Wednesday 6 September 2017

Goth Subculture - Christian Death Interview Sounds Magazine1984


Sounds Magazine article courtesy of  Flavius Merobaudes





Death Rattle
CHRISTIAN DEATH convert Tibet

Sounds, 2 June 1984





Assignment, as the master of horror, MR James wrote is "Penetrans Ad Interiora Mortis". Penetrate To The Insides Of Death. Well Christian Death anyway.The interview takes place in a curry house in the increasingly sordid Kings Cross. Not very Gothic, i hear you say ? All the more suitable then, since Christian Death, contrary, perhaps, to popular belief, don't really have anything to do with the horribly po-faced Gothic movement, even if their name seems... well, a little melodramatic.

Having recently played their first show in England, with a new addition to the group in a shape of a six day old boy, followed by a long European and English set of dates, Christian Death are tired (understandably) and keen on making the point that they have zilch to do with any of the band that are supposedly brothers under the pale, pale skin.

"The whole group started off about five years ago, with Roz" explains Valor, "David and I had been together for various projects for a while, and we got together with Roz. The band has been playing in America for about four years..." That's enough of that; from group's antics to the antics of the religious variety of the Klu Klux Klutzhead types: do you have a lot of problems with your name? "There was a point in time when there were a lot of record burnings from religious groupings; people do seem to get appalled by it. The worst time is when you're coming through customs, and they ask you what the name of your band is ..."

So whose idea was the name?
"Roz's." I turn to Roz: "I can't explain it; it's my own idea, and I don't really like giving a description of it." "It means different things to all of us," adds Valor, "everyone has to find their own meaning to it."
There's one question that it is imperative to ask American bands who play in the G of B. Why, I'm not sure, but it's traditional! "How do you find English audiences?" I would be lying if I said they gasped at the originality of the request, but they answer all the same. "All the people that we've spoken to, like Sex Gang Children and Specimen say that british audiences, especially at the Batcave, weren't very good, and you didn't get encores. But we were amazed that we got the response that we did, and an encore, event we didn't get the chance to do it... (a barbed reference to the two other bands playing on the night. A Certain General and Band of Ousiders).

The subject winds to the future... The imminent future. "The new LP is called Catstrophe Ballet, and is all very new and very good material," says David, "It should be out this month on the french Invitation Au Suicide records; then we'll be doing a proper tour."

A sidetrack; I discuss Los Angeles famous son, Charles Miles Manson, of Helter Skelter fame. "There's a band called Manson Youth in LA," Valor observes drily, "I haven't heard them, but the name fascinates me ! They're very much into having a resurgence of the family thing." And they really into it, or just playing around with horror show imagery ? I wonder. 
"Cause if they're not serious, and they get visited by some of Charlie's old flames... "They're in a lot of trouble" Valor finishes off !

Still: an impressive way to end a career. Valor points out that any band or song with the phrase "Malcom X" on it would never get air play in the US. One man's meat... Valor still feels that there is more freedom of expression in Britain (and long may it stay that way). "Most bands in other countries are copying each other, but British bands are freer."
A natural reaction: as a paternalistic and reactionary government clamps down, people will become more desperate to brandish their rights.

"I'm proud to be in this band, " points out Valor, "because it's one of the few bands from America that are doing anything that isn't influenced by current trends. Christian Death have been using this imagery long before Sex Gang or Specimen." That's an important point: a lot of people are bound to label Christian Death as part of the Gothic neo-post-post-punk band wagon...

"They use that term very loosely," says David. "I was talking to the guitar player of Sex Gang in Los Angeles," says Valor, "and he said he was very much influenced by the guitar on our first LP, Theatre Of Pain, they were telling me that a lot of the new bands, like Death Cult too, were veryinfluenced by bands like Christian Death and The Cramps, as they had bought their records when they were still quite rare over here. Roz was being tied to crosses a long time ago ... but we don't do that anymore!

"We were labelled Gothic in the American press years ago; and we don't have anything to do with it. It's the most common misconception about us. We've seen all of this Death-rock stuff in LA : they sprang up after Christian Death." The problems of 'rock 'n' roll.' A lot of groups say that they're here to destroy rock'n' roll, and then go on their major tour, and play indecently tedious and conventional rock'n'roll music. Are Christian Death the death of things as they are? Can you work against it?
"We're not interested in working against it. We don't even think about trying to be different; we just do what we want," says Valor. For a band that have been invested with so much false imagery, Christian Death are remarkably free of the hackneyed phrases and predictable cliches that you might expect if you believe what some people write about them. Christian Death: they just do what they wanna do. All aboard for Funtime...


