#dark superstition
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#gig flyer#gatecreeper#enforced#200 stab wounds#dark superstition#death metal#melodic death metal#old school death metal
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The Black Curtain - Gatecreeper
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"A Chilling Aura" by Gatecreeper - From "Dark Superstition" (2024)
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GATECREEPER-DEAD STAR
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Gatecreeper: “A Chilling Aura” Dark Superstition (2024)
#gatecreeper#a chilling aura#dark superstition#death metal#melodic death metal#melodeath#arizona#2024#Spotify
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The new Gatecreeper record is not for me.
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Gatecreeper - Dark Superstition
The new wave of old school death metal, or NWOSDM, is in full swing, and it has been for a few years now. A lot of bands seemingly love 80s and 90s death metal, so they want to recreate it. A lot of these newer bands are just clones of Entombed, Cannibal Corpse, Deicide, Morbid Angel, Death, Obituary, and many others, but their success varies. One of my favorites of this wave is Arizona’s Gatecreeper. These guys started off as a straight up 90s death metal clone, albeit with some hardcore influence, but their last couple of records have moved into other territories, such as death-doom and hardcore-punk. Their latest LP, Dark Superstition, is their most interesting yet, as it includes some melodic death metal influences, and has a slight NWOBHM influence, too, at least in some of the song structures and riffs. They’re unorthodox influences for these guys, but it works quite well.
I don’t know if I’d say this is one of the best albums of the year, but it’s still a really solid album that I’ve been playing quite a bit over the last couple of weeks. These guys are trying out some pretty cool ideas, and they got more of a unique sound compared to other bands in the genre (some of which I like, but I haven’t cared much about because they keep doing the same thing). Sometimes the riffs feel shoehorned in, and their sound can be a bit too one note, at least in terms of having pretty straightforward song structures, but that’s not always a bad thing. I don’t know, I dig this album, but it’s not quite a perfect album. I like how short it is, but some of the songs run together, and they don’t really breathe that much. It’s still worth a listen if you’re a death metal fan, though, and they are one of the more interesting bands in the current scene.
#gatecreeper#dark superstition#metal#death metal#heavy metal#melodic death metal#at the gates#obituary#death#morbid Angel#entombed#rock#nuclear blast
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♫ Gatecreeper - Dark Superstition ♫
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Gatecreeper Dark Superstition Skate Deck from Pull the Plug
#gatecreeper#death metal#old school death metal#osdm#melodic death metal#merch#skateboard#skate deck#dark superstition#pull the plug
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gatecreeper went soft outta nowhere???
#gatecreeper#dark superstition#i rlly didn't expect this#not that it's pop or anything not at all#but like#they used to be pretty fuckin crushing death metal and now outta nowhere#a heavy metal album#i know they were never slam or deathcore or anything extreme#but they were pretty heavy on the first 2 records
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#friday the 13th#bad luck#superstition#superstitious beliefs#dark#eerie#goth#creepy#spooky#horror#halloween#autumn#winter#december#christmas#triskaidekaphobia#black cats#unlucky#phobias#fear
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two for joy // prints available
#magpie#bird art#birdblr#illustration#digital art#superstition#queer artist#nature#artists on tumblr#my art#i wrote this#art#forestcore#naturecore#cottagecore#whimsicore#whimsigoth#dark academia#light academia#autistic artist
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Cold Iron in folklore, fiction, and RPGs
'Gold is for the mistress—silver for the maid! Copper for the craftsman cunning at his trade.' 'Good!' said the Baron, sitting in his hall, 'But Iron—Cold Iron—is master of them all!' — Rudyard Kipling, “Cold Iron”
Folklore
Drudenmesser, or "witch-knife", an apotropaic folding knife from Germany
The notion that iron (or steel) can ward against evil spirits, witches, fairies, etc is very widespread in folklore. You hang a horseshoe over your threshold to deny entry to evil spirits, you carry an iron tool with you to make sure devils won't assault you, you place a small knife under the baby's crib to ward it from witches, and so on. Iron is apotropaic in many many cultures.
