corpse paint

{{Short description|Type of black and white body painting}}

{{this|a style of body painting|the paint pigment made from corpses|mummy brown}}

File:Urgehal Metal Mean Festival 20 08 2011 10.jpg wearing corpse paint with the spiked armbands and inverted crosses commonly worn by black metal musicians]]

Corpse paint is a style of body painting, used mainly by black metal bands for concerts and band photos. The body painting is used to make the musicians appear inhuman, corpse-like, or demonic, and is perhaps "the most identifiable aspect of the black metal aesthetic."Patterson, Dayal: Black Metal: Evolution of the Cult; 2013, Feral House, Port Townsend, Washington; p. 144.

Corpse paint typically involves making the face and neck white (or pale), sometimes with red marks to signify blood or laceration, and making the area around the eyes and mouth black. Musicians will often have a trademark style. Other colors are seldom used, yet there are notable exceptions, such as Attila Csihar's use of neon colors and the bands Satyricon and Dødheimsgard experimenting with color as well.

Outside of black metal, black and white face painting has been used by a variety of other public figures such as shock rock artists (notably Arthur Brown, Alice Cooper, members of Kiss, and members of the Misfits) and professional wrestlers (e.g. Sting and Vampiro), as well as for the normal beautification or ornamentation denoted by cosmetics.

History and usage

The earliest rock groups to wear body painting similar to corpse paint included Arthur Brown in the 1960s. In the 1970s, examples of black and white face paint by rock & roll performers included Secos & Molhados, Alice Cooper and Kiss. Guitarist Zal Cleminson of the Sensational Alex Harvey Band wore face paint and colorful clothes, performing in a menacing demeanor that evoked the evil clown trope.Thomas M. Kitts and Nick Baxter-Moore (eds.) The Routledge Companion to Popular Music and Humor, Chapter 6. 2019, Routledge {{ISBN|9781351266628}} Later that decade, punk rock acts like the Misfits and singer David Vanian of The Damned also used black and white face paint. On seeing shock rock pioneer Arthur Brown performing his US number two hit "Fire" in 1968, Alice Cooper states, "Can you imagine the young Alice Cooper watching that with all his make-up and hellish performance? It was like all my Halloweens came at once!"{{cite news|title=Alice Cooper Recruits Arthur Brown For Fire-themed Halloween Show|url=http://ultimateclassicrock.com/alice-cooper-arthur-brown-halloween-show/|agency=Ultimate Classic Rock|date=December 29, 2017}}

In the late 1970s and '80s, such face paint began to be more associated with metal performers. Vocalist King Diamond of Mercyful Fate used face paint similar to corpse paint as early as 1978 in his band Black Rose, while Hellhammer and their later incarnation as Celtic Frost also wore similar face paint. Per "Dead" Ohlin was the first to explicitly associate stylized face paint with an attempt to look like a corpse according to drummer Jan Axel "Hellhammer" Blomberg of Mayhem.[https://web.archive.org/web/20080219143612/http://www.thetruemayhem.com/interviews/previous/hh-june1998.htm Interview with Hellhammer conducted by Dmitry Basik June 1998] Brazilian band Sarcófago also pioneered the look, being dubbed by Metal Storm magazine as the first band with "true" corpse paint.[http://www.metalstorm.ee/pub/article.php?article_id=66 On the Role of Clothing Styles In The Development of Metal – Part I – Metal Storm] However, Necrobutcher insists that his band Mayhem was the first to use corpse paint and credits the band's singer Per "Dead" Ohlin with coining the term.Patterson, Dayal: Black Metal: Evolution of the Cult; 2013, Feral House, Port Townsend, Washington; p. 144. Early corpse paint was meant simply to highlight an individual's features and make them look "dead."

Bands of the early Norwegian black metal scene used corpse paint extensively. Early vocalist of Mayhem Per "Dead" Ohlin started wearing it in the late 1980s. According to Necrobutcher, Mayhem's bass player: "It wasn't anything to do with the way Kiss and Alice Cooper used makeup. Dead actually wanted to look like a corpse. He didn't do it to look cool."Chris Campion: [https://www.theguardian.com/music/2005/feb/20/popandrock4 In the Face of Death]. In: The Observer, 20. February 2005. In the early 1990s, other Norwegian black metal bands followed suit and their style and sound was adopted by bands around the world. Eventually, some Norwegian bands—such as Emperor and Satyricon—stopped wearing corpse paint, often citing its loss of individualistic meaning, as well as its increased trendiness, due to use by so many bands.

Examples

File:King Diamond live 2006 Moscow 01.jpg|King Diamond of Mercyful Fate and King Diamond

File:Behemoth-Orion.jpg|Orion of Behemoth

File:God Seed Hellfest 2009 13.jpg|Gaahl with God Seed

File:Watain1.jpg|Erik Danielsson of Watain

File:Taake Metal Méan Fest 220809 18.jpg|Hoest of Taake

File:Frost live with 1349.jpg|Frost of Satyricon and 1349

File:Mayhem-with-Attila-Csihar-Infernofestival-2010.jpg|Attila Csihar performing with Mayhem

File:Tsjuder Igel Rock Valenciennes 03 03 2012 01.jpg|Nag of Tsjuder

File:Lars Stokstad EoR2011.jpg|left|Lars Stokstad, performing with Antestor

See also

References

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