Accessed 6/9/17 http://thebluehour.free.fr/rozzarticles-sounds84.html


Sounds, 14 April 1984 
Christian Death/ Band of Outsiders/ Certain General
Live at The Batcave







Images by Mick Mercer from Christian Death Photo Book













CHRISTIAN DEATH
The Batcave
London, England
04 April, 1984





Setlist:
Awake At The Wall
Sleepwalk
The Drowning
Theatre Of Pain
Into The Light
Cavity (First Communion)
The Blue Hour
Androgynous Noise Hand Permeates
Electra Descending
As Evening Falls
Face
Cervix Couch
The Glass House
Romeo's Distress
ccessedcessed Rozznet: Th 


Accessed The Official Rozz Williams page 

Batcave: the former legendary club

If subculture takes place, it is not possible to avoid the mention of the Batcave club, the Ollie Wisdom team operated in London, Soho.
England, the beginning of the eighties. A steamy, cool early evening in the entertainment district of the city, in the dark lights of lights and advertisements glitter. There is unemployment, nihil, insecurity, arrogance of ineffectiveness, escape from everyday life. Boots, boots and high heels are heard. A small group walks through the streets. Over-sized waistcoats, stretched sweaters, leather jackets, better-looking jackets, cheap tights and makeup, hairstyles for hairy shapes ... Young people are having fun.

Batcave was one of England's many clubs, which were popular meeting places for underground subcultures. Cheap drinks, dusty checkered flooring, carefully tapped walls, camouflage of the muddy plaster with different torn fabrics and nets, grids and cages, enthusiastic makeup in both men's and men's wards, and of course better ones ...
But what was it that highlighted among the other alternative clubs? Soho is packed with entertainment. Similarly, and similarly legendary, though much more elegant, for example, the new Romantic Blitz club (blitzkid named after the batcaver).
The specialty of Batcave might have been that he was not so elite that young people could not afford to give them space to fantasy, it was an opportunity to break away from the greed of everyday life, to rave a little, to experiment with fashion and music.

When the Bats Cave opened in 1982, it was far from the goal of creating a goth club. The main profile of the bowie cult glam rock and the new wave had some horror aftertaste, but the darker mood of the place soon subtracted the later decisive figures of the musical and cultural life of the nascent subculture. Among them were Siouxsie, Robert Smith, Marc Almond, Nick Cave, Danielle Dax, and Ausgang, Zor Gabor, Test Dept, Fetus, Bone Orchard, Zero Le Creche and Flesh For Lulu bands. Of course, the hosts' own band, Specimen, also often entertained the big-name.

We went to Batcave because they allowed me for free, the atmosphere was nice and friendly, good-looking people gathered down there. But music, that was horrible! This is all romance with death! Anyone who has been confronted with death may say that there is nothing romantic about it. "
Robert Smith, The Gloom Generation, 1997, Details Magazine

Nick Wade, who perhaps knew more than Nik Fiend, was at this time at the club. From here, friendship with Nick Cave, and here he began to break his wings together with Mrs. Fiend, a joint music project, so we can say that Alien Sex Fiend is a real Batcave band. As a foreign guest in 1984, Christian Death also respected, and Specimen also visited the States as a traveling traveling circus, they took Batcave's decoration and their modest performance, bringing the British and American subcultures closer. The club did not only tour abroad, but it was inside the Soh. she moved, but the mood and the name remained unchanged. Beside live music Dj Hamish (Hamish McDonald) was responsible for the mood, who also played guitar and sang in the Sexbeat band.
"There is a big difference between '77 punks and '83 pockets, Mick Jones (ed. The Clash) came down to Batcave and stood alone, he did not know where he was. The old puppets need the Pistols, the new ones have switched to Alien Sex Fiend, and although many goth bands can not be danced, they have the deep, tough bang. " 
" Batcave is attracting a chameleon-like company and you can see a rockabilly guy dancing with a goth girl. Various groups come together and listen to each other's music ... "
Hamish, The Face, 1984


But what about music in batcave? We are talking about a controversial topic, since batcave as a genre is a fairly delicate concept, as many people, as many views and opinions. The oldschool goth subculture has been bunched over many times, but it does not seem to be getting bored for so long.

