro record that will undoubtedly make
you dance.
Hi Pieter. You recently released your third album ‘The
Breaking Waves’. Congratulations, I think it’s a very
successful work. I understand that there is a deeper
concept behind the album. Can you explain to us what
that concept is?
Thank you Xavier, the songs on ‘The Breaking Waves’
often had a hard time forming an album in my head.
That's why ‘The Breaking Waves’ didn't start as an
intended concept album, but rather became one along
the way. I noticed that the lyrics I wrote were intertwined
with seas and oceans, and that water as an element
came to play an important role. Oceans and seas often
become metaphors inmy lyrics for both the good and the
bad sides of my life. It was when I discovered the cover
image, made by Emmanuel Snyers, that it all came
together. That’s a kind of serendipity that I like to
embrace.
The concept of ‘The Breaking Waves’ is based on a
number of personal experiences from the past few
years. What can you tell us about that, not only about
the events, but also about how they inspired you to
make ‘The BreakingWaves’?
When I reflect on my life, it is always ebb and flow.There
are moments of great happiness and peace, and then
there are all those other moments that weigh on my
mind and sow unrest in my head. After ‘Polygon Heart’ I
didn’t want to write another moody album, although I
don’t think I succeeded this time either. But songs like
‘Desire’ and ‘Torn Skin’ are written from a positive desire
rather than from a gloomy attitude. I do try to write from
an autobiographical point of view. Often that starts with
a single sentence that comes to mind, and that is then
supplemented with a story that is somewhere between
fiction and reality. My life is not always easy, and I am
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- 4 -
always looking for a good balance that I often don’t find.
As a result, songs remain interspersed with hope and
love, but are at the same time also characterized by
sadness and disappointment. The duality between both
extremes is something that my melancholic self has
perhaps become too used to.
Your personal experiences also played tricks on you
during the recording of its 2021 predecessor ‘Polygon
Heart’, although I understand that the recording
process was alreadywell advanced when the problems
arose. How did that affect the recording process?
This is quite a few years behind me now, but you
consulted your sources well. It is true that after my first
album I worked on the successor with great enthusiasm.
However, somewhere halfway my heart decided
otherwise. Two (small) heart attacks later I had to find
myself again, which took a long time. It weighed on me.
It took me almost two years to get back into my groove,
not only mentally but also physically. My voice was
severely tested by side effects of medication, and I
actually had to learn to use my voice again.You can hear
this here and there on the album. ‘Lifeline’ is the first
song I wrote after a longmental battle,and it is therefore
a song that is very close to my heart.When I sing it today,
that feeling still prevails, and every syllable is 100
percent sincere.
How did Llumen actually come into being? I heard that
the group originally consisted of three members, but
that you later continued the project as the only
member, from 2009 onwards.
A long time ago I had a band with Ivan Van der Herten,
Sad CBA, which was then supplemented by my brother
Joris. Afterwards we renamed it Llumen. But as is often
the case, life gets in the way and ambitions grow
somewhat apart. Everyone concentrated on their own
path in life. I then decided to continue Llumen myself,
because I cannot imagine a life without music. It is still
high on my priority list. Without music, a part of me is
missing. At the moment I take care of all the tasks, Joris
plays live and Ivan is still a good sounding board. In fact,
he still plays a little on every album.There is often still a
piece of a lyric by him.
Your debut ‘The Memory Institute’ dates from 2017,
with a preceding single in 2016. In other words, it took
a long time before your debut was released. How
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come?
That has to do mainly with time pressure. During that
period I was doing my PhD at the Institute for
Psychoacoustics and Electronic Music (IPEM), and that
took up a lot of time. That’s why it took a bit longer than
planned.
On ‘The Breaking Waves’ you sing a bit in German in
‘Die Stille Totgeschwiegen’. Why did you do that? Was
that a tough work, or do you have a good command of
Goethe’s language? Have you ever considered singing
in Dutch as well?
I heard the sentence ‘Ich habe die Stille totgeschwiegen’
somewhere (wrongly) in an Après-ski bar in Austria, and
it stuck ever since.The sentence simply sounds very good
in German as well as in Dutch,but lacks power in English.
I also have a great affinity with German. I had pen pals in
Germany from an early age, loved to look across the
border as a teenager, went to the Wave-Gotik-Treffen
(WGT) in Leipzig every year, was a big fan of Goethes
Erben and Das Ich, and also had a grandmother who, in
addition to Polish (which I can’t speak at all),had German
as her mother tongue. So it wasn’t that big a task. Even
- 5 -
the entire German version on the double album was
written quite easily.Dutch is a language that doesn’t suit
me for songs. I think more in English than in Dutch.
‘A Part Of Me With You’ is about your brother’s suicide.
In a Facebook post about it, youwrote: ‘Ifyou feel down
in any way, talk to someone. If you feel you have
nobody to talk to, reach out even to me, even if we've
never met.’Do you believe that we can prevent suicides
by paying more attention to the mental health issues
around us?
I would have liked to hope so of course. It was and is an
open invitation to keep talking about what you feel. I
sincerely believe that more attention to mental suffering
can prevent a lot of sadness. Suicide in itself is of course
a very drastic act,but what precedes it is, if possible,even
worse. I can’t really describe how it feels when you
become a kind of expert by experience because of the
suicide of one of your loved ones, but it is the thought of
loneliness and not finding another way out that sticks
with me the most. It is also that which I think of most
when I think of my brother, which also makes me feel
very powerless and sad.
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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Several people have pointed out the standout track
‘Harbour’, which again has serious lyrics. Can you
explain the deeper meaning of it? Is there also a reason
why you put this song as the penultimate track on your
record?
I actually put it as the last track on the CD.‘At Nadir’ is the
first track on the second CD, but with streaming services
that is not so clear of course. ‘Harbour’ came about
somewhere during a discussion. It is about being part of
the same whole, but still not finding a connection, about
wanting the same thing, but not succeeding in
reconciling it, about the ocean as a driving force for good
or for evil.
Can I say that your music evolved from classical and
orchestral dark electro towards future pop in the years?
I remember a time when future pop was often looked
down upon – completely unfairly, by the way – even
though it was hugely popular, or maybe just because of
that. How do you look at this?
I do think I have evolved more and more towards future
pop, or at least more complex electro. That has mainly to
do with the fact that I can’t identify with the minimal
trend that is (or was) prevalent. I like chord progressions
and melodies. In my opinion, they get lost a bit if you stay
in the more classic electro. Nothing wrong with that of
course, but it is not something I can express myself in.
Future pop simply lends itself more to telling stories. It is
sometimes looked down on, but then it is also good to
note that bands like VNV Nation, Covenant or Diorama –
to name but a few – still manage to have an identity and
continue to produce a series of timeless classics. I also
just make what I want and don’t have to justifywhat style
that would or wouldn’t be. If you take the new Implant, or
the latest from Haujobb, you know that pigeonholing is
not necessary.
‘The Breaking Waves’ did well in the German Electronic
WebCharts (GEWC). You were number 4 there for two
weeks. Did you experience much of a consequence from
that?
We entered the GEWC at number 7 and a week later we
were at number 4 with Diary of Dreams, Solar Fake and
Funker Vogt above us. We also held out at number 4 for
the entire period, something I am proud of.Unfortunately,
I don’t really see any consequences of that. I have the
impression that organizers are more concerned with
Instagram likes and Facebook.
You have a PhD in musicology. Now I am no longer
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- 6 -
surprised that people with a thorough knowledge of
music also get involved with metal, rock, pop and even
electro. But can you explain to us how these studies
have influenced your work as an electro musician?
It may sound counterintuitive, but it is mainly by writing
my PhD that I started experimenting less in Llumen.
When you do the craziest musical experiments every day
at your job, you are sometimes glad that you can just
focus on writing a song instead of doing a new kind of
embodied sound experiment. Of course, that urge to
experiment is still contained in Llumen songs and I love
to keep looking for new ways to generate sounds and
images.
When I hear that you were able to play the
Mechanismus Festival in Seattle twice, in the United
States, and recently also performed in Germany, the
United Kingdom and the Netherlands, I wonder why
you can’t performmore often in Belgium. I’m glad that
it can happen on a Dark Entries Night, because I also
expect that a lot of people want to see you here. How
do you look at that?
Well, I’m kind of giving up trying to find an explanation
for that. I think Belgium is a difficult country to find gigs
in. Abroad, however, it’s not much easier. It really takes
effort to get gigs.Most of the time it’s all about likes and
exposure on social media. It might be a joke, but all the
time you put into your socials, you don’t put into your
music.
I’m looking forward to playing in my hometown. It’s been
a long time, so we’ve made sure that October 12th will
be something really special.
Live, Llumen consists of three people. Can you
introduce your band members and their role in the
group?
We are indeed back with three live, Joris is ‘back’ there,
and he takes care of visuals and light. We also play this
aspect live. Manu plays synths and makes sure that
nothing goes wrong technically. It is more fun to
perform with friends anyway.
Xavier KRUTH
https://www.llumen.be/CID.html
alfamatrix.bandcamp.com/album/
the-breaking-waves-deluxe-edition
www.facebook.com/people/Llumen-official/
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www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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On Saturday, June 15, we’ve organized a Dark Entries
Night in the Kinky Star. There was a concert of
Partikul, a Brussels group that has already caused
quite a stir with just two albums. The group consists
of Aly (synth and vocals) and Stef (guitar and vocals),
and they also appear to be a couple in real life. We
asked them some questions about their history and
their music.
