The Gothic
Milieu: Black Metal, Satanism, and Vampirism by Massino Introvigne - presented by Leo Zagami, Dec 13,
2006
Last Updated:
Thursday, December 14, 2006 05:30:57 AM
Posted:
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Leo Zagami
The Gothic Milieu: Black Metal, Satanism, and
Vampires by Massimo Introvigne - A slightly different version of this
paper was presented at the conference "Rejected and Suppressed
Knowledge: The Racist Right and the Cultic Milieu" organized by the
Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention, Stockholm, 15-16 February
1997
The New Satanism by Illuminati Massimo Introvigne XI Degree OTOA
In 1996 both Italy and France were shocked by criminal cases related to
Satanist groups. In Italy Marco Dimitri, the young leader of the larger
Italian Satanist group, the Luciferian Children of Satan (Bambini di
Satana Luciferiani), was arrested twice in the same year on charges of
rape. In France graves were desecrated in Toulon (and subsequently in
other towns in Southern France): four members of a small Satanist band
were arrested. Similar incidents took place in Romania, Russia and other
countries. The media were taken by surprise, considering that by 1996
the Satanism scares of the 1980s and early 1990s had largely subsided.
Modern Satanism appeared in the 17th century. Satanism should not be
confused with witchcraft. While witchcraft is a popular and normally
unorganized phenomenon, modern Satanism is the worship of the Devil
within the frame of organized movements and elaborate ritual. Modern
Satanists -- unlike participants in earlier witchcraft -- are largely
members of the middle and upper classes. Similarly, Satanism scares are
different from witch hunts. Unlike the latter, the former credit
Satanists not only with bloody crimes and relationships with the Devil
but, more specifically, with the power to secretly influence -- if not
direct -- the life of whole nations and the course of human history.
Organized Satanism and Satanism scares manifest themselves in the
history of the West in a cyclical way. Groups of Satanists (normally
quite small) are detected and their activities are magnified by this
modern invention, the press (in later cycles, TV). As a reaction, a
Satanism scare arises, where anti-Satanists usually grossly exaggerate
both the number and the power of the Satanists, insisting that they are
behind contemporary social movements they perceive as disturbing. In a
third phase, anti-Satanism is disqualified by its own exaggerations,
becomes disreputable and opens the way for new open activities of
Satanists, thus for a new cycle.
The first important cycle starts with the activities of a group of
Satanists at the court of the French King Louis XIV between 1662-1679.
When the main Satanists are tried for a number of crimes, press and
pamphlets guarantee an international notoriety to the case. Between the
end of the 17th century and the beginning of 18th century a Satanism
scare follows, where anti-Satanists suspect Satanists (actually a few
dozens people in the French incident) to conspire in the dark to promote
Enlightenment skepticism and anti-Christian culture and politics.
Ultimately anti-Satanist literature became so extreme as to be easily
discredited. This discrediting paved the way for the occult revival of
the years of the French Revolution.
The Revolution, however (and the visibility of occult and magical groups
in the same years), prompted another Satanism scare which lasted through
the 1850s and was revived in the 1890s. The Revolution, Christian
anti-Satanists argued, was so incredible that it could not be a mere
political phenomenon, and a whole religious literature attributed it to
the conspiracy of secret societies such as the notorious Illuminati or,
more directly, to Satanists directed by the Devil in person. Apparently,
small groups of Satanists were in fact active in France, Belgium and
possibly other countries in the 1850s. Their activities caused the usual
anti-Satanist over-reaction.
The Satanism scare (which tried to explain also the surprising success
of Spiritualism through Satanic conspiracy theories) had a first
scholarly phase where Catholic intellectuals discussed theories on
Satanism and Satan’s influence. In a second phase -- after the success
of Joris Karl Huysmans’ novel Là-bas (1891) had familiarized the public
with Satanism and Black Masses -- scholars were replaced by journalists.
At least two of the latter -- the notorious Léo Taxil (1854-1907) and
his co-conspirator Charles Hacks ("Dr. Bataille") -- were clever frauds
who, having spread incredible tales about Satanists, later admitted to
have exploited the gullibility of certain Catholic conservative readers
for a variety of purposes. The game could not go on indefinitely, and
Taxil had to admit the fraud in 1897. His confession discredited the
Satanism scares for decades and only after sixty years a truly
international scare manifested itself again. A large sociological
literature exists on the Satanism scares of the 1970s-1990s, an
over-reaction to the visibility of contemporary Satanist organizations
dating from the foundation of California’s Church of Satan in 1966 and a
manifestation of larger hostility to "cults".
