| Nuts, Bolts And A Big-Ass Boiler: Welcome To Steampunk |
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| News - Features | |||
| Written by Steve Nash / Image: Chad Michael Wolf | |||
| Tuesday, 16 November 2010 18:41 | |||
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Picture the scene: you've just escaped the clawing breeze of the November night time, and descended into the recesses of the local venue. You're greeted by the usual odour of the previous night's gig - stale beer, old sweat and a top note of spent excitement.
"I want to go ahead of Father Time with a scythe of my own" - H. G. Wells
There is to everything in these pre-gig moments a special kind of quiet. The voices of the throng swirl around the room, and the usual selection of rock jukebox favourites pummels the air, but everything is muted. A thick blanket of expectation muffles the sound, and every pair of eyes makes the occasional dart to the abandoned instruments standing patiently on the stage.
Origins And Images
The term itself is a direct response to the term cyberpunk, which was used to describe works in science fiction literature (by the likes of William Gibson, and Bruce Sterling) which combined high technology and extreme low-lives. To describe steampunk in the most simplistic way then would be to say that where cyberpunk used ultra high-tech electronics to envisage its futures, steampunk uses a Victorian aesthetic to create its technological mysteries. Gone is the lush chrome and fibre optic dance of electronic lighting, instead we have brass and wood, and everything is powered by coal and steam. Instead of the glamour of high-speed dog fights involving fighter planes and spacecraft, we have the fragile elegance of hot air balloons and zeppelins. Think of the world created by Alan Moore for his 'League of Extraordinary Gentleman', or the dystopic metropolis envisioned by China Mieville in Perdido Street Station. These are literatures inspired by the nineteenth century fantasies of Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, and Robert Louis Stevenson, asking the questions: "What if we never discovered the benefits of electricity? What if we still ran on steam?"
Music
‘The Devil can sometimes do a very gentlemanly thing.'
- Robert Louis Stevenson
From the roguish punk rock of The Men That Will Not Be Blamed For Nothing, fronted by Cpl Gerhard Heintz. Their first album: 'Now That's What I Call Steampunk Vol 1', teems with nineteenth century inspired tales of grizzled soldiering, and romantic odes such as "I love a girl in goggles". Equally worthy of note is the mad scientist Dr. Steel, who uses his mix of industrial hip-hop and jazz as part of his diabolical plan to take over the world. British band Ghostfire specialise in a kind of warped smokey burlesque, whilst Abney Park can most readily be described as electro rock at its most moody.
Now, pass me my goggles sir, for I have a fancy I should enjoy a trip in my balloon!
For more information on steampunk, click the links.
Steve Nash
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