Filed under: Music, Uncategorized | Tags: Music, Post-Punk, Punk, Teddy and the Frat Girls
I know that to anyone who might stumble across this blog it may very well seem dead. Well, it isn’t. Not yet. I have yet to give up on the Fist…even though the updates have beem few and far between. Yes their are other responsibilities/distractions, yes there is the persistence of writer’s block. I don’t give up that easy, and I would like the Ovarian Fist to thrive.
Having said that…
~
How About a Quickie?
Boys stink.
Come on girls, we all know it.
Yes, even the most pragmatic of feminists can possess that ever ingrained dualistic conflict; that sneer-inducing, panty-twisting, push-him-down-on-the-playground ideal that some men–some boys–just stink.
And while some of us may plant our feet into the notion that both men and women should be treated equal–that that’s what real feminism is about–There are some of those dull-eyed and drooling creatures out there that we simply can’t stand. These are the cavemen that still roam the streets today; the unrefined masses of men that still grunt when they want something and cry when they don’t get it. Like a baby searching for a teat (a surprisingly accurate simile) they clutch their lewd little fists about them to grasp anything they can get and they’ll only be calmed by the sight of “boobies”. It leaves a bitter taste in the mouth, really.
Anyways, these louts are a problem that many women have had to deal with for eons, and it’s something that we’ll most likely always endure. There may not be an antidote, but the consolation prize is at hands, my friends. We can content ourselves with the fact that we at least have the women out there that have grown so tired of this oafish behavior that they choose to sing (or shriek, scream, and growl) about it, and hey, we get to sing along with them.
Teddy and the Frat Girls’ “I Wanna Be a Man” might remind you of all those brutes you’ve had to put up with over the course of your life, but it’ll also provide the angry feminists out there (or any woman who has ever had to say “I’m up here“, really) with a few quick quips and jabs right back at the ogres of the world. You will be disgusted, but then you will be delighted. Don’t be surprised if you sing along to this one in the car while wearing your most terrifying playground face ever.
Yes, men and women should be treated equal, blah blah blah. Now go find a brute and castrate him!
Teddy and the Frat Girls- I Wanna Be a Man
Teddy and the Frat Girls- Clubnite
Teddy and the Frat Girls- I Owe it to the Girls
Teddy and the Frat Girls may have only released one album, it may only have consisted of five songs, but that little album is a sublime blast from the post-punk era. Their sound ranges from LiLiPUT to Bikini Kill, Essential Logic to the rantings of performance artist Karen Finley. There’s a little taste of it all in there; hints of modern riot grrrl, the shriekings of Lydia Lunch, the strangeness of The Slits and the obscurity of the best and rarest swedish female punk bands that you’ve never heard of. It’s one of the oddest things I’ve heard in awhile, and thus one of the best. Give them a listen!
Filed under: Music | Tags: Indie Rock, Music, Scout Niblett, The Calcination of Scout Niblett
Women Who Rock: The Testimony of Scout
Some women you can’t help but fall in love with a few times over, no matter how hard you may try. Of course, some women are thoroughly a pleasure to fall in love with again and again, and those you succumb to with renewed fever and a revived sense of elation.
I fall in love with Scout Niblett a little bit more every time I hear a song of hers, and I know I’m not the only one. After all, who could possibly resist those nudging dark eyes and that hopelessly homeless attire? It would be cliché to compare her to a siren, though her wailing vocals do lead me straight to her citadel each and every time my ears catch a hitch of her resonant howls.
And yet here I am once again; Scout has released a vibrant new musical endeavor and I welcome it with open ears. I hadn’t even known that a new work was in the midst until it was here, suddenly grinning up at me from my copy of Bust (hey, I read it for the music and book reviews. Everett True’s “First Ladies of Rock” is a brilliant installment). Of course I plugged right in, and of course I was contented. Scout never fails to deliver.
As always, on The Calcination of Scout Niblett Scout works on the constant battle between spatial silence and ardent guitar work (that or deep, hounding drums), Thematically she continues to inject her soothsaying vocals into each song, assuring us that she “knew this was going to happen,” whatever “this” may be. She’s there, she’s been there, and now she wallows in it like an experienced soul. This may sound like the same Scout to you, but I assure you that it isn’t. Not entirely. This Scout took a pilgrimage to Anywhere and came back fiercer than ever.
Indeed, there is something slightly different about The Calcination. This album is more self-certain. Scout acknowledges herself in the strongest of ways, especially in songs such as “The Calcination of Scout Niblett”. She beats her guitar like usual, sways her vocals like a stray cat, and howls her way into the night of self-made rock and roll. She’s calcifying her own creative bones. She often invokes the gist of it all with one “yeah”, whether it’s wily and free or restrained and cornered. It soars, no matter the context. She waves to you on the cover of her album, blowtorch in hand, telling you without a doubt that she’s making changes and you’re going to have to participate or abstain. Perhaps you should just sit back and watch, lest you get burned.