By the early 1990s, the theory that underground "generational" Satanic
cults are widespread and prey on day-care toddlers had been largely
debunked by social scientists and law enforcement agencies throughout
the United States and Europe. Memories "recovered" in therapy of past
"satanic" ritual abuses are increasingly rejected as court evidence in
both United States and Europe. Only small pockets of Christian
counter-cult activists and fringe therapists still believe in the
factual reality of "satanic" ritual abuses recovered during memory
therapy.
Although the 1996 incidents have been greeted by these groups with a
we-told-you-so attitude, the scenario was in fact quite different. The
Satanism discovered by Italian and French law enforcement agencies in
1996 is not the same Satanism exposed in the core books of the
anti-Satanist movement in the 1980s. It is also different from "classic"
Satanism of organizations like Anton LaVey's Church of Satan or Michael
Aquino’s Temple of Set. The scenario introduced in the Satanism scares
of the 1980s postulated that Satanists are very difficult to recognize.
They are lawyers, doctors, corporate executives. In fact, their
activities are so clandestine that they could be discovered only in
therapy by inducing their victims to recover post-traumatic memories.
The 1996 Satanists are, if anything, too evident. Marco Dimitri and his
followers dress all in black, wear a plethora of Satanic symbols, and
have appeared as spokespersons for Satan in popular Italian TV talk
shows. While not as famous as Dimitri, members of the Toulon gang also
dressed like a Satanist is supposed to dress.
Classic Satanism was born in California in the 1960s.
The Church of Satan was established in San Francisco by Anton Szandor
LaVey (1930-1997) in 1966 as a development of an organization called The
Magic Circle that he co-founded in 1960 with Hollywood underground
film-maker Kenneth Anger. In 1975 most of the leadership of the Church
of Satan left LaVey's organization and followed Michael Aquino into the
splinter group Temple of Set. The Church of Satan became mostly a
mail-order organization during the 1980s, but experienced a comeback of
a sort in the 1990s through new leaders, the publication of the
newsletter The Black Flame, and the appearance of some dozens of sister
organizations throughout the world.
Although LaVey believed that Satan is only the metaphor for a higher
(and more selfish) human potential, while Aquino maintains that Satan
(or, rather, Set) is a personal being, both are heavily indebted for
their worldviews and ceremonies to British magus Aleister Crowley
(1875-1947). While Crowley did not believe in the personal existence of
Satan and despised Satanists, his rituals have been adapted -- with the
appropriate changes -- by almost all modern Satanist groups.
At least before the mid-1980s members of classic Satanist groups were
typically middle class urbanites in their forties and fifties. Except
for ceremonies, they would wear a jacket and a tie rather than black
leather "Satanic" clothings. This is certainly true for European
offshoots of classic Satanism such as the two Churches of Satan based in
Turin, Italy.
Additionally, their leadership needed to be rather cultivated, since the
magical works of authors such as Crowley are not easy to grasp and
require a solid background in Western esotericism. The situation
somewhat changed in the late 1980s, when the Temple of Set and some of
the smaller groups inspired by the Church of Satan realized that a
sizeable youth subculture potentially interested in Satanism existed and
tried, with mixed results, to get in touch with it. The original
Californian Church of Satan and the Italian Churches of Satan, however,
still largely maintain the original character. By contrast the new
Satanist groups -- such as those "discovered" by the police in Italy and
France in 1996 -- are typically lead by youths in their 30s, have as
members mostly teenagers, and it is extremely rare that their leaders
are well-educated in traditional Western occult lore. They are much more
interested in music.
The Gothic Milieu from the 1970s to the 1990s
The Gothic milieu (occasionally called the Dark Wave, as a sub milieu of
the 1970’s New Wave) has largely been created by rock music, although
fiction, comics, movies, Ã role-playing games and later the Internet
also had a relevant influence. Although the term Gothic was created by
outsiders, it was quickly accepted by the movement, notwithstanding the
fact that the latter largely ignored 18th and 19th century Gothic
literature (with the possible exception of Dracula, whose inclusion in
the Gothic genre is however disputed by contemporary critics). Gothic
music should not be confused with heavy metal. Metal plays on the power
of extreme human emotions and feelings. Gothic concentrates on human
reactions to particular emotions associated with death, corpses, blood,
the macabre, and vampires. Although the Devil is often mentioned, he is
not always a key player in the Gothic scene. Besides, Satan is mentioned
in many brands of rock music that are not Gothic (and so are vampires,
who make frequent guest appearances in heavy metal music).