Hello Aly and Stef. If I understand correctly, Partikul
was born in 2019. I know you are a couple in real life
too. Did the group arise from your meeting, or did it
come about later?
Hello Xavier, thank you and Mattias for inviting us to this
interview and to the Dark Entries evening this Saturday.
We are indeed a couple and we were together for four
years before we founded Partikul.We started this project
shortly before the covid blackout. We first started with
an EP with the prescient title ‘Venus-Virus’ (laughs), so
much so that due to the lockdown we couldn’t perform
a concert one month after its release to give.
forward quickly.We talk about our joys and our sorrows,
linked to what is happening to us in life.We have a very
minimalist approach, we don’t intellectualize too much
what we create, it's quite spontaneous.
Critics immediately spoke of a resolutely eighties
sound. How do you try to recreate the sound and
atmosphere of the 1980s while staying rooted in
today’s world?
We are more of a hybrid group, we mix everything and
make a cocktail of everything that was done best 40
years ago, humbly and for our pleasure.
Regarding the production of the two albums, Thomas
Stadnicki, the sound engineer, is not so focused on the
eighties, but has a modern approach to sound, which
we love. We have a lot of influences: punk, no/new
wave, noise, industrial, etc. but we also really like
current groups like Boy Harsher,Moon Duo and The Soft
Moon.
We mix everything and make a cocktail of
everything that was done best 40 years ago,
humbly and for our pleasure.
You called your project ‘Partikul’, with this very specific
spelling that we sometimes encounter in Brussels, the
city where you operate. What is the history of this
name?
The name of the group has nothing to do with Brusseleir.
We had not made the link, thanks for the reference.
We were with friends on the parvis Sint-Gilles, at
'Verschu'. We were discussing pollution and our way of
consuming in general, and the words ‘particul’ came up
('particules' in French). Besides the meaning, the sound
also appealed to us and visually we preferred to put a K
instead of a C.Then we realized that ‘PARTIKUL’ was also
a Turkish word. (laughs)
Indeed, a first EP with four songs was released in
2019: ‘Venus Virus’. Were you immediately full of
inspiration?
The fact that we composed together allowed us to move
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- 8 -
The next album ‘Related Memories’ was largely
written during the lockdown and was released in
2021.Was the lockdown a painful period for you, or a
period of inspiration?
It was a bit difficult, especially for the social side and
the outings, since 99% of our activities are related to
music... On the other hand,we were lucky enough to be
able to rehearse in the studio in underwater mode, and
rehearse and compose this album.
The last album to date was released in 2023: ‘Having
Gone’. Ifwe compare the three albums,we can say that
the sound has become increasingly dynamic. The
rhythms and bass are more pronounced on your latest
opus.Was it a natural evolution or an explicit choice?
Yes, we wanted to write more danceable songs. We
want to make people dance!
׉	 7cassandra://mpNsGhabi9xiMM_PYrIA-YwwITZCrItjLedDjaNlsYs,`̶ g;(%m`~E׉E:You have founded your own label: ‘Exit does not exist
Records’. Is that only for your own productions, or do
you plan to release other bands on this label?
No, not right away, we founded this label for our music.
All groups should do the same!
The latest album ‘Having Gone’ was also released on
Wagonmaniac Music. So you look beyond your own
label. Why do you do that?
If we are offered a collaboration and it seems cool to us,
why not? This is the case with Wagonmaniac. They
offered to release us digitally. These are people who are
passionate about music, just like us.
We don't want to be closed in on ourselves. Producing
our own albums is also a pragmatic approach. But the
freedom to decide for yourself is also cool.
- 9 -
I see you have a lot of shows. You're even playing at
Castle Fest in Poland this summer. What are the plans
for the coming period?
That show at Castle Fest was a nice surprise. We can’t
wait to be there! Obviously we've had a chance to play
a lot over the last three years. We never thought we
would ever play with bands that we listen to and
respect musically. At our level everything is just a
bonus, so when we were contacted to play at Castle
Fest...
We're working on new songs, so we'll see if we like
them enough to record a third album...We'll see!
Xavier KRUTH
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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(Self-Released)
More than 30 years after their last ‘Blasting Off’ album RLYL are now back with a brandnew
EP ('Driving Black') and, yes! Next year, February 2025, a whole new studio album
(‘Strange Kind Of Paradise’).To be able to listen to the full EP you will have to wait ‘til it’s
released on December 6 but in the meantime we can already present you their new
single‘Driving Black (Ding's Remix)’.And as we are used fromRed LorryYellowLorry; they
do not disappoint… Driving Black' features three exclusive tracks alongside three
distinctive mixes from the upcoming newalbum…6 tracks 100% Full-Steam-Post-PunkPower,
as we are used fromThe Lorries.You are going to put your finger on the ‘volumeup’
button of your music player! Curious? The new EP is available as a pre-order both
Digitally and on Vinyl, but know that the Vinyl is only being released in a limited edition
of 1,000 units. So if you would like to get your hands on one; don’t wait too long! [HC]
THE LIGHT DREAMS -Tricks of the Light (Digital)
(Self-Released)
With influences from science fiction, travel and dreams as numerous pioneering artists
and composers such as Jean-Michel Jarre, Gary Numan,Tangerine Dream, Depeche Mode
& David Bowie (to name a few),‘The Light Dreams’ is an instrumental Synthesiser project
founded byAlex Storer in 2006.‘Tricks of the Light’ is Mr.Storer’s latest ‘The Light Dreams’
creation.The genesis was a trip he made to Iceland in March 2022. Seeing the Northern
Lights from a glass cabin at 3am in the morning made him want to capture that
experience in music. The inspiration however goes beyond seeing the Northern Lights.
The idea for ‘Tricks of the Light’ for example, the title track, came when he saw Peter
Gabriel in concert in 2023.One of Gabriel’s new songs included a majestic ‘wall of sound’
and that immediately sparked new creativity. ‘Subliminal Resonance’ is a leftover
unfinished demo track dating from 2013. The Result? A concept album with 11
mesmerising ‘Synth-Spheric’ tracks that will take you on a trip to the Aurora Borealis.All
you have to do is close your eyes and listen!
[HC].
GROUND NERO - Blood Never Sleeps (CD/Digital)
(Dance Macabre)
Ground Nero's new album, 'Blood Never Sleeps'. The album had been around for a while
digitally, and is now coming out physically. After 'Divergence', it took a while to endure,
until British vocalist Mark Sayle joined the troops following previous vocalist Guy who
regretfully left the band. The basic ingredients remain the same: solidly rocking Gothic
Rock, with a solid flurry of Darkwave. The opening track is immediately a lingering Goth
Rock song of the kind they may continue to make for me,An economical melody, stealthy
and harmless, and yet there is menace emanating from it. Sayle's voice is made for the
genre. So in that regard, a more than worthy vocalist following Gwijde[…] Album after
album, Ground Nero remains true to their typical sound, but without the problem that
other bands sometimes get into: that it becomes boring.That is not the case with Ground
Nero […] The album closes with 'Stars'.A song dedicated to Sofie Taeymans (RIP) […] It is
a great tribute, and immediately one of the catchiest, darkest and most loaded songs,
making this album a more than worthy, deeply dark successor to 'Divergence'.
[JB]
ROSETTA STONE - Under The Weather (CD/ Vynil/Digital)
(Cleopatra Records)
“It was hard enough before the changes came …“Emerging in the late 1980’s UK band Rosetta
Stone came out of the influential second wave of Gothic Rock, leaving an indelible and
undeniable mark on the Gothicmusic scene.35 years since debuting with the,in 1989 released,
‘Darkness And Light’ EP Rosetta Stone is now back with a brand new (No. 7) studio album!
(‘Cryptology’, the previous album, already dates back from 2020) Bandleader Porl King sure
hasn’t lost his touch. From the opening title track to the practically instrumental 'Goth-Floor'
filler 'Change',‘Under TheWeather’ is a,as we are used from him,10-songs counting albumwith
the so characteristic chiming guitars and lush keyboards.The somber &dark romanticmood fits
perfectly with the this-time-of-year (almost Hallowe'en) fall season. In other words; Soulstirring
Goth Rock, high on my list of favorite albums released in 2024. If that is the same for
you I gladly let you decide for yourself.
[HC]
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- 10 -
Read full reviews on http://www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be/en/reviews/
׉	 7cassandra://D6TjnwRv07lzhFLhAQsgyl0P58VCQbFCrhvUWt-y4hY.`̶ g;(%m`~G׉E "- 11 -
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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Two years in prison. That was the sentence for Nadia and
Vova Kalach, frontwoman and frontman of the fantasy folk
band Irdorath. Their crime? They have played music at
rallies during the mass protests against the rigged 2020
presidential election in Belarus. Three other musicians
associated with Irdorath received a year and six months in
prison. In the meantime, all musicians have been released
and left Belarus. Nadia and Vova have gathered new
musicians for Irdorath from their new home in Germany.
We were able to talk to them about the history of Irdorath,
but also and especially about the repression against
anyone who dares to raise their voice in Belarus, a country
that currently has more than 1400 political prisoners.
Hello Nadia and Vova. Thank you for this opportunity to
have a conversation together. Let’s start where you started
with Irdorath. I think Irdorath was founded in 2011 in
Minsk…
Vova: It was a bit earlier,like 2009.Later,we collected a band
and moved to Minsk.