Many people today are used as the synonym for deathrock, although they can be distinguished from both space and sound. The reason for this is that the deathrock scene, especially after the 2000s, is in many respects based on this English foundation (for example, Sex Gang Children, Alien Sex Fiend favorites), and strange modes are brought by fans of the deathrock genre they prefer to use the club logo.

I think it might be somewhat closer to the description of the English music of the era, usually in Batcave and similar pubs. It mainly covers new wave, post punk, melancholic or morbid punk, and positively punk (goth) performers.
During this period, the term goth was not widespread yet. Most people said they were punk or wavers. Siouxsie, Dave Vanian and many others, like punk, lived in the public domain, at first The Cure was also an alternative band running on UK top lists.

In the strict sense, however, only the gangs in Batcave use this term. For similar reasons many people use batcaver for the former visitors of the club, members of younger generations and others of similar interest in other countries are called oldschool goths or deathrockers.

However, it must be acknowledged that the Batcave club itself is largely due to the cultural and clothing aspect of the goth subculture, and the main musical influences have been largely out of the club, and the concerts of later bands will not have been achieved.
A lot of people gathered here, from the more fashionable punk to the new romance to the androgens and fetish fans who considered it a more tolerant place for wilder punk pubs.
"We do not have any dresscode or the like. After all, how do we decide that it's okay that we do not just because it looks like. " 
Ollie Wisdom, London Weekend Televison, 1983

Fashion, for example, thanks to the deathrockers' tattered pantyhose exterior to Specimen, the smocky jabs, strong makeup and pointed punch the appearance of blitzkids, the presence of chains, corsets, leather and rivets on the fetish medium, band t-shirts and painted coats for the punk ... Ideas and thoughts have circled in this varied medium and became a completely new concept that today as goth we know subculture.
"When we went out with Batcave last year, it became clear that people wanted to dance, not just sitting at the black candles in an" alternative "club. In small towns like Colne, we have found that they want to party, rave, but just modern music such as Cocteau Twins. It was very difficult to incorporate older glam rock as well. There are now Batcave evenings in Liverpool in Plane, Leicester in Belfry, Hacienda in Manchester ... "
Hamish, The Face, 1984

The club's organizers have already released a musical selection in 1983 under the name Young Limbs and Numb Hymns, similarly followed.

In the memory of the Batcave club, a booklet published in several books, including volumes of chronological photographs of the club's daily lives, staff, audiences, cabaret performances and concerts, have been released. Some of these recordings are also available on the Internet.
Accessed   http://deathrock.hu/batcavepast#page  © Copyright: Sage Noir 








Sunday 2 July 2017

Goth Subculture: Black Fashionguide of the 80s

Black Fashionguide of the 80s - Between Bogey's catalog and reality

Posted by  Discussion: 45 comments
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 1Who entered the scene of the Gothics and Waver in the 80s needed appropriate clothes. As an external recognition feature of the scene affiliation it had failed, extravagant and of course black. Those who were not able to become creative themselves had to provide themselves with scene clothing in the European main cities or to resort to one of the mailorder senders. An 18-page catalog of "Bogey's Underground Fashion from London", which reached me through a friendly reader by e-mail, inspired me to contribute to the black fashion of the 80s.
Did everything in the catalog really have to do with the scene? Is not something already mixed up in his roots, which will never belong together?
I can anticipate that not all images match the content, but this is simply not possible due to the really "colorful" mixture of the catalog of clothing from the most diverse scenes and marginal areas of many subcultures. So it is about fashion, not necessarily about background and content.