The origins of Gothic come from many different sources. Gothic themes
emerged around 1970 in England and the United States with artists and
groups like Alice Cooper and Black Sabbath. Although these musicians
were not purely Gothic, fans of Alice Cooper were largely responsible
for introducing the Gothic outlook, with its black-leather clothing and
silver earrings for males, in many European countries. In 1976 David Letts founded The Damned in England, a band that was originally a punk
group, but later focused mostly on Gothic. Letts changed his name to
David Vanian (from "Transylvanian") and focused on the vampire theme
(although Nazi symbols were also occasionally introduced). In the same
year, Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Ian Curtis (1957-1980) and Terry Mason
(later replaced by Stephen Morris) decided to start a band in
Manchester. Originally called Warsaw, they changed their name to Joy
Division in 1978 in order not to be confused with a pre-existing London
punk group, Warsaw Pakt. The name came from the line of huts were young
deported women were forced to prostitute themselves to German officers
in Nazi concentration camps. Notwithstanding the name, Joy Division
denied any Nazi sympathies and in fact appeared at the Manchester Rock
Against Racism benefit concert in 1978. Although Joy Division
occasionally used Nazi paraphernalia on stage, its portrait of Nazism
was, if anything, sad, as evidenced from the following lines of its hit
"They Walked In Line":
All dressed in
uniforms so fine,
they drank and killed to pass the time.
Wearing the shame of all their crimes
with measured steps they walked in line.
They walked in line.
They carried pictures of their wives,
and number tags to prove their lies.
And made it through the whole machine,
with dirty hearts and hands washed clean.
They walked in line.
Joy Division eluded classification, but its
haunted and ghostly atmospheres had a deep influence on later
Gothic. On May 18, 1980, just before Joy Division was to leave
England for their first U.S. tour, Ian Curtis hung himself in
his kitchen. Without its talented singer and lyricist, replaced
by Bernard Sumner, the group continued as New Order and remained
influential on the alternative (but much less on the Gothic)
music scene.
In the years when Joy Division was becoming popular, a more
cultivated version of Gothic was introduced in England by singer
Suzie Sioux, "Siouxsie". Sioux came from punk, and was inspired
by groups like the Sex Pistols. She was also a friend of Genesis
P-Orridge, an Aleister Crowley enthusiast and the founder of the
Temple of Psychick Youth (TOPY). Orridge's music — the first
wave of industrial, or "industrial culture" -- was as far from
Gothic as possible, but his contacts with Sioux did much to
introduce Crowley in the Gothic milieu. Later, Orridge will
become an inspiration for the birth of the "second wave" or
industrial music, much closer to the Gothic and, in fact,
occasionally labeled "industrial Gothic". This further subgenre
will emerge in the late 1980s around the Wax Trax circle in
Chicago, will become well-known with the Nine Inch Nails of
Trent Reznor and their influential album Pretty Hate Machine
(1989), and will eventually triumph with Marylin Manson. In the
late 1970s Sioux founded Siouxsie and The Banshees. Robert
Smith, the leader of a much more famous band, the Cure, worked
with Siouxsie and the Banshees in 1983-1984 following four
influential Cure albums.
Largely responsible for defining Gothic as a genre was Bauhaus,
whose leader Peter Murphy continued as a popular Gothic musician
after the dissolution of the group in 1983. By 1983 -- the year
when another early Gothic group, The Misfits, also separated --
Gothic music was experiencing a boom. New groups emerged,
including The Sisters of Mercy and later, in 1988, Dark Theater
whose leader, Vlad, wears portable fangs and claims to actually
drink blood (originally only from his wife, Lynda, who later
divorced him and now proclaim herself a "lesbian Goth").
Blood-drinkers are, at any rate, a small distinct subculture
within the Gothic milieu, perhaps closer to sado-masochism than
to teenage Gothic.
While classic punk was experiencing a crisis, Gothic groups,
including the 45 Grave, inherited some of its features and its
fans. By 1990 the Gothic scene was truly international, with
bands in countries such as Japan, Sweden, Finland, New Zealand,
Poland, Italy, in addition to Germany, the United Kingdom, and
the United States. By 1990, the Gothic subculture was well
established with specialized magazines, including Propaganda
(established in New York by Fred H. Berger and perhaps the most
important voice for the Gothic), and Ghastly.
Non-Gothic groups such as the Iron Maiden and Kiss felt
compelled to issue at least an album with Gothic themes. But
readers of Propaganda and other members of the Gothic subculture
typically skipped the most famous groups as being too
commercial. They rather regarded themselves as part of an elite
subculture, lionized less well-known groups and remained apart
from the larger world of rock fans. Being part of the Gothic
milieu for many was not a Saturday evening concert affair, but a
permanent lifestyle. "True" Goths dress in black every day of
the week, wear peculiar jewelry and use their own jargon. Rather
macabre allusions and jokes -- whose meaning is often lost to
outsiders -- are a trademark feature of their style.