Nadia: 2011 was when our fresh band started to play in
Minsk.
Vova: It was then that we released our first album.
So you met in 2009? Were you already a couple at that
moment?
Nadia: Yes. We met and immediately started to make music
together. But it only got serious in 2011. Before that,we just
learned how to play our instruments. We played in the
streets.We were students and we had fun.
2011 is perhaps the moment when Anton Schnip joined
the band, with whom you recorded your first CD‘Ad Astra’.
Nadia: Yes, we finished studying at the university in Grodno
in 2011, and we moved to Minsk. Me, Vova and Anton were
living together, and we started to record our first album.We
had no connections in Minsk, no experience, no money, but
we were very motivated, and together we did it.
Vova:We started to work on‘AdAstra’it in 2011,and released
it in 2012.
The second CD‘Dreamcatcher’followed in 2016. So it took
four years to work on a follow-up.Why did it take so long?
Nadia: We were young, and we needed time to learn how to
do this. It never was our aim to release as much as possible,
or to make a very simple product according to a strict timing.
Vova: I don’t remember why it lasted four years, but there
were a lot of festivals, a lot of concerts, a lot of changes in
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- 12 -
the band. You can hear the difference between the first
album that we recorded with three persons, and the later
albums, which are much more musical. They’re not so
medieval.
Nadia: We wanted to make something profound, something
very beautiful. We used a lot of strings on that album. The
music was noble and complicated. Since it was our first
global work,we wanted tomake something really good.That
took some time. I hope we succeeded.
Yes, I like the album very much. You released your third
album ‘Wild’ a year later. At that time, Irdorath
incorporated more musicians. I think you were five or six
musicians.
Vova: Yes, we were six. We had two drummers, a guitar, a
violin and the both of us.
Nadia: When we had opportunities, according to the
possibilities in Minsk or our hometown, we always invited
friends and musicians to play with us, in order to make it
bigger. But this is costly, and now we need to survive on a
much more limited budget.
You had some international success. You toured in Europe.
You played a lot in Germany, but also in Belgium, at the Na
Fir Bolg festival, where you also played again this year.
Nadia: Yes.That was the only time we played in Belgium.But
we played in Germany several times, including at Wacken
and at the Wave-Gotik-Treffen, and also in Poland, the Czech
Republic, Italy, Slovenia, the Netherlands and the Baltic
states.
Let’s move to the more tragic story. In August 2020, there
were presidential elections in Belarus. I’m absolutely
convinced, like many people, that the elections were
rigged. I don’t think the dictator Lukashenko,who has been
in power since 1994, really won the election. There was a
broad protest movement against the election fraud. Many
people took to the streets, and you also decided to go to
the protests and the play music at the gatherings. What
was your motivation?
Vova: I think the most powerful trigger for all of the people
was the violence. The police reacted very violently to the
peaceful protests.
Nadia: It’s kind of a tradition. After the elections, people go
out and wait for the results of the elections. It was the same
here. But what they saw was cruel. They were attacked,
beaten, arrested, even killed.
Vova: They were shot at. They even threw grenades in the
crowd,right in the center of the crowd.It was incredible.A lot
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stay at home.
Nadia: The police arrested a lot of people. They got ten or
fifteen days in prison, I don’t remember.And when they were
released from prison, people saw in what condition they
were. They were blue from the beatings. They had broken
noses, legs and arms. Some were raped. All this information
was in the air.
You could of course try to pretend that you did not see this.
You could do this, and your life would be much easier. But
you can’t do this if you’re a human being.We are humans.We
were not able to shut up and to stay at home.We spoke out
against it, in the way that we could.
We are musicians.We put flowers on our bagpipes, as a sign
of peace. We took to the streets and played. We supported
the people who protested after this incredible evil happened.
We had no chance to act differently,because we are humans.
But youwere conscious that this was dangerous.Therewas
always this threat of police violence.
Vova: Of course.But it was also dangerous to stay at home or
to go to the grocery store. The police worked in civilian
clothes. They were everywhere. They arrested everyone they
suspected of any opposition. It was really dangerous to just
go outside. So it didn’t matter. We knew that we could be
beaten, or that we could be imprisoned for several days.
Nadia: In this period,the prison sentences were still days,not
years.
- 13 -
Vova: We knew that our bagpipes would be destroyed. But it
was not enough to stop us, because of what they did …
Nadia: It was very scary to go there.We saw what happened,
with our own eyes. It was very scary, but still we did it.
I have also heard that theywere especially looking for the
musicians at the protests. Were they really tracking the
musicians, or just everyone.
Nadia: No. I would say they were tracking everyone. People
in Belarus are incredible.Doctors took to the streets in white
coats and the symbols of doctors. IT professionals went to
protest with keyboards. A lot of people made cool art and
installations. There were a lot of funny signs. It was so
creative and bright. It was scary, but at the same time it was
beautiful and creative.There was a lot of humor.The protests
were really peaceful.
I don’t think that we attracted more attention than others.
But of course the video where we were playing the bagpipes
went viral.People inAmerica sawour video,and that was the
reason they tracked us, I believe. It was too beautiful for
them.
You also recorded two new videos at that time of the
protests. These were songs you had alreadywritten: ‘Kryly
(Wings)’, which is really beautiful, and ‘Быў. Ёсць. Буду. (I
Was. IAm. Iwill be)’.Did you connect these two songs to the
protests?
Vova: We did our best with our bagpipes at the protests, but
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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we had to do something more.We wanted to do something
else with our art. It was the only way to act. Our music, our
band, was not political at all. But we felt we could not
continue to produce and release songs about fairy tales and
mystical creatures, like we usually did. We found two songs
that really fitted for what was going on. We hoped that it
would sheer up a lot of people.
Nadia: The lyrics to those two songs are very cruel, but they
fitted the situation.‘Быў. Ёсць. Буду. (I Was. I Am. I will be)’ is
a prayer for everyone who suffered in an attempt to build a
castle for humanity, a kind of new world.There is a phrase: ‘I
pray for those who will make a revolution, even against god,
if it would be needed for the people.’
‘Kryly (Wings)’ is connected to the women’s manifestations
that were happening in Minsk at the time when we recorded
those videos. It’s a hymn to Belarussian women.Women took
to the streets in white and red dresses, and with lots of
flowers. They were brutally repressed. The police attacked
them. A lot of women were arrested. They convicted a lot of
them in real criminal cases. Their punishment was years in
prison. We dedicated this song to all the great women who
stood there, attacked by weaponed men.
We played a lot, also next to what was visible on YouTube. If
you know the story of our revolution, you know about those
tea parties in yards.
Yes, the yard parties. I wanted to ask you about that also.
Nadia: We played there five times. It was as in a spy movie.
We played at one place,and then tried to go to another place
secretly.
Vova: We travelled with several cars, so as not to be together
in one car. It was really scary.They knew that we were doing
this.But we were lucky.Friends who did the same thing were
arrested. But they did not get criminal cases. In this period,
that was not the case yet. But anyway, to go for fifteen days
in that hell, Okrestina (the prison where a lot of opposition
figures were jailed),must have been really hard.
Nadia: People will remember what happened in Okrestina.
The people who work there are real nazi’s. It’s the most cruel
thing that I ever saw with my eyes. Hopefully, the day will
come that all these people will be punished by law. I hope
they will be punished for what they did as public servants.
You were also punished for doing the yards concerts. You
had jobs at the Victoria youth center, and you were fired.
Vova: We don’t take that as a punishment now.After all they
did to us,we understood that it was just a little trouble.
Nadia: We were teachers at that education center for eight
years.We were ideal teachers and we evolved quickly. I was
a teacher of the first category before I was fired.That’s a very
good result for eight years. They appreciated us because we
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- 14 -
spoke different languages. We were very good workers for
them, but when they understood that we were participating
in the protests, they started to be afraid for their own asses.
Our bosses were afraid that they would be fired because of
us.They chose their own comfort.
We had talks,several times.They asked us to stop this,or they
would fire us. But we didn’t agree. Should we stop fighting
for human rights? Who is crazy? They asked us to stop
fighting against violence.Did they support violence,or what?
They answered that they were doing their work, that they
brought education and culture to children. They spent so
many years working there, and they didn’t want to lose it.
This is a choice people have to make. They made their own
choice.They supported what happened there.Or maybe they
didn’t support it, but they just supported their own ego.
Vova: And now, after four years,we still have friends who are
trying to work there.They tell us it’s like the Soviet Union,full
of KGB spies.The spies knowwho is who and tell you how to
behave. They walk in as in North Korea. It’s not a cultural or
artistic place anymore. It’s just another place with KGB spies.
Is this the way the Lukashenko regime manages to
survive? The protests were massive, and sociological
studies showed that the majority of the people in Belarus
supported the protest movement. But this system where
every director fires the ones who protests, and where
everyone spies on each other… Is that the reason why the
regime is still in place?
Vova: Unfortunately, Lukashenko has a very strong power
vertical.His main weapon is fear.He uses it,and it works well,
really well.
Nadia: People do not support the games he has played in
Belarus, and they have shown it in 2020.
We come to that fateful night, on the second of August
2021. It was your birthday party, Nadia, and this was the
occasion when the police came to arrest you. Can you tell
us what happened that night?
