fet•ish or fet•ich noun
1. Something, especially an inanimate object, that some people revere or worship because they believe it has magical powers or is animated by a spirit
2. An object, idea, or activity that somebody is irrationally obsessed with or attached to
3. Something, for example, an inanimate object or nonsexual part of the body that arouses sexual excitement in some people
fetish
1b : an object of irrational reverence or obsessive devotion.
Source: Merriam-Webster online.
Angst Club – Fetish Party set list [25/02/05]
A título personal diré que tan sólo estoy moderadamente satisfecho con mi sesión de este sábado, aunque parece ser que no disgustó. En cualquier caso, disfruté mucho la experiencia y quiero reiterar mi agradecimiento a y a por contar conmigo para esa velada, que gracias al esfuerzo de todos resultó un éxito. Y, cómo no, agradecer a todos los que mostraron con su asistencia su apoyo al funcionamiento del club y a este tipo de eventos.
Debido a distintas razones tuve que realizar cambios en mis previsiones iniciales. Nada grave, por suerte.
Tibetan music – Monastere de Gyuto – Track 1
Attrition – 12 IAE [In the nursery remix]
Ah cama sotz – Fluido mortal
Android lust – Sin
I, Parasite – Ten years
Paul Oakenfold [feat. Tiff Lacey] – Hypnotised
Stromkern – Im Traum
Athamay – Restrict and obey
Ministry – Isle of man [Version II]
Demonix – Passion, pleasure and pain [remix]
Velvet Acid Christ – Caught
Phallus dei – Slave
Architect – Beyer Dinamic
Music for bondage performance [First –and frustrated- attemp]
Faith and the muse – Porphyrogene [Laboratory X version]
Die Form – Amnestic disorder
Leaether strip – Sex dwarf [Soft Cell cover]
Marilyn Manson – I put a spell on you [Nina Simone cover]
Fetish park – Reiz
Death in Vegas – Hands around my throat [u.x.b. mix]
Nine Inch Nails – Ruiner [Rejected remix from TDS sessions ‘94]
In slaughter natives – As my shield
:wumpscut: – Torn skin
Music for bondage performance
Tarmvred – 0918.00
Pzychobitch – Sweet kiss
P.A.L. – E-Mass
Ritual
Ritual The Next Vision of Clubbing is a modern fetish club.
It was founded in 1999 by clubbing people, that bored of the Italian club scene and inspired by innovative events like Torture Garden, had a new vision of an event based on free self-expression, energy hard dancing and fetish culture.
Starting from a different approach, the word culture and the term art assume main importance in Ritual concept.
Ritual dance floor is characterized by the newest hard house techno music with some trance, without forgetting the alternative aspect with some session of pure techno –electro experimental. In a Ritual event you will also find ritualistic music as atmospherical set for dungeon area, which is based on bdsm culture performances. Ritual event is also a place for exhibitions of painters, photographers and artists of any type, and for performances of different national and international artists as bands, guest dj’s, body art artists, fetish shows, fashion shows. All of this with a particular consideration for subjects like body and sexuality.
Ritual is sometimes a dress code theme event, but it’s always a dress code event, which we encourage and consider as stimulation for fantasy and imagination.
The Ritual crowd is very unique in age and style, from 20’s to 60’s, from cyber fetish clubbers to classic fetish people.
The choice of the venue is related to the kind of party, trying to not use the same environment each event. Visuals and projections are mostly of body art and fetish culture, but with no limitation and depending on the theme of the party.
Ritual is based in Rome, Italy, with periodic parties in other main Italian cities.
Taking part to a Ritual event will make you think how a party like that can ever happen in Italy.
Aviso para navegantes.-
Este sábado, al Angst.
ANCIENT FEARS AND MODERN INSTRUMENTS OF TORTURE
The morbid electronical music of DIE FORM has won a fan audience in scene circles, particularly in Germany and Japan. The man behind this brand name is the Frenchman Philippe Fichot. In parallel with his musical oeuvre Fichot has created a photographic one consisting not only of videos conceived as visual supplements for his music, but also of traditional black-and-white photographs.
Philippe Fichot is a perfectionist and the reference to tradition is vital to him, not least in terms of technique. As regards motifs, Fichot’s photos belong to the genre of a black horror poetry stretching from the romantics via surrealism to the present.
Eroticism and death, sexuality and agony, beauty and putrefaction are the dualisms Fichot presents as a union.
This “border transgression” fascinated Wiesbaden publisher Donna Klemm so intensely that she published Fichot’s photographs in a book entitled THE VISIONARY GARDEN in her Artware Edition.
Fichot’s pictures are highly artificial installations. By laboratory processing they are endowed with a patina of decay and decomposition, so that the resulting image is not longer comparable to any existing reality.
According to an ancient topos the ambivalence of eroticism and death is revealed in the beauty of the female body. To enact this ambivalence Fichot invokes the obsessions of collective consciousness. In the Ophelia motif the beautiful young corpse melts with nature. Fichot embeds the bodies in grass and herb, covers them with leaves and dissolves the contours to such an extent that the body becomes part of its surroundings. This process receives a classical note when the body is adapted to a stone environment – columns or walls.
Fichot invokes passion with a lethal outcome – which Christian religion placed under a taboo – in a draping and undraping game with white children’s clothes and a black nun’s habit which is overlaid by the witch motif and the connected torture instruments.
These are of more contemporary origin: machines, implements, chains, cords, corsets, bandages, tubes and clamps from modern intensive medicine. They visualise both the fear of the loss of physical integrity, which appears archaic and sombre in Fichot’s morbid aesthetics, as well as sexual violence fantasies. Accordingly the women appear partly innocently virginal and partly wanton and whorelike.
Pictures showing a woman and machine components in a kind of patchwork co-assembly are a special variant of Fichot’s art. The fragmentation engendered by this construction appears to the viewer as abstract image material in which the mere idea of physical unity is dissolved.
Heike MARX / Die Rheinpfalz / April 07, 1997