Around 1990 the Gothic milieu, born from music, started to be
increasingly defined by its literary preferences as well. Two
Gothic role-playing games focusing on vampires -- Ravenloft,
that emerged in 1990 from the fantasy game Dungeons & Dragons,
and Vampire: The Masquerade, introduced by White Wolf in 1991 --
had an important influence on the milieu.
Considering the Gothic milieu's love affair with horror
literature (including frequent allusions in its music to such
classics as Dracula), it is surprising that references to
Stephen King are virtually non-existent. King is probably just
too popular for a subculture glorying in its minority status. He
also insists that his novels do not promote any kind of
worldview. By contrast, Anne Rice -- who occasionally does claim
that she is introducing a worldview, with increasingly apparent
Gnostic and Kabalistic references -- is immensely popular in the
Gothic milieu. Classics of Gothic and horror literature, from
"Monk" Lewis to Lovecraft, are largely ignored, with the
occasional exception of Dracula.
Gothic events, including the 1989 Theatre of the Vampires held
in Long Beach, California, musicians such as Tony Lestat (a main
participant in the 1989 event and singer of Wreckage), shows
such as Tony Sokol's La Commedia Del Sangue: Dances From A
Shallow Grave - The Vampyr Theatre, Gothic bands such as Lestat,
and the Italian Theatre des Vampires, fanzines such as Savage
Garden (published in English in Milan and now renamed Wistaria)
all borrowed their names (and much more) from Anne Rice. Later,
in 1992, another New Orleans female horror writer, Poppy Z.
Brite, wrote a cult novel for the Gothic milieu, Lost Souls,
featuring the encounter of real undead vampires with the Gothic
subculture of a small American town.
As of the mid-1990s the very success of the Gothic threatens its
existence as a separate genre in rock music. Contemporary rock
is eclectic, and it is often difficult to tell what genre a
group is all about.
Such labels as post-punk, dark metal, doom metal, garage rock
and trash are difficult to define and often include Gothic
themes. If anything, some of the new labels mean to convey a
passion for the outrageous and the extreme, and regard the
Gothic bands of the 1980s as moderate. The most extreme subgenre
which emerged in the 1980s is black metal, mixing heavy metal
and Gothic. Black metal is both musically and culturally less
sophisticated than Gothic, but fans may switch from one to
another and still remain part of the same Gothic sub cultural
milieu.
Generally credited with starting black metal is a British band,
Venom. Formed in 1978 and originally named Oberon, Venom assumed
its name in 1980 and introduced Satanism and the cult of death
as a main heavy metal theme. Their song "Black Metal" (1982)
defined the subgenre and became an anthem for the
movement:
Black is the
night, metal we fight
Power amps set to explode.
Energy screams, magic and dreams
Satan records the first note.
We chime the bell, chaos and hell
Metal for maniacs pure.
Fast melting steel, fortune on wheels Brain Hemorrhage is the Cure (Venom - Welcome to
Hell, 1997)
Proclaiming themselves the "Sons of Satan",
Venom called to:
Live like an
angel, die like a devil,
Got a place in hell reserved for me,
Live like an angel, die like a devil,
Gonna burn in Hell, that’s where I’m gonna be" ["Live Like An Angel (Die Like a Devil)," 1981,
in
Venom- Welcome to Hell 1997].
Another of Venom’s most famous -- and both
Satanic and vampiric -- hits was "In League With Satan" (1981):
I’m in league
with Satan
I was raised in Hell
I walk the streets of Salem
Amongst the living dead
I need no one to tell me
What’s wrong or right
I drink the blood of children Stalk my prey at night (Venom - Welcome to Hell
1997).
Specialists of metal discuss whether after
Venom there is a difference between black metal and death metal,
the latter being more brutal, more interested in drugs and sex,
and more faithful to Venom’s original inspiration. One problem
is that some of the most famous bands have evolved through the
years. Bathory, started in Sweden in 1983, was originally very
much influenced by Venom but by 1987, with Under the Sign of the
Black Mark, started evolving towards a new style, later called
"modern" or "Northern" black metal. In 1990, with Hammerheart,
an element of Viking romanticism started playing a key role. The
Swiss group Hellhammer between 1982-1984 was one of the bands
defining black metal; renamed Celtic Frost in 1984 they quickly
evolved out of black metal and continued until 1993 insisting
that they were not part at all of the black metal scene. The
early albums of the German band Sodom, established in 1983, were
black metal, while their later productions could rather be
classified as speed metal, a different subgenre. By contrast,
Florida bands such as Death (established in 1985), Obituary,
Deicide and Morbid Angel (who came to Florida from North
Carolina) are usually classified as death (rather than black)
metal. Contemporary doom metal may be regarded as a later
development of death metal.