Scout, you see, is simply becoming an expert at what she does best. You can hear the years that have passed since Sweetheart Fever and I Am, and even the more recent This Fool Can Die Now. Scout is refining her grit to a tee. She’s managed to keep her spirit and her fire, though she’s becoming less like the frumpy street corner soothsayer and more like the certified sirenic prophet (still homeless, though).
Old favorites like “Drummer Boy” and “Miss My Lion” now seem like build-ups to this present Scout, surefire rungs in the ladder upward and onward. Progressions as it should be, not settlements or creative compromises. A certain logical refinement, a growing and spreading like branches. You always have the roots, of course; they cannot be forgotten. If you simply stick to the roots, however, you’ll never see any visible growth. Like so many of the best artists Scout has her roots, she’s built herself a steady trunk, and now she’s simply working on her branches.
Emma Louise Niblett, you have my heart. Please do abuse it like one of your guitars.
Off The Calcination of Scout Niblett:
Scout Niblett- The Calcination of Scout Niblett
Scout Niblett- Lucy Lucifer
And for those who were previously unfamiliar with Scout, a few older works:
Scout Niblett- Drummer Boy (I Am)
Scout Niblett- Let Thine Heart Be Warmed (This Fool Can Die Now)
Also, please indulge in this awesome video:
Scout Niblett featuring Bonnie Prince Billy- Kiss
Filed under: Music | Tags: Adickdid, Allison Wolfe, Bratmobile, Cold Cold Hearts, Corin Tucker, Heavens to Betsy, Kaia Wilson, Music, Punk, Riot Grrrl, Sleater-Kinney, Team Dresch, The Butchies
Women Who Rock
Allison Wolfe. Kaia Wilson. Corin Tucker. Your mouth watering yet?
If you haven’t heard these names until now, then it’s about time you catch up on your studies of “women who kick ass”. Corin Tucker, the wailing-flailing insistence of Sleater-Kinney. Kaia Wilson, the pioneer of nearly every female queercore band that has mattered. Allison Wolfe, the bitch-bouncing, catty head cheerleader of Bratmobile. All of these women have made a significant difference in contemporary female punk, and all of these women have contributed to numerous projects on the side. It can send the mind spinning when one takes into consideration how these different notable females can intertwine, weaving in and out of gigs with each other like bored and curious teenagers in a suffocatingly small town (or, perhaps, like the few lesbians in my high school who took turns dating each other because there wasn’t anything or anyone else).
I began my young feminist career observing the obvious deities; Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, Sleater-Kinney and The Butchies. I got down on my knees for Tobi Vail, bowed my head for Allison Wolfe, and crossed my heart for Kathleen Hanna. As much as I love riot grrrl, I will openly admit that one can delve only so deep into these few examples (that is to say, the projects–not the women). Riot grrrl was certainly a comfy seat for me, but it wasn’t long before I began to feel the thirst again. I craved that high that one experiences, that enigmatic rush when one happens upon a new band or sound that is just damn right. So, inevitably, like one who is always searching to trump what one has already found, I dug deeper. I’ve rummaged through an impressive amount of female punk bands since then and have happened upon some interesting results. Without much research I plugged into bands like Heavens to Betsy, Excuse 17, Cold Cold Hearts and The Frumpies, never really aware of the fact that I was tuning into the same heroines all over again–just coupled in different pairings and wearing different wigs. In most cases, I was surprised to find that I actually preferred the obscurer of the projects.
This leads us once again to the three women exclusively named at the forefront of this review. These three women are prime examples of such an occurrence; I enjoyed them—ravished them all in their primary bands and then experienced a second coming once I dug deeper into their careers (though an accidental discovery, it may have been). Because I am a person that likes to analyze, I am also a person that likes to compare. Today I intend on making a comparison of two notable projects from each of these females; I intend on providing you all with an example of what they’re usually affiliated with and what I think they should be most affiliated with. These are all opinions, of course, and may not be perceived in the same light by each individual. That being said, on to the ladies!
~
Kaia Wilson
The first I heard of Kaia Wilson was the faux-punk hopping of The Butchies’ song “Trouble”; a fun ride but one that provides nothing more than a slight sugar buzz. Like with Gina Young, I was initially stimulated by the fact that The Butchies sang about sharing love with a woman and how pretty other girls were—out loud! This is a flimsy plank to stand on, however, and I jumped ship as soon as the giddiness wore off. Through the Butchies I came across the perhaps more popular Team Dresch, which certainly provided me with less feelings of pop-ridden guilt and more of a sense that I was ‘rocking out’. With Team Dresch I got the same excitement of listening to women sing about women, this time minus the insubstantial cuteness of songs like “Send Me You” and “She’s So Lovely”, ditties so sweet that they ultimately leave you feeling a bit on the sick side.