Nadia: I can show you a video if you want.
I didn’t see the video, but I saw pictures. It seems to have
been very violent. The police was firing with weapons
during the arrests.
Nadia: They behaved like animals. They had surrounded our
house, and when they came in, they were shooting in the air.
They were extremely brutal. I think they had fun.
Vova: It was quite early in the evening, we hadn’t really
begun to party. People were arriving with their cars, and we
had just poured out the first drinks. We were not really
drinking alcohol, because people had to work on the day
after.Then they came in, very violently.They were dressed in
civilian clothes, but were heavily armed. That was the last
time we saw our home in two years.
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Nadia: They were real monsters. Outside, the dog was
attached to a tree. They left the animal like that. They knew
the dog would not be able to drink or to eat if he remained
attached. Only the day afterwards, the neighbors came and
gave the dog water and food.
Vova: Afterwards, we realized that they broke into our
phones. They knew everything about us. They had read all
our text messages.They knew that all the participants in the
protest marches would be there that evening, which is why
they decided to arrest us there.
This is not a very good way to celebrate your birthday.We do
not recommend it.
You got two years of prison for attacking the police with
bagpipes. When you were convicted, it started an
international solidarity movement. This is where I first
became aware of your story. Bands as Corvus Corax and
Faun were protesting against your arrest. A lot of other
bands joined in the protest. There was an action where
musicians covered the song ‘Peremen’, that you played at
the protests. Were you aware of this protest movement
while you were in prison?
Nadia: Yes, we got some information, and it cheered us up
very much.You know,we didn’t see the sun in the first seven
months of prison. It is a place where you do not have sun or
fresh air.You just sit there in darkness. It’s very lonely.To get
small messages that something is going on... It gives you so
much warmth. You are smiling in this dreadful place.We are
very grateful for it. It gave us power to survive, especially in
these very hard first seven months.
You were released in April 2023. Did you immediately
decide to continue with Irdorath?
Nadia: We did not think about this. After we were released,
we were under huge pressure from the police.They came to
our house at night. They took our phones to install their spy
programs.They called us to their post and so on.Again, they
were rude. We were under such a pressure that it was not
about what we would do.We were in chock after everything.
They forbade us to leave the country until August 2025,
which was illegal. That is something they sometimes do to
people with depts, but for us, there was no reason why.
We understood that this would not lead us to something
good. If they can come to your flat whenever they want, you
will not feel protected.So we decided that we had to escape.
At the beginning of June 2023, we crossed the border with
the EU with the help of some very good people who were
part of the BYSOL Foundation. They helped us, and we
escaped. We are very grateful to them and to Libereco for
their help.They work in different countries.
Vova: To come back to your question, about how we decided
to continue or not … They sent us to a labor camp, a colony.
It’s a real prison where you have to work. There, we could
communicate by writing letters. They allowed us to
- 15 -
communicate, because it’s in the law. As husband and wife,
we had the right to communicate.We sent each other paper
letters.Theywere reviewed by two censors,one frommy side
and one from her side.Anyway,we found a way to do this.
We knew that if we would survive, and when we would be in
a safe place,we would continue to make art.We didn’t know
what kind of art it would be.After prison, it’s hard to saywhat
you will do. But either way, it would be Irdorath.
Nadia: I would say it’s not a correct question about when we
decided to continue Irdorath, because we did not stop.
Vova: Yes, Nadia wrote lyrics and composed melodies for a
new album while we were in the labor camp. I spent some
time on making new designs.
Nadia: If you see this bird, that we use for the solidarity
movement (points at her t-shirt) … It was drawn by Vova on
the cover of a letter.Vova creates our visual part,and I create
our audio part.We did not stop, but we were just not able to
leave this place. […]
s there anything else you want to mention?
Nadia: What is going on right nowwith political prisoners in
Belarus is making us crazy. The Belarusian dictator
Lukashenko has announced that he will release at least
some deeply ill people, including people with cancer.
Yesterday, they released some people.We check it every hour,
you know. We know several names. It seems they released
some people we know. But it’s nothing. One of them is a
really old man.
I personally know such heavy stories. People are in such bad
conditions,physically.One woman lost the ability to walk.Me
and another women brought her to the hospital on a blanket.
That was one and a half years ago, and she is still there.
Another girl had brain cancer and an operation before going
to jail. She certainly needs special treatment now. Everyday,
she took painkillers, not with pills but with injections. She is
still there.
We are doing the best we can to bring people positive
energy and to represent this story. But so far, people are still
there in prison.And we continue to suffer.The biggest part of
our soul will suffer with them.It is a hard time for us,because
we really feel like we are still there,with them.We are a part
of them.
Vova: My message, I would say, is that if this interview
reaches someone with economical or political power, or
someone with other ideas on how to release Belarusian
political prisoners – it’s time to do it. Their life is more
valuable than any money and any principles. It’s not about
political views anymore. It is about the lives and health of
simple, good people.
Nadia: These are people who are against evil, and they are
suffering.We just would like somebody to help us so much.
Xavier KRUTH
(Read the complete interview on www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be)
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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Punkrock is an endless struggle.
The umpteenth edition of Breaking Barriers will take
place in Het Depot on September 21, 2024. Breaking
Barriers was created in 2016 to celebrate forty years
of punk, and has since wanted to remind us every year
that punk is not dead. In September, fans of the British
punk pioneers will really be enjoying the festival.After
all, Steve Ignorant will be playing songs from his
legendary anarcho-punk band Crass. But equally
legendary are UK Subs, whose frontman Charlie
Harper just turned 80. Organizer Malcolm Nix asked a
few questions to the ever-persevering grandpa punk.
In September, UK Subs are returning to Belgium. Do
you have any idea how many times you've played in
Belgium before or have you lost count, like the most of
us?
My guess would be around 40 concerts, starting with a
concert with Ramones in 1980.
UK Subs have always had a solid fanbase in Belgium.
Is there a difference between the audience you get
over here and other audiences in other countries?
Belgium is an exciting place. It's more chaotic than
anywhere else and the beer is good.
Before we move on: congratulations on your 80th
birthday! You've been around for a while, as they say.
Do you still feel the fire burning like you did in 1976
or do you think you've achieved everything you set out
to do?
Punk Rock is an endless struggle. We're surrounded by
shit, now more than ever. The fight goes on!
The band have been touring a lot (to put it mildly) the
past few decades. What has been your worst
experience on the road ever? Are there concerts that
went horribly wrong?
In Eastern Europe we have had a few bad storms
suddenly coming in. People even died then.
We obviously hope to do better at Het Depot and make
sure everyone has a memorable experience all night
long. UK Subs will undoubtedly do their bit, but you're
not alone on stage, as there are four other bands
performing as well, with Steve Ignorant headlining. If
I'm not mistaken, UK Subs and Crass toured together
in the late 70s. Do you remember those concerts?
We did play a few shows together, before Crass or UK
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
- 16 -
Subs ever toured.Those shows went well.A few of them
are mentioned in my book, which will hopefully come
out next year.
Do you think this political strand of punk is still
relevant? Or do you think people listen less and less to
the lyrics and don't care as much about the message
as they used to?
Not in the UK Subs community. The young bands have a
harder message, but, as you say, the people who should
be listening, will never hear it. Floods, war and fire still
kill thousands of people.
The political situation has indeed evolved a lot since
UK Subs started in 1976, when people couldn't even
imagine that Margaret Thatcher or Ronald Reagan
would one day become the most important political
players in the world. What, in your opinion, is the most
important political change we've seen in these 48
years?
Right now we’re facing an enormous challenge. Wars
and corrupt governments are moving millions of people
out of their homes.The result is a backlash on the right,
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support for getting you awarded a KBE (in full: Knight
Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British
Of course, it's not all about taking a political stand.
There's also the music. You've completed your mission
to release 26 albums, one for every letter of the
alphabet. Did people believe you would actually reach
that goal when you had only released the first three or
four albums?
It didn't matter.We just went on with it. It was all a lot of
fun.
If no new UK Subs albums are coming, does this mean
you'll be concentrating more on other projects? The
past few years,we've seen you do more solo concerts. Is
it your intention to focus on this musical approach the
next few years?
We have always taken life as it comes.We may yet record
one more album, but let's wait until all the reissues have
come out this year. My solo gigs will get better and I'm
mixing a new solo album right now.We can’t concentrate
on one single thing.We work on all kinds of projects.
I once saw an online petition to gather signatures and
- 17 -
Empire). Any thoughts on that?
It was silly, but... Thank you, guys!
What is actually the best accolade or form of
acknowledgement a band can get? What's the best way
people can show their appreciation, including those
people who, for some reason, can't attend the live
concerts?
I would say it's coming to see us. We know they have
given us the lives we’ve led and we really appreciate that.
Finally, do you have any advice for young kids starting
a punk band or alternative band nowadays? Given your
massive experience, what do you think is the one
mistake that's easily made but should be avoided at all
cost?
Don’t quit. Just carry on and follow your dream.
Malcolm NIX
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
Photo © RAVEN's HeartCore Photography
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Music has the ability to take you to the distant corners of
the sky. To see the Fallen Ones enter our earthly ground. A
world taken over by the Offspring of Angels. We had the
privilege of talking to a musician who knows how to
perfectly portray this world in his music. And although he
has spoken to Peek-A-Boo many times before, living in our
small country, he certainly deserves to be brought to the
attention again. Ladies and gentlemen, let me present to
you; RafAhráyeph.