Black metal has become popular in segments of the Gothic milieu
in a number of countries, including Greece, Brazil, France,
Poland, Norway and Sweden. A frequent feature of black metal,
particularly in its "modern" or "Northern" form, is extreme
hostility to Jesus Christ and Christianity. The anti-Christian
theme keeps together different worldviews. Some black metal
groups are pagan; others are Satanist. Some are not interested
in politics, while others are overtly neo-Nazi or promote a
nationalism rooted in pre-Christian Northern Europe. In Norway--
and subsequently in other countries -- the anti-Christian
activities of some black metal groups took the illegal form of
"esotericism", or esoteric terrorism. Two black metal groups --
Emperor and Burzum -- were involved in burning Christian
churches, including historical monuments, and in desecrating
Christian cemeteries. Emperor one-time member, Bård Eithun,
killed a gay man who approached him at night in a Lillehammer
street in 1992. Vandalizing graveyards seems to be a popular
activity in segments of the black metal milieu in a number of
countries, including Italy and France. Varg Vikernes ("Count
Grishnackh", or "The Count"), the leader of Burzum -- who
somewhat converted from Satanism to "a National Socialist form
of racialist Odinism" --, not only was involved in the burning
of at least ten churches, but was later sentenced to 21 years of
prison after killing in 1993 fellow black metal musician Oystein
Aarseth, "Euronymous". Although the press liberally described
the homicide as "Satanic" and "ritual" -- and Varg himself
claimed that the unfortunate Euronymous was a "false Satanist"
and a "communist" --, in fact the main reason for the crime was
a quarrel over money and the management of the musical label
Deatlik Silence. [1]
Varg remains a popular character in the black metal milieu, and
continues to write music and articles for the specialized
fanzines from jail. In 1997 he published his "sacred text",
Vargsmål, and announced that he had discovered a forerunner and
(alleged) pioneer racialist Odinist in Vidkun Quisling
(1887-1945), whose very name is synonymous of collaboration with
the Nazis, not only in Norway. From a musical point of view,
Mayhem -- Euronymous’ band, started in 1984 and coming back in
1994 after Euronymous’ death -- remains the most influential
model of "modern" Black Metal. In 1990 they recorded Live in
Leipzig which included one of their most famous songs,
"Carnage":
Witchcraft,
blood and Satan
Meet the face of Death
Blood
Fire
Torture
Pain
KILL
(...) Winds of war, winds of hate
Armageddon, tales from Hell
The wage of mayhem, the wage of sin Come and hear, Lucifer’s sings (Mayhem, "Live in
Leipzig",1990).
The earlier "Deathcrush" (1987) was not more
reassuring:
Demonic
laughter your cremation
Your lungs gasp for air but are filled with blood
A sudden crack as I crushed your skull.
(...) Death, nicely crucified
Death, heads on stakes.
The barbecue has just begun. Deathcrush - Deathcrush — Deathcrush (Mayhem, "Deathcrush",
1987).
As the fate of Euronymous sadly confirmed,
violence in the Norwegian black metal scene was not purely a
matter of lyrics. Without burning churches, groups such as
Bekhira and Osculum Infame in France, or Marduk in Sweden are
not less anti-Christian. A 1995 CD of Marduk (evolving from a
1991 demo) is called Fuck Me Jesus, and its cover shows a young
girl masturbating with a crucifix. A look at the catalogue of
the French musical distributor Osmose Productions (specialized
in black metal) shows bands with names such as Impaled Nazarene
(from Finland), Rotting Christ (from Greece), Diabolos Rising
(with musicians from Greece and Finland), Fallen Christ (and a
number of references to Aleister Crowley). In France some
industrial rock bands, including Dissonant Elephants and Non,
have jumped onto the anti-Christian bandwagon, although with a
different musical style. In 1996 Dissonant Elephants released a
CD, Our Eyes Like Daggers, with liberal quotes from the
ubiquitous Aleister Crowley and a cover featuring Jesus Christ
on the cross with a clown-like red nose. The activities of these
groups are among the reasons for the establishment of a Catholic
Anti-Defamation League in France in 1997.