In English, we often come across passages that refer to apotropaic cold iron (or cold steel). "All uncouth, unknown Wights are terrifyed by nothing earthly so much as by cold Iron", says Robert Kirk in 1691, which I believe is the earliest example. "Evil spirits cannot bear the touch of cold steel. Iron, or preferably steel, in any form is a protection", says John Gregorson Campbell in 1901.
Words
So what is cold iron? In this context, it’s just iron. The “cold” part is poetic, especially – but not only – if we’re talking about either blades (or swords, weapons, the force of arms) or manacles and the like. It just sounds more ominous. There are “cold yron chaines” in The Fairie Queene (1596), and a 1638 book of travels tells us that a Georgian general (in the Caucasus) vowed “to make the Turk to eat cold iron”.
Green’s Dictionary of Slang defines “cold iron” as a sword, and dates the term to 1698. From 1725 it appears in Cant dictionaries (could this sense be thieves’ cant, originally? why not, plenty of words and expressions started as underworld slang and then entered the mainstream), and from ~1750 its use becomes much more common.
NGram Viewer diagram for 1600-2019.
In other contexts, cold iron is (surprise!) iron that’s not hot. So let’s talk a bit about metallurgy.
Metals
In nature, we can find only one kind of iron that’s pure enough to work with: meteoritic iron. It has to literally fall from the sky. Barring that very rare occurrence, people have to mine the earth for iron ore, which is not workable as is. To separate the iron from the ore we have to smelt it, and for that we need heat, in the form of hot charcoals. Throwing the ore on the coals won’t do much of anything, it’s not hot enough. But if we enclose the coals in a little tower built of clay, leaving holes for air flow, the temperature rises enough to smelt the ore. That’s called a bloomery.
clay bloomery / medieval bloomery / beating the bloom to get rid of the slag
What comes out of the bloomery is a bloom: a porous, malleable mass of iron (that we need) and slag (byproducts that we don’t need). But now we can get rid of the slag and turn the porous mass to something solid, by hammering the hot bloom over and over. And once the slag is off, by the same process we can give it a desired shape in the forge, reheating it as needed. This is called “working” the iron, hence “wrought iron” objects, i.e. forged.
a blacksmith in his forge, with bellows, fire, and anvil (English woodcut, 1603)
This is the lowest-tech version, possibly going back to ~2000 BCE in Nigeria. If we add bellows, the improved air flow will raise the temperature. So smelting happens faster and more efficiently in the bloomery, and so does heating the iron in the forge, making it easier to work with. And that’s the standard process from the Iron Age all through the middle ages and beyond (although in China they may have skipped this stage and gone straight to the next one).
If we make the bloomery bigger and bigger, with stronger and stronger bellows, we end up with a blast furnace, a construction so efficient that the temperature outright melts the iron, and it’s liquified enough to be poured into a mould and acquire the desired shape when it cools off. This is “cast iron”.
a blast furnace
So in all of this, what’s cold iron? Well, it’s iron that went though the heat and cooled off. (No heat = no iron, all you got is ore.) If it came out of a bloomery, or if it wasn’t cast, it’s by definition worked, hammered, beaten, wrought, and that happened while it was still hot.
Is there such a thing as “cold-wrought” iron? No. In fact, “working cold iron” was a simile for something foolish or pointless. A smith who beats cold iron instead of putting it in the fire shows folly, says a 1694 book on religion, so you too should choose your best tools, piety and good decorum, to educate your children and servants, instead of beating them. When Don Quixote (1605) declares he’ll go knight-erranting again, Sancho Panza tries to dissuade him, but it’s like “preaching in the desert and hammering on cold iron” (a direct translation of martillar en hierro frío).
Minor work can be done on cold iron. A 1710 dictionary of technical terms tells us that a rivetting-hammer is “chiefly used for rivetting or setting straight cold iron, or for crooking of small work; but ’tis seldom used at the forge”. Fully fashioning an object out of cold iron is not a real process – though a 1659 History of the World would claim that in Arabia it’s so hot that “smiths work nails and horseshoes out of cold iron, softened only by the vigorous heat of the sun, and the hard hammering of hands on the anvil”. [I declare myself unqualified to judge the veracity of this statement, let's just say I have doubts.] And there is of course such a thing as “cold wrought-iron”, as in wrought iron after it’s cooled off.