To us you are no stranger but to introduce yourself a little
to those who are not yet familiar with your music, how
would you put it into words?
It's at once an easy and a tough question to answer... I could
say my music is a reflection of me and how I view the world
at large, which is the philosophical thing to do. I suppose I
could take a description my late best friend bestowed on me
and say it's 'Progressive Gothic Rock' or 'Prog Goth' for short,
which is what I think most people will understand. But I
guess what comes closest is that Ahrayeph is an expression
and externalisation of the dark aspects of my life and what I
observe around me. It's a better form of expressing darkness
than being depressed, I guess...
Say you could describe your music by naming both movie
and classical literature titles, which would you choose?
Well, coincidentally, I just rewatched Coppola's take on 'Bram
Stoker's Dracula' last week. I felt that that's the perfect visual
- and narrative - illustration of the kind of music and lyrics I
write. Ever since I discovered Romanticism as a literary, and
later visual, art form (thank you, Iron Maiden!), I've been
partial to that form of expression. My literary influences are
the usual suspects : the Shelleys, Byron, Pope... But there's
also quite a bit ofmore modern influence like Sartre and the
Beat Poets by way of JimMorrison.
The start of Ahráyeph was with the 2006 ‘Heralding The
Marooned’ EP. Was it a at that time conscious decision to
take the direction that characterizes your music today?
In one word, no. That came long before the E.P.'s release. At
the tail end of the period when the band was still called
Crucifire, I was jamming with David and Peter,my then band
members and I had already started looking for a sound that
was less ensconced in Metal. One afternoon, after listening
to the The Cure's compilation album 'Staring At The Sea', I
reflected on how their iconic song 'A Forest' moved me
emotionally and then tried to put that emotion into my take
on that song (as evidenced in the cover song I later released).
That's when what I call the 'Ahrayeph Sound' was born. As a
happy coincidence, I also found my lyrical 'voice' around that
time. I was never happy with the worse-than-sophomoric
lyrics I wrote for the Crucifire songs the year before. Luckily,
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
it all came together at that time. A few years later, when
virtual synthesizers became available with the advent of
computer recording, I was finally able to put it all together
into the sound I had in my head and create a perfect sonic
environment for myself that contributed to the creative
process of the lyrical part ofmy songwriting
With Coppola's take on 'Bram Stoker's Dracula', as you
"Winterland. Summerla
Dry Land
mentioned before, in mind; Don't know if you've seen
Roman Polanski's 1967 classic ‘The Fearless Vampire
Killers’? Imagine that you are a professor slash Vampire
hunter, which famous person would you like to be your
bumbling assistant?
Tom Cruise. It's about time he paid for his sins.
Looking at your discography up till now, there are 3
albums, a special in 2018 re-recorded version of
'Marooned on Samsara', 4 EP’s, and several singles. Howdo
you look back at what you've accomplished so far?
For someone who apparently has a reputation for not
finishing projects in some circles, I do feel pretty
accomplished, haha! Seriously though, there were times
when I wasn't sure I would get so far in writing such an
extensive body of work. Like I said : it's a constant evolution
and at certain points in that evolution you're going to have
moments of doubt. Not necessarily because you don't feel
like you're good enough,although that is sometimes a factor,
but because you inevitably have moments where you're void
of inspiration.These don't necessarily last long, but they feel
- 18 -
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d. M
like they do. I've learned to stop worrying about that. It
comes when it comes, and it invariably always does. And on
the technical side, I'm particularly proud that I've finally
reached a point where, as a producer of my own music, I can
make it sound exactly the way I want. That, too, is an
evolutionary process.
I hope you'll stick around to finish this interview!
I'm not going anywhere, Hayley. Except to the bar in about
half an hour *laughing*.
You play your own music, you write your own music, you
produce your own music, but what about performing live?
I can imagine as a one-man-band that is not something
easy to do.
Being a one man band is not something I sought out.Writing
and recording different instruments is of course easy to do,
but in terms of live playing, I prefer more bodies on stage,
because it's more fun for the audience to see people moving
across a stage, even if it's not by much. Unfortunately, I
haven't found the right musicians yet to perform with,
something I'd like to remedy shortly,because I'd love to start
playing live again.
nd. Ghostland. Dark Land.
Mindland"
Who knows, maybe you find the right musicians through
this interview? Keeping fingers crossed! Do you have any
memorable/fun anecdotes from live performances when
Ahráyeph consisted of more band members you’d like to
share?
That's certainly possible. Interested musicians can always
contact me either through Bandcamp or the Ahráyeph band
page on Facebook. I do have to stress,however, that this isn't
a hobby for me, so I only want to work with people who
take their craft seriously. I've been burned by amateurs -
mentalitywise -way too many times to have my time wasted
by such people anymore.A professional attitude is definitely
a must. Ahráyeph unfortunately didn't play live as much as
I'd liked, so I don't have a lot of fun anecdotes from those
gigs. Certainly memorable was our first ever gig in Leuven,
'The 22nd Movement', in '07. That was a great gig to start. A
few people actually came over from Scotland to see us play.
Also memorable was the Spain Gothic Festival in Madrid in
2010,whichwe co headlinedwith QNTAL,a band I really like.
- 19 -
Hanging out in Madrid and meeting Spanish, Argentinian
and Scottish fans, of which the latter later became good
friends,was fun too.
And of course there was the Wave Gotik Treffen in Leipzig in
2012. Our gig was bad for reasons I'm not going to go into
here, but it was great to be able to revel in the atmosphere
in the city for two days, completely taken over by
representatives of all subsections of the Goth culture. I really
loved that openmindedmentality and the relaxed vibes.And
of course meeting a few musicians I used to look up to like
the guys from Red Lorry Yellow Lorry is something to
remember. I'd really love to go there again and make up for
the bad gig we played there.
If you want more memorable stories, I'd have to delve into
the two stints I did in Ancient Rites. I've toured more
frequently with that band, as they were already an
established and well known act, which is something you
can't accuse Ahráyeph of being, haha!
When it comes to performing on stage some bands have
favorite songs they swear byplaying live. Do you have such
songs? Songs you will always include in a setlist.
Well,since I haven't played live for twelve years now,it's a bit
of a mixed bag, because there are plenty of songs I've never
played live, which I definitely would like to put into the set
when it comes to that again.
Going by past sets,'Misanthropia'is a song that will always
stay on the set list. Same goes for 'Resolve (A Dirge)'.
They're both up tempo songs that always get a crowd
going.
It's very odd, but I used to get several requests to play 'The
Rain Suite'. It's odd because at twelve minutes, it doesn't
seem like an obvious song to play live, but for some reason,
it's a fan favourite and to be honest, you don't have to twist
my arm to play it live; it's a song I really like because I can
put a variety of emotions into when performing it live.
Imagine this. You are a substitute teacher at a preparatory
school and you have a class of musical talented students.
Sounds familiar right? Let’s call it ‘School of Ahráyeph’.
What bands/songs would you teach the students?
I smell a 'School Of Rock' theme here.
Correct!
Well, it may not be the 'Goth' thing to do, but academically
speaking, I'd go for a wide catalogue of Prince songs,
because there is so much you can learn from him in terms of
songwriting, dynamics, expression, invention and production
(especially lack thereof,which may seem surprising).Oh, and
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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work ethic, which is something I find lacking, as I already
mentioned.He was a hard taskmaster,but he demanded a lot
from himself too.Prince's body of work is a master class in all
these things and I knowhe was influenced bymany different
genres of music. You'd never know it, but he did love bands
like Kraftwerk and Joni Mitchell, and that's something I'd try
to teach my students : don't be limited in your influences. I
could be obvious and put stuff in there like Pink Floyd, Rush,
Marillion and all those iconic 80's Goth/NewWave bands like
The Sisters Of Mercy, The Cure, Siouxie, Joy Division etc. and
of course they'd get those too, and a lot more, because
there's so much good music out there, it's nigh on impossible
to pick just a few bands, artists or songs. You should see my
music collection : from Disco over Blues to Metal, Goth, Pop,
Jazz Industrial,Ambient, Classical...The list is endless.
But when it comes to understanding music and how to write
it, I'd definitely start with Prince.And Toto.Unapologetically.
When making music, do you demand a lot from yourself?
I have the reputation of being a perfectionist and that is not
undeserved. Although, as the years go on, and especially
having spent twelve years in my studio almost exclusively, it
gets easier to accomplish what I have in my head. But I do
still suffer from performance anxiety when the 'record'
button goes on. I can play a part flawlessly when I rehearse
it, say, four times before committing to recording, but when I
hit 'record', I get a bit uptight because my inner perfectionist
is yelling'It has to be perfect now!',and while it does happen
less than before, it makes me make one or two mistakes that
I can't live with, so instead of cleaning those up - 'punching
in' in professional terms - I just start from the top because I
want to get the entire part right and will continue to redo
the part until I achieve that. I guess I'm old school that way,
as with computer recording, you don't really have to be
perfect. But I take pride in my craft, so I don't like to 'cheat',
even if punch ins have been an industry standard for
decades, even before computer recording.
The same applies to production : I'm unwilling to let go of
songs until they sound just right. They don't have to be
polished to death, just sound like I have it in my head and I
won't stop until they do. That's the reason why I go back to
old songs and re-record them, especially from the 'Samsara'
days. It doesn't happen with the songs I've released over the
past five years, because I finally got to a point where I can
achieve my production goals easily.