I’m not sure just what took place, but after a brief period of enthusiasm I steamrolled right through Team Dresch, too. One by one the songs were removed from my iPod to make space for newer tunes that held more interest. Some songs that I had originally enjoyed began to grate on my nerves, and I skipped past the remaining few when ‘shuffle’ offered to play them. After a period of little to no Kaia Wilson in my life, I happened upon Adickdid. I’ll admit that it’s a slightly new endeavor for me and I have yet to fully immerse myself in the music, but I like what I hear. I’m not going to make the argument that Adickdid is any more substantial than The Butchies or Team Dresch, but it certainly is rougher and that’s something I’ll get behind.
Team Dresch songs like “Freewheel” give one the sense that the guitars are in charge, that they’re vibrating uncontrollably in the arms of the musicians and they’re just doing their best to hold on. Conversely, songs by Adickdid generate the perception that the instruments are being beaten to death– not played. It’s the difference between an animal that is wild with freedom and one that is abused to the point of rebellion–and one most always finds it easier to identify with the abused than the free.
Team Dresch- Freewheel
Adickdid- Eye Level
Allison Wolfe
Cold Cold Hearts’ “State Trooper in the Left Lane, Nattles!”, a song title that finds it hard to be taken seriously, and honestly shouldn’t be. At the opening of the song the drums march, the guitar makes an accusation, and the bass vibrates in your gut. In comes Wolfe’s vocals, sweet and bitter like marmalade- “So yeah, I’m coming downtown with a baseball bat”. All of it follows the true to life riot grrrl fashion; One can only imagine a small party of girls on a stage wearing suspiciously short skirts and Mary Janes, tights and scowls and guitars that look just a little too big.
The thing is, though, that I will take it a little too seriously and listen to the opening of this song over and over. There is something so handcrafted about it, so DIY that I can’t help but feel strangely empowered. The lyrics are nothing special, the music may be on the tedious side, but the riot grrrl mentality thrives. For me it was a nice change from the recital-like deliverance of Bratmobile; I always imagined a well-rehearsed Allison Wolfe at the head of the stage with pom-poms, kicking and scowling in time as originally planned. That isn’t to say that this song is void of such a vision; it’s not. Wolfe’s interluding string of “oh yeah”s isn’t far from the initial Bratmobile image of a tousled girl brigade, but the song reminds me a bit more of the unseatbelted strangeness of Bikini Kill (Which I’ve always preferred to Bratmobile and consider to be the epitome of riot grrrl) . In short, you aren’t completely sure about what you’re going to encounter around the next corner, and its certainly more interesting than determining the entire song from just the first few notes (see “What’s Wrong With You?”).
Bratmobile- What’s Wrong With You?
Cold Cold Hearts- State Trooper in the Left Lane, Nattles!
Corin Tucker
Certainly, I will always have a soft spot for Sleater-Kinney. Their self-titled debut album ranks at the top of my list of riot grrrl masterpieces, along with mainstays like Bikini Kill’s Pussy Whipped and The Raincoats’ self-titled from 1980 (yes, it predates riot grrrl, but it’s still very important). It’s not a band that needs plugging, however, and so I won’t be preaching the significance of that record. I have something else in mind.
Before Corin Tucker set her high-powered yowl to Sleater-Kinney greatness she pitched her vocals a’wailing for the one album wonder Heavens to Betsy–and don’t you forget it. There may only be one record, but it’s a damn good one. The guitars buzzed, the drums vibrated, and Corin Tucker wailed like she was performing an exorcism on herself. I hate to say it (and I almost feel like I’m breaking some riot grrrl taboo—though surely that line was crossed when I dismissed Bratmobile), but in my mind Calculated surpasses any one of the albums produced by Sleater-Kinney. Yes, this includes the debut. Though Heavens to Betsy precedes Sleater-Kinney, the album Calculated still appears to be just one step ahead. When Sleater-Kinney cheers, Heavens to Betsy howls. When Sleater-Kinney gets angry, Heavens to Betsy gets revenge. When Sleater-Kinney bites, Heavens to Betsy castrates.
Heavens to Betsy is what happens when Sleater-Kinney is on its last nerve. When one listens to the song “Terrorist” one gets the feeling that the whole song is coming at you, staring you down, and challenging you to back up your words with valid action. The guitars hold their ground, Tucker challenges you to a fight, and the drums chant, “finish them!”
Never before has Corin Tucker seemed so dangerous, and never has she seemed so damn free.
