Tag Archive: Salò


Caligine’s Anomia Mediterranea

Caligine is, to all intents and purposes, the brainchild of one man although,as Gabriele de Seta loves playing with other people, he prefers to define the project more as a collective than a solo act. He’s an Italian who, for the past two years, has mainly divided his time between the Netherlands and China.

Having begun in 2007 by experimenting with harsh noise and found sounds on two volumes entitled Minimalia, Caligine’s new album Anomia Mediterranea is a more luminous and melodic collection of contaminated folk music.

The title track has spoken words (in Italian) that are all but drowned out by insistent drones and there’s even a brief hint of Carmina Burana in there if you listen carefully. These inserts make the musical journey so much more interesting, it’s as if each track begins with the intention of taking a direct line from A to B, then gets drawn to a sound or idea that lies a little off the beaten track.

The longest piece on the album, all 12 minutes and 26 seconds worth, is entitled ‘Cani di Paglia Divorano Tigri di Cartapesta’ which roughly translates as ‘straw dogs devour paper maché tigers’. This surreal ,even faintly savage, imagery belies the lyricism of the instrumental track where a rustic acoustic guitar has elements of Jack Rose’s work with Pelt in which traditional folk becomes gradually corroded by complimentary elements.

Other tracks make me think of Czech poet-musician Vladimir Vaclavek, self-styled neo-folk guru David Tibet and Six Organs of Admittance’s Ben Chasny. In addition, a brief piece of improvised acoustic guitar (Blitris) sounds like an homage to Derek Bailey. Continue reading

Saloposter“Anything that can be done to a rat can be done to a human being. And we can do most anything to rats. This is a hard thing to think about, but it’s the truth. It won’t go away because we cover our eyes”  – Bruce Sterling .

Sterling was writing about Cyberpunk in the Nineties but this quote came back to me after the grueling experience of watching Pier Paolo Pasolini’s final film : Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma) which was made in 1975.

Sterling was explaining the reason for strong imagery in Sci-Fi novels; Pasolini’s movie is no futuristic fantasy but an aspect of the modern world we’d all prefer was a fiction.

The film is a powerful and uncompromising polemic exposing the depths of degradation human beings are capable of and Pasolini’s own brutal murder before its release ironically served to confirm this.

The British Board of Film classification says it “contains strong violence, sexual violence and scenes of torture and degradation”,  but even this strong warning seems an understatement.

The movie transposes the Marquis de Sade’s eighteenth century novel, 120 Days of Sodom, to Mussolini’s  fascist republic of Salò on Lake Garda at the end of World War Two.

The setting and events are exaggerated for dramatic effect but the film draws its inspiration from well-documented Fascist crimes against humanity.

The horrific scenes so graphically depicted are  also examples of the commonplace cruelties and abuse of power that are not confined to fascism.

The movie shows a systematic programme of rape, torture, mutilation and humiliation of 16 young victims (8 male, 8 female).

Their suffering is made more ‘entertaining’ for the sadistic protagonists by a ritualised series of gruesome initiation ceremonies including being forced to eat excrement,  put on dog leads and fed scraps of food.  As with hardcore pornography, the  sexual acts are reduced to the level  of detached, emotionless mechanical bodily functions.

It is undoubtedly a courageous and unique movie but  ultimately the crudeness of the allegory  and the extremity of the images just  left me feeling sickened.

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