Your studio is called ‘Rose Creek’. Where did the name
come from? Is there a special story behind it?
It's a bit of a funny story, really, going back to the days of my
second stint in Ancient Rites. When we were in
preproduction for the'Rubicon'album,my bandmate and coguitar
player Erik Sprooten used to come over from his home
in Harderwijk, Holland on the weekends to rehearse my
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- 20 -
demo songs at my place and to teach me his. The part of
town I live in is called 'Roosbeek',which in English translates
as 'Rose Creek', something Erik always said when he arrived
here : 'Back in Rose Creek'. It was a light bulb moment for me,
because I liked how it sounded, so the name stuck. I since
found out there are a few towns in Canada and the U.S. that
are called Rose Creek, and it's also a town in the movie 'The
Magnificent Seven'.
Now that we are on the subject of movies again, 'Dark
Century Bats' wants to make a biographical movie about
your musical career. To give the movie the right mood they
ask you to choose both the composer for the score, the
director and the actor who portrays you.Who, oh who, will
you choose?
Score composer : the late, great Angelo Badalamenti. He's
mostly famous for the Twin Peaks soundtracks,but I also love
the album he did with Marianne Faithfull, 'A Secret Life'. It's
one ofmy all time favorite albums andmany of the songs are
based on Marianne's own life experiences, so I know Angelo
could've translated mine perfectly as well. For the director...
Perhaps Alex Proyas, who directed The Crow. Or the
aforementioned Francis Ford Coppola, because I love the
Godfather movies and he knows how to give a character the
proper gravitas. Without taking anything away from his
stellar performance,Michael Corleone wasn't just Al Pacino's
merit. Actor... That's a tough one. I think, if he were still able
to, I would go for Val Kilmer.Obviously not for his looks, he'd
have to tone those down considerably to look like me,but he
did a great Jim Morrison and a stellar Doc Holliday in
Tombstone, so I feel he would be able to get into my head
and not just play a shallow one dimensional derivation of
who I am.
A little birdie, a 5 feet Pteropus to be precise, told me you
are working on a new album. Is there anything you already
like to tell us about that?
The only thing I can say about it right now, is that it will
probably be the last release for a while.As I've mentioned
before, I spent twelve years almost exclusively in my studio,
save for one or two gigs.With the catalogue of music I have
right now, I could play two and a half hour sets and still have
songs left to switch things up and not play the same set
night after night.As much as I love writing and recording,I've
missed playing live, so my future focus will be on trying to
get a band together and booking gigs. Of course, I can't just
switch off my creative brain, so I'm sure I will keep writing
songs in the mean time. It's just that I might not release
them at the same frequency as I do now, depending on how
well the resurrection of Ahráyeph as a live band goes. It may
be a year or more before I release newmusic, if all goes well
on the live front, that is.
Hayley CLX
https://www.facebook.com/ahrayephofficial
׉	 7cassandra://Fb5_beSDlTx9jGzc1-1RQR18i4VL3AfL-Y83X2--yoM/y`̶ g;(%m`~Q׉EGTHECURE SONGSOFALOSTWORLD
will be, to use the terrible words, a bit ‘doomy’ and
‘gloomy’, melancholic and darkly atmospheric in the
extension of the successful album “Disintegration”, an
album where the critics who had still diarrhea from
listening to the pitch-black “Pornography” had to admit
that there was also a lot of sincere and tender beauty
under this ‘darkness’. Well, this is no different with this
“Songs OfA Lost World”.And I would like to explain why.
Opener “Alone” immediately gets under your skin,
bombastic because of its hollow drums, but also with a
sensitivity that only The Cure can approach.
Overflowing with passion, “Alone” is something we all
will be sooner or later. The song sounds loud in its
deafening silence. “And Nothing Is Forever” starts with
a slow, instrumental build-up that apparently becomes
a bit playful because of a kind of harmonica tune.
Everything gets older, also Robert Smith and his The
The Cure should not need no introduction, unless you
have been living under a rock for the past decades or
have a very bad taste in music. But in the latter case you
would probably never read this magazine. In 1979
“Three Imaginary Boys” (Fiction Records) was released,
in 2024, 16 years (!) after “4:13 Dream”, there is a new
album by Robert Smith and his band. Respect! Because
who can keep it up for so long, with the same passion as
before? Few, that is why you should cherish this artist
like a precious jewel. Of course the band has also made
a number of amazing records,immortal albums of which
I personally like to mention “Faith”, “Pornography”,
“Disintegration” and “The Head On The Door”, the latter
especially because this was the first The Cure album
that I bought with my own pocket money when I was 15.
The Cure and I, we have a bit of a history. In the 80s
there was already The Cure. Since then they have always
remained in my life and I now own every album and
much more.
Once in the heart, never out again. Hence my
enthusiasm for this new, and according to who know
more, also the final album from The Cure. A group of
friends from the God-forgotten village Crawley, founded
The Easy Cure in 1978 after starting in 1976 as a band
called Malice. But now back to the new album. About
two years ago people were already talking about three
albums, then two and finally this ‘only’ eight (8) new
songs album. Let this be my only point of criticism,
because I am already shouting ‘we want more’ (at least
me and my black ego),even though the 8 songs together
have a playing time of more than 49 wonderful minutes.
The preliminary singles already predicted it, this album
- 21 -
Cure. Overflowing with melancholy and hope, especially
that. Wrapped in swirling synths, waltzing rhythms and
caught in the shackles of time that becomes timeless
when listening to this song.Yes, at 65, Robert Smith can
still write songs. That means: composing and conjuring
up sensible lyrics.
“A Fragile Thing” is not really unknown anymore.
Everything is fragile, just like the power of this record.
That is precisely the duality of The Cure. Perhaps the
most accessible song on this record, strong in its
composition. As far as I’m concerned, it could have been
on “Disintegration”, although the instrumentation here
intertwines stronger and closer together, tighter. The
guitar blows a somewhat lost wind through this song,
with Robert Smith’s voice picking up the ‘black’ thread
again and again. With “Warsong”, “Pornography” seems
to be back in full force, slow and powerful as if the cloud
cover is closing in. A guitar that hurts, curls around the
mortal's suffering but with so much intensity and drama
that it is simply beautiful. Heaven has fallen to earth
and listens to The Cure. A sadness that no other band -
and I repeat: no other band - can wrap up in such
wonderful music.
Behind "Drone:Nodrone" a modern pop melody is
hidden. Robert Smith actually starts 'rapping', but rest
assured, not completely. You can compare it somewhat
with the nothing (yes, The Cure also made that, but
fortunately not too much.) Think of "Hot Hot Hot" that is
hung on "Shake Dog Shake" in "The Hanging Garden", or
something like that.The result is as spicy as it is strange.
Time for another long intro in "I Never Can Say
Goodbye", which Robert Smith wrote as a tribute to his
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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(Continuation p21)
deceased brother. In all the pain and honesty, but even
then the leader of this band excels in fragile beauty.
Bass, drums, guitar, synths/piano and the typical and
unique voice of Robert Smith seem to form a guard of
honor ...'something wicked this way comes...'
Robert Smith is aware of all his 'smallness' and 'just
being human' in "All I Ever Am", which characterizes The
Cure as makers of the most honest and delicious, dark
pop music. And that has been the case for decades.
Finally, there is the epic "Endsong", a closer more than
worthy of the name.The only pity is that after more than
10 minutes unfortunately really comes to an end. This
song bites into your skin. A solid rhythm flows through
the song like a lifeline, over which a sparkling blanket
of guitar and synths is pulled as if it were a warm, fluffy
blanket against the protection of a cold night. Is this
then also the last studio song we will ever hear from
The Cure? Too bad, but everything has an end, although
it is rarely with the power, subtlety and finesse of this
“Endsong”. It's all gone, it's all gone, I will lose myself in
time. It won't be long. It's all gone, it's all gone ...
DARKVOLT -The Time Device (CD/Digital))
Fortunately, there is still the repeat button, or the pickup
arm that is working overtime. I am flabbergasted. On
repeat.With my mouth wide open.This is a monumental
record, a masterpiece among the other great albums of
this band where the current hit parade tunes do not
even reach the ankles of these eight songs. And who in
their commercial banality will never even reach it. Great.
Tears and goosebumps. Music that touches, and if that is
not the case, you are either Donald Trump or just a bad
person. Kudos. And especially thank you to The Cure for
so much unreal beauty that is locked up in each of us
and that this The Cure music invariably brings out. Heart
and soul. Thank you.
Back to business: “Songs Of A Lost World” has been
released on regular CD, limited double CD + blue-ray
(instrumental bonuses on the second CD), cassette,
vinyl, limited gray marbled vinyl, as well as a double
vinyl. Run to the record store now. The All Saints are
dancing, I wipe away a tear. Desolate but never reckless,
a bit like the cemetery on the day this album was
released. Sadness bathed in a colorful but transient
carpet of flowers.