On the other hand, it is important to note that black metal is
not really representative of the Gothic milieu in general. It is
a small segment, a subculture within a subculture. There is a
larger number of musical and other groups inspired by Anne Rice,
whose worldview is not anti-Christian but rather a brand of
gnostic Christianity (as suggested in Rice's novel Memnoch the
Devil, 1995). Black metal is also anti-Jewish, with frequent
references in its fanzines to the infamous Protocols of the
Elders of Zion, while Rice's 1996 novel Servant of the Bones is
a tribute to Jewish esoteric culture. Black metal also
emphasizes Satanic and pagan symbols and has no colours but
black, while the mainstream Gothic subculture, influenced by the
glam rock music of Kiss, and by Tom Cruise's movie portrait of
Anne Rice's vampire Lestat, increasingly includes elaborate and
baroque ways of dressing, quite far away from the old black
leather jackets.
The Gothic Milieu as a Metanetwork and the Emergence of
Gothic Movements
The Gothic milieu is loosely organized. Its main organizing
agents are magazines such as Propaganda, but more obscure
fanzines with limited circulation also have an important
influence. It could be described as a network, or -- more
accurately -- as a metanetwork, where participants in different
networks convene. There is, for instance, a recognizable network
of Anne Rice fans, and thousands attend the yearly Gatherings of
the Coven organized in New Orleans by The Anne Rice's Vampire
Lestat Fan Club (established in 1988) and by the Louisiana
writer herself. Most of these fans dress like the vampire Lestat
only once a year, and have no contacts with the larger Gothic
milieu. Some, however, do adopt a Gothic lifestyle. For them the
network of Anne Rice fans is the door to enter the larger
metanetwork of the Gothic subculture. Similar comments are in
order for the many fans of Gothic role-playing games such as
Ravenloft or Vampire: The Masquerade. (There are also darker
role-paying games for the black metal milieu, but their
following is not very large). Hundreds of thousands of them
certainly do not dress in black, and are not even interested in
Gothic music. But, again, active involvement in these
role-playing communities (and their lively exchange over the
Internet) may become a door to access the Gothic metanetwork.
This does not mean that every fan of role-playing games is on
his or her way to become a Satanist. This view is promoted by
professional anti-Satanists such as Pat Pulling who, after the
suicide of her son Bink in 1982, founded BADD (Bothered About
Dungeons and Dragons), claiming that role-playing games were
literally "stalking our children for Satan." Groups like BADD
are part of a larger Evangelical counter-cult (and
anti-Satanist) scene and seems to have become less influential
in recent years. At any rate, it is when fans of Gothic music
also become interested in Anne Rice, and when Ravenloft players
start attending Gothic clubs and dressing in black that the
metanetwork really takes shape. As mentioned earlier,
participation in one of the Gothic networks does not necessarily
mean that one takes the next step and becomes a participant in
the metanetwork or part of the Gothic milieu.
Further, being part of the Gothic milieu does not mean that one
joins a particular movement. Dressing mostly in black, wearing
silver jewelry with macabre themes, and focusing musical
preferences on Gothic groups not well-known in rock's mainline
market are the trademarks of the Gothic milieu. In Stark and
Bainbridge terms, many or most participants in the Gothic milieu
only participate in audience or client cults, not in cult
movements. Occasionally, however, movements emerge, but they
only involve a minority of those who participate in the milieu.
It seems appropriate to distinguish between pre-existing
movements recruiting in the Gothic milieu, and movements born
from the milieu itself.
Among the first are some "old" Satanist and neo-pagan groups. As
mentioned earlier, some classic Satanist groups have realized
that the Gothic milieu may be an interesting ground for
recruiting new members. The Temple of Set has designed its Web
page in order to attract the Gothic subculture, and on February
1, 1997 Don Webb, High Priest of the Temple of Set, introduced
his movement at the Hellhouse of Hollywood, a (now defunct)
California bookstore typically catering to Gothic clients.
Classic Satanist groups are quite small, and even the addition
of a few new members could be significant in order to preserve
their very existence. Their success in recruiting in the Gothic
milieu is not, however, spectacular.
