Rivethead

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A Rivethead is a person associated with or a fan of the Industrial Music Subculture.

Basic Information

The Origins of "Rivethead"

The man responsible for coining the term Rivethead in the context of Industrial Music was Chase[1], founder of Re-Constriction Records, a subdivision of Cargo Music specialized in Industrial Music[2]. In the early 1990s Chase released Rivet Head Culture, a compilation including several Industrial acts of the American underground scene. This is, allegedly, the first time the term was put in official use on the Industrial counterculture. The problem of that statement is that during the same year Rivet Head Culture was released Chemlab - whose members were close friends of Chase - released their debut album, Burn Out at the Hydrogen Bar (1993). This record had a track called "Rivethead".

Outside music, the term was already being used since the 1940s as a nickname for American car factory workers, mainly those working on assembly lines[3]. The term hit the mainstream with the publication of Ben Hamper's Rivethead: Tales From the Assembly Line[4].

Rivetheads vs. Goths

It should be noted that Rivetheads are different from Goths in ideological and musical terms, as well as in their visual aesthetics. They originally grew out of Punk and art cultures, and was around before Goth. Confusion regarding the boundaries of those two youth cultures has heightened because of recent (mid-1990s onwards) apparent hybridization between both and the rise of cybergoths - a melting pot of several youth cultures, mainly Clubbers and Goths with a touch of Cyberpunk themes. Rivethead culture is highly violent in its visuals, but not necessarily in practice. Goth culture is, however, totally devoid of any appreciation for violence. The most important difference is the related types of music. They were grouped due to how small the Industrial scene was plus the fact of dark themes and further the merging of the music.

Music

Since its beginning, Industrial Music has often re-invented itself. The eventual broadening of it's music spectrum split the fan base - a crack that's widening with each passing year. The club-oriented subgenres (Futurepop, Terror EBM, TBM), for example, don't fare well with the Neofolk crowd, which are closer in spirit to Industrial's founding fathers. There's also the case of Industrial Metal, which is more akin to standard Rock 'n' roll than Throbbing Gristle's electronic maelstrom.

Aesthetics

Is there a dress code for Rivetheads?

Some argue that a typical Industrial Music fan doesn't resort to a particular "look"; that's an excellent strategy to avoid the stereotyping traps that transformed Punks and Hippies into walking clichés. Also, this kind of thinking is in accord to the highly individualistic nature of the music and it's active disdain towards mass culture.

Others, though, claim that rivetheads do have a dress code, and that dress code can be identified relatively easily, often related to "anti-fashion". The sections below deal with the details of this alleged dress code.

The Basics

The prime dress style of Rivetheads is inspired by military aesthetics, complemented by Modern Primitive body-modification (tattoos, piercings and scarification) or borrowed visual cues from Goths (mainly androgyny, fetishism and black hair dye), as well as oldschool Punk themes.

Specifics

Primary colors are black, grey and olive green. Rivethead dress almost always consists of or includes the following:

  • Pants: cargo pants or BDUs, tucked into boots, rolled at the bottom cuffs, or as cut-off shorts. Also, leather pants.
  • Hair: Long and black or natural non dyed bright colors, shaved bald, partially shaved (undercut), or in a few cases, dreadlocked* and cyberfalls*.
  • Female Rivets: May play along the Femme Fatale look with sexuality as power. Short skirts, military, knee high stilleto boots, vinyl / leather / PVC bustiers and corsets, and lip gloss with less makeup than Goths. Colorful synthetic pony falls / hair extensions and colorful vinyl are seen but are more known as *"CyberGoth" wear.

See Also

The Philosophy

Rivetheads often follow some of the following; Survivalist, Nihilist, Existentialism, Posthumanity,Transhumanism , Distopia, Radical Traditionalism,Man VS Machine and or more philosophical positions.

Though they may have different beliefs, just as other subcultures. Also, are more philosophical rather than religious.

Labels

Related Urban Tribes

Notes

  1. ^ "rivet head culture?". rec.music.industrial. 1997-03-09. Retrieved 2007-09-11. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ "Re-Constriction". Cargoland!. Retrieved 2007-09-11. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ "Rivethead@Everything2.com". Welcome to Everything@Everything2.com. Retrieved 2007-08-23. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "Ben Hamper". Welcome to MichaelMoore.com. Retrieved 2007-08-23. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)

Related Links

Research

Humor

References