Kurt INGELS
(Dresscode Black)
Antwerp's Darkvolt has finished its first album and that debut goes by the name "The
Time Device". Electro, that's what Darkvolt stands for, electro that scrapes and cracks,
finds its own way and enjoys itself like a dying factory worker among the pumping
machinery. I have the feeling that there is a good bit of the Canadian old school
industrial of the 90s in the genes of inspirer Frederik Strobbe,but also that a European,
let's say Belgian bands like The Klinik are also an inspiration, is proven by the recently
released cover of The Klinik classic "Black Leather". You could already get acquainted
with a couple of songs from this debut album and I am mainly talking about “Tools Of
Destruction”, which sounds like an apocalyptic dark electro track and “Precious
Dangerous” that sings about love against a background of industrial decay. But in
addition, there is a lot of new material and those new songs fit perfectly within the
musical colour palette of Darkvolt.Electro industrial,over whichMr.Strobbe scatters his
rather slow and dragging vocals, as if it were a lament and sometimes a torment. [KI]
DARK VOLT - Songs For Halloween (CD/.Digital)
(Dresscode Black)
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
Darkvolt, who only recently released their debut “The Time Device”, surprises us with
this “Songs For Halloween”, an album title that is as simple as it is obvious. On eight
songs,six ofwhich rely on the input of like-minded artists,an electro horror atmosphere
is evoked that strongly reminds me of what a band like Fear Incorporated does,
although for the latter it is Halloween every day. […] Creepy electro compositions, dark
electro so to speak, that sound atmospherically creepy, certainly on “Trick Or Treat”, on
which a certain Axel Machens of Placebo Effect fame donates his voice. But also
Marieke Lightband (Psy’Aviah), Jan Dewulf (Mildreda), Vain Sacrosanct (CauseNation),
Chesko Geert Vandekerkhof (Der Klinke) and Peter V. (Pro Patria) put on their best
Halloween mask. […] “Candyman”. Dark, menacing dark electro without a doubt,
Darkvolt is doing well […] Darkvolt also announces a second album, “Spirits Of Angst
And Despair”. Inspirer Frederik Strobbe has clearly found his muse!
- 22 -
[KI]
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www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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(Self-Released)
It's possible you haven't heard of Black Rose Moves before since they are a fairly new
band. For more than 10 years they played together in various acts and toured with
famous names such as The Charlatans and Simple Minds. The sonic journey of Black
Rose Moves started in June 2024 with the single ‘Summer of Sorrow’ and followed-up
in August with a second single ‘Ghost Town’. Meanwhile, there’s now the band’s new
single ‘Jessica’,but before I move on to that,a little bit about what you can expect when
listening to Black Rose Moves. Inspired by The Sisters Of Mercy, The Cult, Iggy Pop,
Depeche Mode & NewOrder the music is a ‘put through the blender’mix of Dark-wave,
Post-Punk and Goth Rock. Highly enjoyable to digest. What will haunt your ears are
relentless bass-lines, pounding drums, sharp synths and catchy guitar riffs topped off
with Grant Leon’s raw, impassioned vocals.‘Jessica', the November 1 released single that
we want to draw your attention to, is more of this. Sharp, stormy & electrifying. Take a
step in Black Rose Moves shadowy world and listen for yourself. Very promising
emerging band in the Post-Punk & Darkwave scene.
[HC]
ENZO KREFT - Hey Mr Dictator (Single (Digital))
(Self-Released)
We will have to be patient until spring before Enzo Kreft's new album 'Dictator' is
released.To ease that wait, here is a second official track that may warm us up. Hey,Mr.
Dictator is a protest song.One that fulminates against an authoritarian leader.And it is
one with a big ego, trying to deceive, cripple and manipulate the people with lies and
propaganda. But the people are resilient and continue to fight for freedom and are not
so easily intimidated. The song has the typical Enzo Kreft touch. Electro with a solid
beat, with a breath that leans more towards minimal synths, a wriggling bass line and
Enzo Kreft's voice hanging between recitation and vocals.
[HC]
THE HYBRIDS - In The Wake Of The Witch (Digital)
Time for the brand newalbum“I AmThe Eye Of Horus”,a concept albumwhereon which
the Egyptian book of the dead, a book in which the journey of the dead through the
underworld is the main source of inspiration.All the lyrics are taken from this book and
the music is of the darker kind, esoteric and rather dark ambient with the occasional
ritual outburst in while the voice of Madeline Arndt stand out. Sometimes whispering ,
then again ritualistically raving as if she were the personification of our travel guide.
The music here serves the atmosphere, of course the glue is electronics but also the
piano (on “Barke” for example) and various percussion instruments as well as the bass
bow are in the foreground. The orchestration is rather minimal but that is exactly why
this album gains strength, even though a rather quiet yet also ominous and mysterious
atmosphere blows through this album, where the rhythm, for example on “Isis”, forms
the threat. In other words,with this new“I Am The Eye Of Horus” you can add colour to
your journey through the magic of ancient Egypt, wonder is your portion, a wealth of
magic,sound and atmosphere.Unique and successful in its magical ambient design.[KI]
(3rioart)
CIERN - Flawless EP (CD / Digital)
(Bat-Cave Productions)
Creating music to confront & fight ideologies that dominate & oppress human rights,
animal rights and the conservation of our planet, CIERŃ (Polish for thorn) was formed
in Berlin in 2019. They make Anarcho Punk, but Anarcho Punk with a capital A and
capital P.‘Flawless’ is their latest EP. First digitally released in may earlier this year and
now recently by Bat-Cave Productions made available as a limited edition compact disc.
Same as their earlier released first album, 'The Emperor Rx', ‘Flawless’ has that kind of
dark 80’s energy in the line of bands such as Skeletal Family, Rubella Ballet and, of
course, Siouxsie And The Banshees.The voice of lead-singer Devi hits you like the cold
whispers of a haunted soul. Summed up: Mesmerising Anarcho Punk that would make
skeletons dance on their grave.
[HC]
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
- 24 -
Read full reviews on http://www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be/en/reviews/
׉	 7cassandra://cPG992VKQH_C7_PliDUuKt7AWFmhu3uIAbvl6KsSrHI-`̶ g;(%m`~U׉EMOTOR!K - 5 (CD/Vynil/Digital)
(Out Of Line)
Motor!k present their 5th album, very practically and in good Motor!k tradition simply
called 5.Anyone who is already familiar with the music of this Belgian Krautrock band
(or Neo Krautrock, or Dark Krautrock, or ...) (all of you who read this, I assume) knows
that their instrumental rhythmic music results in banging live concerts! The main
ingredients will probably never really change: Joeri Dobbeleir who lets his guitar
determine a melody line in his compositions and then lets it thunder along with the
rhythm, Dries D’Hollander who sticks to the strict Motorik rhythm (which was mainly
pioneered by Krautrock band NEU!) and at the same time pushes the boundaries within
this ‘restriction’, finally Dirk Ivens (for once without a microphone but with just as much
enthusiasm) on guitar and FX box.Where Kraftwerk made Autobahn Musik exactly 50
years ago,we can situate Motor!k on a modern-day highway. Music for cruising…Sharp
electronic rhythmicmusic with a very organic feel at the same time. Successful molting,
still the same beast but with a new shiny skin! Another great album!
[JD]
[MELTER] - [MELTER] (CD/Digital)
(Self-Released)
In case you haven’t heard of [melter], the band was formed in 2015 as the brainchild of
Robert Hyman, drummer for early 90’s Goth Rock icons ‘In the mind. Hate is bred. It
breeds Permanent Red’, yes, UsherHouse.With Nadia Garofalo on vocals and keys, and
for the live performances Ivan Russia on bass.However, in 2019 Nadia bowed out of the
band to be replaced by vocalist and collaborator Jax Allos (of Aviatrix on Fire), and Ivan
in 2023. Leaving now Robert & Jax as a sonic duo. Their first EP has already been
released in may 2023, so high time for Peek-A-Boo to give it the attention it deserves!
Don’t expect ‘Old-School’ Goth Rock like UsherHouse, [melter] is a Dark Industrial Rock
band with an appetite for Darkwave, Electronica & Goth in the same way a Vampire
craves for blood. […]The EP includes 4 original songs; DAM,Catwalk,Raw&The Golem
(already released in 2019) topped off with ‘The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore’, a
enigmatical cover of the legendary pop classic by The Walker Brothers.
[HC]
PLAY DEAD -The Collection (CD/ Digital/Vinyl)
If there is one compilation (anthology,best of,greatest hits or whatever you want to call
it) album that deserves muchmore attention it is this one.PlayDead formed in Banbury,
Oxfordshire in 1980,and although they split up in 1986 the legacy they left us is, to put
it mildly, outstanding. With Robert Hickson on vocals, Re Vox (later replaced by Steve
Green) on guitar, bassist Peter Waddleton and Mark "Wiff" Smith on drums they
combined various styles such as Rock, Funk, Alternative Metal and Electronica into a
unique sound that would make them become a part of and embraced into the fledgling
Post-Punk Tribal scene.Several singles included, Play Dead in total made 4 albums: The
1983 debut album ‘The First Flower’, which was promoted supporting Killing Joke on
tour,‘From The Promised Land’ (1984), the live album‘Into The Fire‘ (1985), and the, on
their own label (‘Tanz’) released final album, ‘Company Of Justice’ (1985). ‘The
Collection’ is a must-have overview of their short-lived career featuring 16 essential
tracks selected by the band itself.