Most Gothic bands are not particularly interested in Satan or
Satanism. Some black metal fringes certainly are, but they
typically scorn organizations like the Church of Satan or the
Temple of Set as "moderate" or "liberal" Satanism. Uww, the
founder of French black metal fanzine Deo Occidi (published in
English), contrasts "liberal Satanism" and "fascist Satanism"
and embraces the latter. The "liberal Satanism" of classic
American movements is regarded as extreme individualism and as a
shameless apology for capitalism. Uww also mentions that Anton
LaVey is a "moderate Jew". Additionally, classic Satanism is
accused of dealing only in words. Black metal prefers actions
and events, and clearly admire Scandinavian esoterrorism. It is
also against capitalism, liberalism, democracy, and Judaism
according to classic European Nazi models. Small Satanist groups
catering to the black metal Satanist fringe include the Black
Order, the Order of the Nine Angles, the Ordo Sinistra Vivendi
(formerly the Order of the Left Hand Path), and the Order of the
Jarls of Balder. None of them has more than fifty members and
all belong to a network called The Infernal Alliance. Although
this wing of Satanism had its most important centers in the U.S.
and New Zealand, combining fringes of classic Satanism and black
metal, it is now present in European countries such as the
United Kingdom and France. Most of these groups are openly Nazi.
In the version of the Black Mass of the Order of the Nine
Angles, participants affirm their belief that "Adolf Hitler was
sent by the Gods to lead us into greatness". In bad but not
difficult to understand Latin, they worship Hitler together with
Lucifer. The priest gives the cup to the priestess with the
words:
"Suscipe, Lucifer, munus quod tibi offerimus memoriam recolentes,
Adolphus". All reply: "Hail Hitler".
Some neo-pagan groups have also attracted individual members of
the Gothic milieu. This is particularly true for continental
European and Scandinavian Odinist movements (who have in turn
attracted portions of the black metal fringe), while the British
and American Wicca is largely remote from the Gothic style.
English-speaking neo-paganism and Wicca have matured beyond
their early anti-Christian phase, while it is precisely the
anti-Christian theme of continental neo-paganism that may
occasionally attract black metal fans.
An interesting, if controversial, movement is the Temple of the
Vampire based in Lacey, Washington, and not to be confused with
the Order of the Vampyres within the Temple of Set. The Temple
appears to have been created outside the Gothic milieu but with
the specific purpose of attracting members of it. Its founder,
Lucas Martel, is a former member of the Church of Satan, and
like LaVey's, his is a largely a mail-order organization. It
claims to continue an ancient religion called Hekal Tiamat and
to keep its sacred book, the Shurpu Kishpu. The Temple is not
Satanist; it mostly teaches how to contact the Vampire Gods
through a ritual in seven steps. The crucial step is the fourth,
where the celebrant offers to the Vampire Gods his or her own
life force and the life force he or she has captured from other
weaker human beings. Signs such as "ringing in ears" or "unusual
pulling sensations at the solar plexus" confirm that the Vampire
Gods have accepted the offering. The Temple's worldview is also
apocalyptic, since "we are now approaching the Final Harvest",
when "the human stock shall be drained in a carnage of energy
release unlike anything seen before". The energy released by
killed humans would allow the Vampire Gods to descend and rule
on Earth with their faithful followers, the initiates. "The
humans shall (...) continue to serve as slave and food" when
"the Great Undead Gods shall return to their mighty thrones of
Power." Given the popularity of the vampire theme, many in the
Gothic milieu check out the Temple of the Vampire. Few stay,
fearing that the mail-order scheme may simply be a money-making
business, or disagreeing with the brutal worldview. After all,
in contemporary literature "postmodern" vampires are often
depicted as not entirely evil, but caring for humans (Chelsea
Quinn Yarbro's Saint-Germain) or at least psychologically
ambiguous (Anne Rice's Lestat).
Finally, a number of movements have really and entirely
originated from portions of the Gothic milieu. While some of
these movements are pagan and anti-Christian but not technically
Satanist -- including The Sacred Order of Emerald in France --
most claim to be Satanist. One of them, however, the French
Confrérie spirituelle sataniste les Croisades de la Nouvelle
Babylone, declares to promote the "unification" of "Satanists,
Luciferians, pagans and neo-pagans." The larger Satanist group
emerging from the Gothic milieu has been, before its disruption
by the Italian police in 1996, Marco Dimitri's Luciferian
Children of Satan (Bambini di Satana Luciferiani - BSL). BSL
grew in the 1980s from Dimitri's precocious interest in Aleister
Crowley and classic Satanism. But it proclaimed that classic
Satanism was a thing of the past, and that a new, bolder
Satanism was required.
The history of BSL is a paradoxical tribute to the power of the
media. BSL was originally a small, local group. It was only
when, from 1989, it was targeted by the Catholic milieu of
Bologna (Dimitri’s city and home to the largest Italian Catholic
counter-cult group, GRIS) and later by secular anti-cultists
that BSL attracted the interest of the national press. This lead
to Dimitri’s participation in some of the most popular Italian
TV talk shows as a spokesperson for Satan.