Either way, in the context of pre-20th century English texts which refer to apotropaic “cold iron”, it’s definitely not “cold-wrought”, or meteoritic, or a special alloy of any kind. It’s just iron.
Fiction
The old superstition kept coming up in fantasy fiction. In 1910 Rudyard Kipling wrote the very influential short story “Cold Iron” (in the collection Rewards and Fairies), where he explains invents the details of the fairies’ aversion to iron. They can’t bewitch a child wearing boots, because the boots have nails in the soles. They can’t pass under a doorway guarded by a horseshoe, but they can slip through the backdoor that people neglected to guard. Mortals live “on the near side of Cold Iron”, because there’s iron in every house, while fairies live “on the far side of Cold Iron”, and want nothing to do with it. And changelings brought up by fairies will go back to the world of mortals as soon they touch cold iron for the first time.
In Poul Anderson’s The Broken Sword (1954), we read:
“Let me tell you, boy, that you humans, weak and short-lived and unwitting, are nonetheless more strong than elves and trolls, aye, than giants and gods. And that you can touch cold iron is only one reason.”
In Peter S. Beagle’s The Last Unicorn (1968) the unicorn is imprisoned in an iron cage:
“She turned and turned in her prison, her body shrinking from the touch of the iron bars all around her. No creature of man’s night loves cold iron, and while the unicorn could endure its presence, the murderous smell of it seemed to turn her bones to sand and her blood to rain.”
Poul Anderson would come back to that idea in Operation Chaos (1971), where the worldbuilding’s premise is that magic and magical creatures have been reintroduced into the modern world, because a scientist “discovered he could degauss the effects of cold iron and release the goetic forces”. And that until then, they had been steadily declining, ever since the Iron Age came along.
There are a million examples, I’m just focusing on those that would have had a more direct influence on roleplaying games. However, I should note that all these say “cold iron” but mean “iron”. Yes, the fey call it cold, but they are a poetic bunch. You can’t expect Robin Goodfellow’s words to be pedestrian, now can you?
RPGs
And from there, fantasy roleplaying systems got the idea that Cold Iron is a special material that fey are vulnerable to. The term had been floating around since the early D&D days, but inconsistently, scattered in random sourcebooks, and not necessarily meaning anything else than iron. In 1st Edition’s Monster Manual (1977) it’s ghasts and quasits who are vulnerable to it, not any fey creature. Devils and/or fiends might dislike iron, powdered cold iron is a component in Magic Circle Against Evil, and “cold-wrought iron” makes a couple of appearances. For example, in AD&D it can strike Fool’s Gold and turn it back to its natural state, revealing the illusion.
Then Changeling: The Dreaming came along and made it a big deal, a fundamental rule, and an anathema to all fae:
Cold iron is the ultimate sign of Banality to changelings. ... Its presence makes changelings ill at ease, and cold iron weapons cause horrible, smoking wounds that rob changelings of Glamour and threaten their very existence.... The best way to think about cold iron is not as a thing, but as a process, a very low-tech process. It must be produced from iron ore over a charcoal fire. The resulting lump of black-gray material can then be forged (hammered) into useful shapes. — Changeling: The Dreaming (2nd Edition, 1997)
So now that we know how iron works, does that description make sense? Well, if we assume that the iron ore is unceremoniously dumped on coals, it does not. You can’t smelt iron like that. If we assume that a bloomery is involved even though it’s not mentioned, then yes, this is broadly speaking how iron’s been made since the Iron Age, and until blast furnaces came into the picture. But the World of Darkness isn’t a pseudo-medieval setting, it’s modern urban fantasy. So the implication here is that “cold iron” is iron made the old way: you can’t buy it in the store, someone has to replicate ye olde process and do the whole thing by hand. Now, this is NOT how the term “cold iron” has been used in real life or fiction thus far, but hey, fantasy games are allowed to invent things.