The origin of everything

Punk
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 2The black style was born in the UK. In the mid-1970s, the punk movement turned out to be the motor of difference. The "garbage look" was an expression of her vitality: "It has no purpose anyway" (No Future). With their clothes, they symbolized their attitude to supremacy and shocked the public. The punks made the ugly a clothing strategy of attention excitement.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 3The central element of their clothing was the black leather jacket, which already had to show use traces with its first wear. Letterings, patches and a whole armada of rivets in all forms and finishes were a must. (419)
The youngsters began to focus the shock effect by placing safety pins in their ears, mouths, or cheeks, and connecting them with chains. Symbols put the crown on the whole. Idols like Johnny Rotten and Siouxsie Sioux made an excitement and fashion accessory from the Hakenkreuz at the same time, laying the foundation for this kind of symbolic provocation. By deliberately destroying the connection between the symbol and the symbolized, the punks performed a kind of aesthetic pioneering work for many subsequent scenes, which the Gothics in particular took up again.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 5With the punks the hair gained a very special importance. Red, green, yellow, or blackish-colored, hairstyles made with sugar-water, which were shaved off at the sides or neck, became a characteristic feature of this youth culture. (427 & 428) The predecessors of modern Gothics adopted this style and continued it.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 4The New Waver
At the end of the 1970s this species emerged mainly in the European capitals. They wore suits of the 1950s, which were unmistakable with wide shoulders and narrow lapel. (441) They wore wide trousers that narrowed to the ankles and found their perfection in the pointed shoes, the so-called Pikes or Winklepickern.
As an accessory, one liked to use glasses, while in the make-up style hard contours and lines prevailed. With the ironic imitation of the "normal", with the meticulous adherence to the bourgeois clothes of the fifties, the New Waver held a critical mirror in front of society, and on the other, they were confused by this accomplished imitation. (451/454)
Feminine New Waver captured by figurative cuts (443) and interrupted stylistic accuracy through high-haired and shaved hairstyles. Large-area jewelery emphasized the decollete and wide belt helped to a narrow waist. Optionally to the tight skirt were also worn over the top (433) or high-cut blouses with wide, puffy sleeves (453).
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 7The New Waver is a rendezvous on the way to modern Gothic and developed also in other Lebensbereichen in a completely different direction. The catalog of Bogey's unfortunately shows this style on the same level as other youth cultures of this time, without taking into consideration the actual development of the Gothics. The mixing of youth cultures into a large black mass probably begins with the commercialization of clothing.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 6The New Romantics
Many were the punks ugly and the New Waver too dreary, they developed in a completely different direction. The New Romantics were inspired by the style of clothing of long-standing epochs. Frilly shirts, wide flowing trousers and skirts, made of fabrics with imaginative ornamentation, captured in their style (447). They wore ample jewelery and made themselves strongly with striking, bright colors.
The New Romantics enchanted living images of the switch, they witnessed elegance and splendor. They gave themselves to the glamorous and developed to "Edel-Punks", their hairstyles resemble those of the punks, their pointed shoes the New Wavern. By putting the elegant in the place of the sloppy and the noble in the place of the vulgar, and putting it in the place of the defeat, they became anti-punks.
After punk was also successfully marketed by Vivienne Westwood and Malcom McLaren , other fashion designers also took up the style and made influences from the scene fashion for the masses. On the stage Adam & The Ants, Steve Strange, Boy George, and many others were at the disposal of the young people as a fashionable model, which they could also play with due to the start of the production of live music. Bogey's profit from the empty German market in the middle of the 80s and reached a high level of awareness through clever advertising in youth magazines.

