Portsmouth News

Goth godmother Anja Huwe summons spirit of Xmal Deutschlan­d

On the record

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“Anja’s voice is like a spear, her appearance a torch

Nowadays they’re part of society’s furniture – out and about in shops and pubs as well as in graveyards – but in the 1980s the Goth subculture was new and striking.

And while trendy West Berlin attracted Nick Cave, and London’s New Romantics (and chart superstar Adam

Ant) mixed up high fashion and punk rock, it was in the unlikely city of Hamburg a gang of five women formed Xmal Deutschlan­d, and unwittingl­y pioneered the movement we now know as goth.

Forty years later, alongside better-known acts like Siouxsie Sioux, Bauhaus and even The Cure, they are cited as an integral influence for countless bands, despite having never achieved the mainstream success of their peers.

Two releases may redress this balance however – a reissue of long out-of-print music in the form of compilatio­n arrives

in the darkness” Mona

Mur

in tandem with the debut solo album, ‘Codes’ from the band’s frontwoman Anja Huwe.

Invited by her long-time friend and bandmate Mona Mur, Huwe reconsider­ed her decades-long hiatus from music and decided to join Mur in her studio in Berlin. Together, they worked for a year and a half, composing, performing and producing the tracks from scratch which eventually became the album ‘Codes’.

Integral to the overall sound experience was the input of Manuela Rickers who added her famed signature guitar style. The collaborat­ion was relentless: “Mona and I have a similar artistic background since the 1980s. We hung out together, and we sport a similar attitude towards life and art. We don’t have to explain ourselves to one another,” says Huwe. Mur adds: “Anja’s voice is like a spear, her appearance a torch in the darkness.”

This may be as close as we get to a reunion – Caro May,

Rita Simon, bassist Wolfgang Ellerbrock who, for a while jokingly, became the token man of the group. They released two albums on legendary label 4AD which reached the UK

Indie Charts. “Since the split in the early 1990s, I have been haunted by the ‘Legend of Xmal Deutschlan­d’ and never-ending requests from all over the world, all of which I always turned down,” Huwe says.

And while the singles album shines a light on Goth’s past, it’s the unexpected but long overdue ‘Codes’ that’s the missing page from post-punk’s history books.

 ?? ?? Both ‘Codes’ and ‘Early Singles’ are available via Sacred Bones - more at sacredbone­s. com and anjahuwe.com.
Both ‘Codes’ and ‘Early Singles’ are available via Sacred Bones - more at sacredbone­s. com and anjahuwe.com.
 ?? Pic: Jan_Riephoff. Xmal 1982 image by Ilse Ruppert ??
Pic: Jan_Riephoff. Xmal 1982 image by Ilse Ruppert

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