Regardless, 3.5 borrowed the idea, and for the first time D&D made this a core rule. Now most fey creatures had damage reduction and took less damage from weapons and natural attacks, unless the weapon was made of Cold Iron:
“This iron, mined deep underground, known for its effectiveness against fey creatures, is forged at a lower temperature to preserve its delicate properties.” — Player’s Handbook (3.5 Edition, 2003)
Pathfinder kept the rule, though 5e did not. And unlike Changeling, this definition left it somewhat ambiguous if we’re talking about a material with special composition (i.e. not iron) or made with a special process (i.e. iron but). The community was divided, threads were locked over this!
So until someone points me to new evidence, I’ll assume that the invention of cold iron as a special material, distinct from plain iron, should be attributed to TTRPGs.
#long post#cold iron#d&d#Changeling: The Dreaming#World of Darkness#Peter S. Beagle#The Last Unicorn#Rudyard Kipling#Poul Anderson#The Broken Sword#how to rogue#pathfinder#rogues in fiction#Operation Chaos#rogue superstitions#words of the trade#thieves' cant#ad&d#d&d history#1st edition#fey#3.5#fluff#trs
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i like how crossroads of ravens elaborated on geralt’s childhood at kaer morhen a bit, his brotherhood with eskel mentioned and even more on his relationship with the temple of melitele, nenneke and assumpta, in addition to giving us a new mentorship dynamic with holt
but also because this just confirms further everything we already knew: that geralt has a familial background, he was socialized, yes he was raised in isolation in the mountains but he wasn’t raised wild.
in crossroads, especially for a witcher, and for everything he’s been through… he seems like a well-adjusted young lad. a little underconfident, but pretty smart, funny, kind, good-natured.
again: it’s geralt.
and yet. as we know. he still wanders this world alone. he travels alone he sleeps alone. his life is filled with loneliness. and we are to presume that he did this same thing, rinse-repeat for nearly 40 years. chronic loneliness. and as we know, he did nothing wrong, did nothing to deserve it. he’s just alone because he is alone. he’s always travelled alone.
i think aloneness and loneliness is always presented as a consequence of being wrong, socially outcast, you know—abnormal.
and as geralt deals with this, as we know, because he’s a witcher. but we also know that many people were grateful to him for his work, and it’s not impossible for a witcher to socialize and find a place in a society (preston holt had how many people working at rocamora, who i am assuming did not fear or hate him? who literally invited all their relatives there to stay for a big saovine and yule party?!)
of course times have changed since holt’s, but just saying, although geralt’s isolation is a consequence of society casting him out, we know he also casts himself out—flaunts his abnormality. but even besides that, before he became embittered with society’s treatment, he was still alone. yes, he made allies, but did he make friends…
crossroads just cleared its throat, went up on stage, and made it extra crystal clear for us: “no, he’s a nice kid, he’s just kind of a loser” fuck offffff. he’s just like me fr
#i mean it’s that and the superstitions about the mange but#geralt is ‘the weird kid’ but he’s not even that weird 😭😭 he’s literally normal#like i know geralt sinking into his jonkler ‘white wolf will get them’ dark moods is a meme but#he’s literally just a guy who is alone by coincidence and circumstance#loneliness is not a punishment it just happens to you. that’s so fucked up#because one who is alone will perish tossed from hand to hand like a doll#and then also by coincidence: REJOICE POET BE UPON YE 🎸🎸🎸🎸#(there’s no lute emoji)#the elbow-high diaries
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Haunted house rules:
Always have a extra chair at the table, in case you have an uninvited guest, may they be human or not.
It’s always wise to be polite.
#pagan witch#witch community#witchcore#witchy#babacore#pagan community#witchcraft#witches#folklore#folk witchcraft#folk magic#folk horror#superstitious beliefs#superstition#haunted house rules#haunted house#haunted#ghosts#ghostcore#hagcore#Spooky grandmacore#dark cottagecore
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