Gothic - The birth of a fashion

Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 9At the beginning of the 80s the Gothics rose from their trenches. No one knew how to sort the pale-painted figures dressed in black, so they were placed in the musical environment to which they seemed to belong. The leading scene club was the Batcavein the British capital of London, which alone had already made possible the conclusion of its ambience by the logo of its membership card (the contour of a bat). The decor was predominantly in the colors black, blood red and purple, while the decoration dominated velvet, sequins, spiderwebs and metallic elements. An ideal setting for every Horrorfilm. Just as the interior furnishings appeared, the visitors, who were waiting for weddings in meters of snakes in front of the club. The faces pale and eyes black painted, while their bodies were hung with black drapery.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 8They differed from all the scenes preceding them by important external features. The punks appeared as an aestheticization of the ugly, the New Waver ironized the normal and the New Romantics appeared as a revival culture of the glamorous past times. The Gothics were different, they staged the horror. " Black clothing (with a hint of purple), often with fetishistic, historical, religious or occult reflections, deathly pale complexions, black and red cosmetics, heavy silver jewellery and black, spiky hait characterise this style. 1 In their clothing style, the Gothics built on the origins of black fashion and adopted important elements in order to differentiate themselves in the course of individualization.
The "Gothic-Gothic"
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 10The Gothic-Gothic is the classical Gothic, which was then as rare as today. It was not until the mid-80s that the term "Gothic" extended a fashionable umbrella over all other clothing styles of the subculture. Wide, flowing, body-covering clothing was stylistic for the classical Gothic. They wore cloaks, gowns, cloaks, and wide coats with wide sleeves. It was assumed that the wearer goes to a distanced attitude toward his own body 2 and, by the way, he also emphasizes the social characteristics of the sexual identity.
The gown is a long-sleeved and knochellanges amtskleid, which was already known by lawyers, academics and clergymen. The cloaks (capes) are coat-like garments without sleeves, which were originally worn with hood. The Spaniards of the 16th century used this as a typical piece of clothing for the gentlemen. The monks were shamelessly stealing their cloaks, a mostly straight-cut or tunic-like shirt gown. The typical long leather coat with wide sleeves often also referred to as a cowl.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 11Capes can still be found today in relevant catalogs of the scene, even though they have clearly gained in quality in their present-day designs and are often made of high-quality velvet lined with red inner lining. On the other hand, the gowns, priests, and monk's robes have almost disappeared, since their simplicity in the course of individualization was no longer sufficient.
The Waver
The stereotype, which was widespread in the scene, carried very wide trousers, bodices with bat sleeves, wide coats and jackets. The Pumphosen was a central feature of the Wavers (463), which found its worthy conclusion in the shape of the pointed shoes of the New Waver (458).
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 12She is a long, wide, sack-shaped trousers without pockets, tightens at the ankles. It can be traced back to the army which was worn in Spain in the sixteenth century and was often filled with rosshaar on the hip, in order to exacerbate the desired form. At the end of the 19th century, women's rights activist Amelia Bloomer developed a similar trousers called "Turkish Trousers" or "Bloomers". The pikes finished the slimmer ends of the pants with their often impressive tops.
The billiards, which were brought to Europe by cruisers from the Orient 3 , are a recurring element of the 80s. At the time of rococo and baroque, the buckles and ornaments for shoes 4 , which are found at the pikes, are reincarnated. The waders, however, took over the shoes from the early subcultures of the 60s and 70s, where the mods provided for a revival of pointed shoes, later re-fashioned by the New Waver.
The romantics
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 15They turned the New Romantics into the black fashion world of Gothics. The romantics showed themselves masterfully in dealing with historical elements of the clothing and sampled through all the centuries around them to a new style. Feminine romantics were characterized by wide skirt and dress forms, which were additionally adorned with cloaks and head-dresses. Even narrow and deeply cut tops and bodices were already found in the 80s. They play with elements of the Burgundian fashion of the 15th century and above all with the baroque and rococo elements of the 17th and 18th century without taking into consideration historical connections.
Male romantics preferred wide shirt shapes and tight, body-reinforced pants. The romantically playful ruffle shirt (479), on sleeves and the chest area with numerous frills, is in all variations is central element of the male style.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 13Frequently used fabrics are velvet, lace and ruffles, which stand for luxury and elegance and a romantic past to remember. Ruffles have their roots in Rococo, lace is one of the achievements of the Italian High Renaissance. Velvet has its origins in the Middle Ages, in which it was even more precious and coveted than silk.
Latex, lacquer and leather
In the late '80s, the corset and bodice appeared in the garbo's outerwear (490). Clothing pieces made of lacquer and leather are first adopted in elements, later completely in fashion. Initially taken from stylistic features of the romantics, one discovers the bodice with overlaps from the SM scene as an erotic stylistic device. Apparently, a tied and constrainedly narrowed waistline observer and wearer alike. Lacquered lacquer finishes match the feminine style of New Waver. (494 & 497)
The return to body-stressed features of the body is a phenomenon of the late 80s. While at the beginning of fashion they tried to conceal their own bodies and make them unrecognizable in gender and expression, one went back to the end of the decade in a clearly gender-oriented way of the clothing style. Pikes and pointed pumps with small heels were pushed out by ever higher plateau shoes and chunky boots, floor-length robes waving fishnet stockings and mini-skirts.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 14While latex, varnish and leather in the SM scene function as material fetish, most gothics are more concerned with the external appeal and with the play with the forbidden and spoofing. Only a few are actually attracted to a Sado-Masochistic sexuality.
everyday
Black, black, black are all my clothes; Black, black, black is all I have. That's why I love everything that is so black ... "
Despite the outward rebellion, against the colorful and neongrellen 80er many Gothics in the life of the society. Even if one remains faithful to the color, one tried to reduce the optical rebellion to a socially acceptable level. Dresses in the normal range marked many scene-goers in everyday life. They used comfortable jeans and leather pants, t-shirts and sweatshirts, which are decorated only by rivet belts or band logo.
Today's everyday clothing of the Gothics has become more extreme. Only with increasing social acceptance in the course of the decades is more and more borne of the style of the scene in everyday life. As a result, the outfits reserved for "scene evenings" are becoming increasingly extreme in order to be able to exclude themselves from everyday life within the scene. I claim fetish clothing, cyber-fashion, and increasingly extreme body wear are the consequences of wider acceptance. In the early '80s black hair, which had been shaved off at the sides, was a clear signal of the exclusion, nowadays high heels, lacquer & leather, gas masks, dog leashes and a lot of skin are needed to give a similar signal.