While classic Satanists in Italy have wisely avoided the media
(and criticized Dimitri for not following their example, Dimitri was only too eager to oblige talk shows host desperately
in need of someone "from the other side" to animate prime time
shows on Satanism which would be boring if limited to
anti-cultists and theologians. The "success" of some talk show
appearances as astonishing. True, Dimitri was generally
ridiculed by hosts and fellow guests alike. But -- among
millions of viewers -- he never failed to attract a dozen or
more teenagers who later contacted him at his
not-too-confidential Bologna address. The Italian black metal
milieu somewhat adopted Dimitri as a fellow traveler, despite
reservations by some. By 1996 BSL had grown to some 200 members
over North and Central Italy. In 1992 Dimitri was arrested for
obscenity, but this was not a serious matter. Much more serious
is the prosecution started against him and fellow members in
1996, citing rape of a female follower unwilling to fully comply
with her sexual duties as priestess and the participation of
children in rituals. On 20 June 1997 a jury of the court of
Bologna found all defendants in the Children of Satan case not
guilty of rape and child abuse. The leader, Marco Dimitri, was
however found guilty of a minor tax offense. The prosecutor,
herself an active participant in Bologna’s anti-cult milieu,
appealed the decision, but lost again in 2000.
It is certainly true that the BSL book Vangelo Infernale
(Infernal Gospel) -- intended for private circulation only -- at
least symbolically suggests that sexual abuse and pedophilia may
be part of an acceptable Satanic lifestyle. Vangelo Infernale is
not a particularly memorable esoteric text, and it is unlikely
that it may have attracted much interest.
Ultimately, there were the anti-Satanist campaigns of secular
anti-cult and Catholic counter-cult movements that introduced
the BSL to the media and made them more well-known than they
originally were.
On the other hand, the burning of churches in Norway, and the
profanation of cemeteries in Southern France, confirm that,
although small, some movements arising from the Gothic milieu,
particularly from some of its black metal fringes, are indeed
dangerous and may be involved in criminal activities. Law
enforcement agencies are to be commended if they keep a watch on
these movements, particularly those combining Satanism and
neo-Nazism. Undue media emphasis on their activities could, on
the other hand, backfire and induce copycat remakes of their
most spectacular deeds. It would surely be unfair to blame the
activities of a small group of movements, including a few
hundreds members throughout the world, to all neo-pagan or
occult organizations, whose activities are normally carried out
within the limits of laws. It would be even more unfair to
regard the most extreme Nazi or Satanic fringe of black metal as
representative of the entire Gothic milieu (and indeed of the
entire black metal subgenre, where many groups are neither Nazi
nor Satanist). Although unconventional in its way of dressing
and lifestyle -- designed, as with previous movements, to shock
adults and express teenagers' independence -- the Gothic milieu
is not normally engaged in criminal activities, nor primarily
interested in Satan or Adolf Hitler. The evolution of horror
literature may also exert a positive influence on the Gothic
milieu. The heroes of this literature, in its postmodern
versions, are no longer monsters who, like the Judeo-Christian
Satan, are totally evil, but psychologically complicated
characters -- epitomized by Anne Rice's Lestat -- caught in the
middle of eternal dilemmas about good and evil. One such
character is Angel, the only vampire portrayed sympathetically
in the Gothic fad of the late 1990s for teenagers, the TV series
Buffy the Vampire Slayer (which, of course, also has a
significant non-Gothic — and non-teenager -- following). The
other role model in the series are vampire slayers such as
Buffy, or techno-pagans good girls such as Buffy’s best friend,
Willow, who combines witchcraft and high computer literacy in
order to battle evil vampires and other preternatural creatures.
Following the evolution of its preferred fiction, the Gothic
milieu -- no longer dressed only in black -- may simply become,
as other previous countercultural movements, a collective rite
of passage introducing teenagers to meaningful questions about
life and death.
Footnote:
[1] The book, "Lucifer
Rising: Sin, Devil Worship, and Rock'n'Roll" by
Gavin
Baddeley is an excellent resource if you want to know what
is going on in the music industry. Baddeley is the head of
Church of Satan in Great Britain, and he is interviewing
artists that are openly satanic, many of them also admitted to
being members of the Church of Satan, which makes shocking
reading. I recommend this book to anybody who is not afraid to
know the truth, and it kills the myth that occultism and
satanism in rock music is just a gimmick. The information in
this book comes directly from the horse's mouth. Wes Penre,
www.illuminati-news.com
Gavin Baddeley, head of Church of Satan in Great Britain, and the cover of
his book,
"Lucifer Rising: Sin, Devil Worship, and Rock'n'Roll"