Difference between revisions of "Laibach"

From Culture.si
(MB 2012 category)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Article
 
{{Article
| status      =  
+
| status      = PHOTO COVER
 
| maintainer  = Ičo Vidmar
 
| maintainer  = Ičo Vidmar
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 00:15, 10 September 2011




Contact
Download this image
Laibach
P.O. Box 101, SI-1001 Ljubljana


Phone386 (0) 1 361 8340
Past Events
Show more




Laibach 2003 concert Photo Miha Fras.jpgLaibach concert, 2003

Laibach is an avant-garde music group from Trbovlje, established in 1980. The name of this most famous Slovene band is the German version of the name for the Slovene capital Ljubljana. Up to 1984 when they co-founded the Neue Slowenische Kunst art collective, Laibach has been involved in a "gesamtkunstwerk" multimedia art practice from industrial music to visual arts (xeroxes, posters, paintings, performances). Since the beginning the group was associated and surrounded with controversy, provoking strong reactions by political authorities in former Yugoslavia and in particular in the Socialist Republic of Slovenia. Laibach is actually best known for their cover versions, which are often used to subvert the original message or intention of the song.


History

Established in Trbovlje, a coal mining industrial town in the centre of Slovenia, Laibach launched their first multimedia project Rdeči revirji (Red Districts) in the same year, a project designed to challenge the striking contradictions of the political structure of the town at that time. The project was banned before it opened, preventing the first public appearance of the group, though not the angry media response which followed. Laibach appeared again in 1982 with their first concert in Ljubljana. Next followed concerts around Yugoslavia (Zagreb, Belgrade) and a headlining appearance at the New Rock [Novi Rock] Festival in Križanke in the centre of Ljubljana. On 23 June 1983 the group made its first television appearance with an interview on the political news programme TV Tednik. The interview provoked numerous reactions, and was followed by an administrative political ban on public appearances and the use of the name Laibach.

November and December 1983 saw the first European tour by the group, the Occupied Europe Tour, which also featured the British group Last Few Days. The 17-date tour covered 16 cities in eight countries in Eastern and Western Europe. After their performance in Warsaw the then ambassador of socialist Yugoslavia made a declaration which seems the most concise characterisation of Laibach's performances ever, saying: "This is a completely adequate presentation of the history of the Yugoslav nations."

The group made a successful anonymous appearance at the Malči Belič Hall, Ljubljana in December 1984. In the same year Laibach became a founding member of the Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK) art collective.


Recent projects

Recent projects of the veteran band with its constant changing personnel include fine and conceptually skewed remakes of (imperial) national anthems (album Volk) and a loose reinterpretation of Johann Sebastian Bach's The Art of Fugue.

On 18 September 2009 the Kino Šiška, a new centre of urban culture was inaugurated in Ljubljana with a concert by Laibach and the British Juno Reactor.

The Red District Symposium and the Laibach Kunst 1980–2010 exhibition in Delavski dom Trbovlje Cultural Centre was followed by the First NSK Citizens’ Congress at Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin in October.

Recent exhibitions

In 2009 a retrospective exhibition Ausstellung Laibach Kunst - Recapitulation 2009 was shown at Muzeum Sztuki in Łódź, confronting archival and recent material.

The International Centre of Graphic Arts, Ljubljana set up the exhibition GESAMTKUNST LAIBACH, Fundamentals 1980–1990, opened from 15 April to 6 June 2010, which presented the group's visual artworks (posters, album covers, fanzines, linocuts, xeroxes, paintings and installations) as well as the controversial TV interview from 1983 and other documentary material.

30 years after the Laibach's first (and than banned) exhibition, the group set the exhibition up at the same place in Laibach’s home town Trbovlje.

Releases

Laibach's first album Laibach was released in April 1985 on the Slovene ŠKUC Ropot label. However, because of the ban the record came out without the group's name; instead the cover featured a symbol that was Laibach’s trademark. Its second and third albums Rekapitulacija 1980–1984 (1985) and Neu Konservatiw (1985) were the first of the group's records to gain an international release. Following Nova Akropola, Laibach's 1986 album for British independent Cherry Red, the group was signed by London-based Mute Records. Opus Dei, released in Spring 1987, was the first album on this new label.

The band's discography since 1987 includes Slovenska Akropola (1987), Krst Pod Triglavom-Baptism (1987), Let It Be (Mute Records, 1988), Sympathy for the Devil (Mute Records, 1988), Macbeth (Mute Records, 1990), Kapital (Mute Records, 1992), Ljubljana-Zagreb-Beograd (The Grey Area/Mute Records, 1993), NATO (Mute Records, 1994), The Occupied Europe NATO Tour 1994-1995 (The Grey Area/Mute Records, 1996), Jesus Christ Superstars (The Grey Area/Mute Records, 1996), Malči Belič, December 21, 1984 (The Grey Area/Mute Records, 1997), The John Peel Sessions (Strangefruit, 2002), WAT (Mute Records, 2003), Anthems (Mute Records, 2004, compilation), Volk (Mute Records, 2006), and Volk Tour London CC Club (Live Here Now, 2007).

See also

External links

References

Gallery