"The hair is the most important!"

hairstyles
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 16Why do I talk about hair when it comes to clothing? Well, an investigation among teenagers showed that 68% 5 of all respondents felt that the hair style was the most important on the overall outfit. Under Gothics these values ​​should have been much higher in the 1980s.
The hair was similar to the punks high-heeled and partly elaborately staged. In hours of sitting in front of the mirror under the use of plentiful hairspray, the most elaborate creations were created. To put the cover hair on a tower, while the sides and neck were shaved off, is one of the most original scene dresses. In the plate (also called Tellermine or Tellerschädel), the covering hairs are placed into a flat, plate-shaped structure which widens outwards from the nape and the sides.
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 17While these hairstyles were rather worn by men, the women followed other styles. The "haired hair" or "wuschelkopf" hairstyle was an explosive and if possible in all directions protruding hairdo. The female hairstyle, created with a lot of hairspray, is reminiscent of Robert Smith (The Cure), who is probably considered an icon of the Wuschelkopfes.
In everyday life one followed the practicality and brought the hair formations to the collapse, in order to bind them back as a horse tail, the neck and sides remained naturally preserved. Black dyed hair became a must, the scarcity of the blond hair of the New Waver and the Waver.
Makeup, Jewelry & Accessories
Bogey's Underground Fashion - Page 18Almost typical for the make-up of the Gothics, was the pale-faced face that was regarded as a status symbol in the 18th century. The Gothics, however, brought it more in connection with death and transience or just as a clear contrast to the black outfit. The blackness found itself in the eyes. They were bordered in black with a kjal pencil and often pulled over the eye area to the temples. Eyeliner conjured up fractal-mystical structures around her eyes, reminding her of the make-up of ancient Egypt. Red lipstick provided for the finishing touches and thus plays on older cinematic horror productions. " The make-up of the Gothics anticipates the fate of the future death and is to express the solidarity to the dead "2 "Painting dead" was scene jargon.
With silver jewelry in all variations, the Gothic finished his outfit, the pikes were often decorated with more chains, rings and buckles. Countless narrow bracelets of silver and jewelery, with mystical symbols, formed the contrast to the otherwise uniform black outfit. At the same time, they liked to use provocative styling as they were already established by the punks. In the later development, one took over also rivet hulks and richly equipped wristbands, which are also due to the punks. Jewelery also began with the discussion about the motives and intentions of the Gothics, after all the whole thing had to say something about the sentiment of the wearer. But in many cases the young people followed their example, Madonnaestablished, for example, chains with Christian crosses as fashion jewelry. Gothics refer to Siouxsie Sioux or Billy Idol . Black painted fingernails stood in contrast to numerous rings, often one had the impression ten fingers were not enough.
The variety of accessories was aching and a gold pit for every scene dealer. Gloves, sunglasses, belts, pantyhose, bags, headgear and towels. Everything was collected and relevant to the scene. With each part the individual became a work of art. Symbol-laden jewelry and eye-catching accessories, which differ from the mainstream, played an outstanding role. Körperschmuck had been on the rise since punk.
And then? 
With the 80s the comprehensibility of the clothing styles also ends. There are always new influences on an expanding subculture. In principle, all styles of the 80s are still to be found today, more rarely in pure form, more frequently as elements of a remix culture. Perhaps this article gives a little insight into the black fashion of the eighties, although I do not want to presume to know and describe the totality of all the details.
The fact is that the personal identification potential of each individual decreases with increasing diversity. To be washed away are the original styles, too absurd the ever-more in-going developments. This is an attempt at an overview of the origins, I look forward to your additions and corrections, your memories and impressions.