(Jungle Records)
[HC]
CAUGHT IN JOY - Out Of Nowhere (CD/Digital)
Music to travel far beyond the boundaries of space, allowing your mind to wander into
the great plane of existence…In this categoryCaught In Joymay certainly bementioned
along with pioneering bands and Synth wizards such as Tangerine Dream, Klaus
Schulze,Ash Ra Tempel & Michael Garrison.As a multi-Instrumentalist,music producer
and sound designer, residing in his home studio in Coconut Creek Florida, Caught In Joy
passionately embraces hardware Synthesisers, tape recording,and a daw-less approach
to create captivating musical experiences. Out Of Nowhere’ is his 35th studio album in
about a year time, talking about a busy “(space)-bee-(ing)”, fully recorded while playing
live and improvised without edits to the 8-track reel to reel tape. From the opening
Read full the reviews on http://www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be/en/reviews/
- 25 -
(Self-Released)
‘Connecting With The Stars’ to the concluding ‘Still Trancemitting’ you get 7 BerlinSchool
tracks with a touch of Drum& Bass’ tracks full of other-worldly energy [HC].
www.peek-a-boo-magazine.be
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- 26 -
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05.10 STAATSEINDE, DAS CODE, KRIEG-B, CAUSENATION, SUB HUMANS + LISALUV @Magasin 4, Brussels [BE]
12.10 THE BELFRY - OCTOBER 2024 @ Downstairs At The Albany, London [UK] Resident Dj Mortasha Kinski & Guests
12.10 NEW-WAVE-CLASSIX PARTY @ De Casino, St.-Niklaas [BE Tunes By Resident Dj Filip Delie
15.10 LAIBACH: OPUS DEI REVAMPED @ Bibelot, Dordrecht [NL]120 Minutes Live Set - No Support Act
18.10 GLAMOUR TOURJOURS FESTIVAL @ Kafe Kult, Munich, München [DE] On Stage: Soft Roit, Ivur, Gleitsicht,
Staatseinde, Zack Zack Zack + Aftershow With Djs On Both Days!
19.10 D:ZINE & LAVI EBBEL @ Harmonie, 9700 Oudenaarde [BE] Afterparty Met Dj Fapnoir (Black Planet)
19.10 LAIBACH : OPUS DEI REVAMPED @ La Sucrerie, Wavre [BE] 120 Minutes Live Set - No Support Act
19.10 INDUSTRIAL METAL METALCAFE @ Koornbeurs, Delft [NL] Von Mollestein Schwarzstern We Had It All
25.10 D:ZINE || ERATO @ 't Smiske, Asse [BE] Afterparty Dj Bagge
26.10 BODIES & BEATS XVI FEAT LEAETHER STRIP (DIRTY SLEAZY SET) @ Fetish Cafe, 2000 Antwerp [BE]
26.10 BLITZ (80’S POP & WAVE PARTY) @ De Fermerie, Deventer [NL]
26.10 FRAGMENT, THE UTIMATE DREAMERS, HER DESCENT, DREADFOOL @ Garage Creative Music, Liège-luik [BE]
27.10 BODIES & BEATS XVII FEAT. LEAETHER STRIP (VINTAGE ZOTH OMMOG SET) @ Fetish Cafe, Antwerp [BE]
31.10 PORTA NIGRAWITH MIDGE URE, LENE LOVICH, ,BLAINE L. REINIGER @ Stadsfeestzaal, Aarschot [BE]
01.11 ALTERFEST @ La Ruche Verrière, Lodelinsart [BE] Clan Of Xymox Kas Product Reload The Breath Of Life Ductape
Suir Dear Deer Kezdown Dresscode Awid Enid
02.11 FOURSCHER FESTIVAL @ Club From Hell, Erfurt [DE] Pyroline Spherical Disrupted The Juggernauts, Dj Drill.
03.11 FOURSCHER FESTIVAL @ Club From Hell, Erfurt [DE] Amnistia Datavoid Amorphous Haujobb Dj Drill
08.11 A SLICE OF LIFE + SUPPORT TBA@ Djingel Djangel, Antwerpen [BE]
09.11 XXX PARTY 3 @ Rumba En Co, 3000 Leuven [BE] Dj’s: The Black Widow, The Survivor, Vanonoise
15.11 CURTAIN, THE ULTIMATE DREAMERS, DRIVE WITH A DEAD GIRL + DJ SETS @ La Brat Cave, Lille [FR]
16.11 BELGIAN ELECTROWAVE IS NOT DEAD III - 30 YEARS OF IC 434 @Wommel, Wommelgem [BE] Ic 43, Deleritas,
Herrnia, Ic 434 And Aftershow By Euforic Existence And Dj Peter Melis & Dj Pk.
16.11 MORTICIA PARTY @ Cerberus, Hengelo [NL] Darkwave Party With Dj's Burb & Sl!m
19.11 BLIND DELON @ Kunstverein Hintere Cramergasse E.v., Nürnberg, Nürnberg [DE]
23.11 10 JAAR THE OBSCURE + NEWWAVE PARTY @ Zaal Futur, Turnhout [BE]
22.11 PORTA NIGRAWITH KIRLIAN KAMERA, GRENDEL, ORDO ROSARIO'S EQUILIBRIO, ART OF EMPATHY @
Stadsfeestzaal, Aarschot [BE] + Afterparty By Dj The Black Widow
23.11 PORTA NIGRAWITH SONAR, POTOCHKINE, SYNAPSCAPE, XOTOX, MONYA, LIQUID TRAUMA@
Stadsfeestzaal, Aarschot [BE] + Afterparty By Dj The Black Widow
23.11 UNKNOWN NEWWAVE PLEASURES #3 @ Klimax, Antwerp [BE] Djs Djinn, Baxter & Lex Free Entrance
28.11 HOCICO @Magasin4, Brussel [BE]
30.11 D:ZINE & FRAGMENT @ De Mooie Molen, Roeselare [BE] 20.00 H. Afterparty Fapnoir
05.12 OMBRA FESTIVAL - DAY 1 @ , Barcelone [ES]
06.12 OMBRA FESTIVAL - DAY 3 @ , Barcelone [ES]
07.12 OMBRA FESTIVAL - DAY 3 WITH A SPLIT-SECONDS + THE JUGGERNAUTS & MORE @ , Barcelone [ES]
07.12 ERATO @ Gonzo, Ninove [BE] Https://www.facebook.com/erato.cc
08.12 OMBRA FESTIVAL - DAY 4 @ , Barcelone [ES]
15.12 WE LOVE DARKER MUSIC @ Bibelot Dordrecht, Dordrecht [NL] Auger (uk) Darker Palais Ideal La Lune Noire
20.12 BIMFEST XXI - DAY 1 @ De Casino, St-niklaas [BE] 20:00 Super Dragon Punch!! 21:00 : Blac Kolor 22:05 : Pankow
23:15 : Suicide Commando 00.30 : Dj Borg 03:00 : The End / Curfew Line-up & Timing Are Always Subject To Change!!!
21.12 BIMFEST XXI - DAY 2 @ De Casino, St-niklaas [BE]115:30 : Dark Minimal Project 16:30 : Oszylayter 17:30 :
Plastikstrom 18:30 : Ntrsn 19:30 : Linear Movement 20:30 : Emmon 21:40 : Horskh 23:00 : Clock Dva 00:30 : Dj Borg
21.12 D:ZINE / NEL&JP/THE NIKTI REVOLT + DJ FAPNOIR @ B52, Eernegem [BE] Doors Open 20.00
21.12 BLITZ (80’S POP & WAVE PARTY) @ De Fermerie, Deventer [NL] Dj Sl!m
28.12 ELECTRONIC DANCE ART FESTIVAL - SUICIDE COMMANDO, TORUL, IN STRICT CONFIDENCE, ORANGE
SECTOR,... @ Neue Stadthalle, Langen [DE]
31.12 DARK NEW YEAR’S EVE @ Regenbooghuis, Leuven [BE] Dj’s The Black Widow, Malcolm Nix, The Survivor …
04.01 + 05.01 FRONT 242 (SOLD OUT) @ Concerthall Vooruit, Ghent [BE] + Neon Electronics - Sold Out
11.01 MIXED VISIONS' 21TH ELECTRO & INDUSTRIAL TOP 100 @Aalmoezenier, Antwerpen [BE]
11.01 THE OBSCURE (THE CURE TRIBUTE BAND) @ Djingel Djangel, Antwerpen [BE]
25.01 SHADOWPLAY @Walhalla, Deventer [NL] Alternative 80s / New Wave Party With Dj Sl!m
25.01 LA LUNE NOIRE (NL) & D:ZINE (BE) @ Poppodium De Piek, Vlissingen [NL]
08.02 THE ULTIMATE DREAMERS, CURTAIN + DJ SETS & AFTERPARTY @ Caliclub, Drogenbos / Brussels [BE]
22.02 INTERNATIONAL EBM DAY: PORTION CONTROL, TYSKE LUDDER, ARMAGEDDON DILDOS & more @ De
Casino, St- Niklaas [BE]
22.03 E-TROPOLIS FESTIVAL @ Turbinenhalle, Oberhausen [DE] Solar Fake Hocico Rotersand Empathy Test Chrom
Orange Sector Rue Oberkampf Alienare
16+17.05 DOUBLE-DARE FEST: X-MAL DEUTSCHLAND, DIARY OF DREAMS, CALVA Y NADA,…@ Vooruit, Ghent, B
>>>>>IF YOUR EVENT IS NOT LISTED HERE YOU FAILED TO ADD IT (FOR FREE!) TO OUR ONLINE CALENDAR<<<<<
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