Sleater-Kinney- How to Play Dead
Heavens to Betsy- Terrorist
~
It does seem to be a strangely common occurence; many artists leave behind the sinewy gristle of their old projects for a smoother, more accessible sound—as if that’s progress. Kathleen Hanna went from Bikini Kill to Le Tigre, Kaia Wilson “traded up” from Adickdid to The Butchies, and Courtney Love went from classic Hole to…whatever she’s doing now. It’s as if a certain amount of experience comes with a certain decrease in passion, as if the more one takes part in such projects the more one forgets how expressing real emotion actually feels. You either experience a short (yet abrasive) career, or you watch yourself become an empty vessel, a brittle shell of plastic with no warm marrow to cushion your bones. I don’t see the improvement from early Sleater-Kinney to the release of The Woods, and I definitely don’t see the improvement from Calculated to Sleater-Kinney. All I can really do is revisit these brief gasps of sheer life and intensity and wish that they had held up just a little bit longer. This is why I will continue to meander about the Internet for any obscurity that can quench my thirst; I will always be looking for the ghosts of Kathleen Hanna and Corin Tucker, Allison Wolfe and Kaia Wilson, Tobi Vail and Gina Birch.
Filed under: Literature, Music | Tags: Folk Rock, Gina Young, Lesbian, Michelle Tea, Music, Punk, Riot Grrrl, Women's Literature
“You’re Right Where You Should Be, Now Act Like It”
I’ve always been a regular library-goer, a borderline librarian wannabe. Even when I was in high school I dragged myself down to the school library daily, skimming the limited shelves for something new and interesting, any title or book cover that could catch my eye. Once I had just about memorized each and every book in the fiction section of the school’s supply I expanded my discoveries to include the little library by my house.
At my school library I had only gotten a taste of of the literature that could be, a tiny vial drop on the tip of my tongue of what the world had to offer in the means of women’s literature. Upgrading from the narrow and confining shelves of my school to the rows and rows of unexplored fiction of the public library was a bit daunting, but it was a challenge that was welcome. Like exploring a new land, I wandered up and down each shelf for something to reach out and tug on my sleeve, to draw me in and choose me as a reader.
It didn’t take long. As if approaching a shrine I slowly made my way up to one shelf in particular, to one book amongst so many of much brighter colors and much more fantastic typefaces. My feet took me there, my eyes found the title, my hands grabbed the book, and all of this happened as if preordained. Rose of No Man’s Land, it read.
I found my dad in one of the odd and awkwardly small sections, religion or health or maybe even “large print”.
Found something? he asked. I nodded. I think so.
–
If I could name one woman to you that has undoubtedly influenced me, I would most certainly name Michelle Tea in the first regime. At that time in my life I had had my fill of Go Ask Alice-type books; novels that contained the tired formula of “young teen treads off the beaten path, ruins life, ruins family, loses everything/dies a horrible death”. I knew that ‘certain behaviors’ had ‘certain circumstances’, but I also knew that most young adults reacted with the timeless ‘eye roll’ when they were presented with this formula. One was curious and couldn’t help but ask: But what about those who didn’t succumb to this famous synopsis?
In Michelle Tea’s Rose of No Man’s Land the main character Trisha experiences just such a night of exciting (and frightening) debauchery, indulging in all the self-destructive habits that are so popular at that age. In fact, the entire second half of the book is concerned with this one night– up until the very end. At the end of the novel the exhausted Trisha simply walks home. How refreshing, I thought, that one could experience so much in such a short period of time and still remain oneself (more or less). Unlike the majority of young adult fiction out there Michelle Tea was not shoveling morals; she was only concerned with telling a story.
This was my first impression of Tea, but it is not why I find her decidedly important. Though I’ve continued to find her individual stories refreshing it is the style in which she writes them that has had the most impact on me as a writer and an artist. Michelle Tea’s writing consists of an overtly raw and sinewy honesty, complimented by an introspective humor and enhanced by an unconventionally descriptive voice. She is the corroded queen of the back alley, the silver-spewing siren of a strange mix of pop culture and battery acid. Both a writer and a poet, Tea has already turned out a slightly impressive amount of novels in a relatively small period of time, and she doesn’t show any signs of relenting just yet. When she’s not writing herself she gives a leg up to other promising authors; In 1994 she co-founded the “legendary all-girl spoken word show ‘Sister Spit‘, and she’s also created Radar Productions, a non-profit organization designed to help young authors in the San Francisco area.
Among the list of Tea’s accomplishments are autobiography-like novels such as Valencia (which she won a Lambda award for) and The Passionate Mistakes and Intricate Corruption of One Girl in America, an official memoir titled The Chelsea Whistle, and one graphic novel with the title of Rent Girl. She’s also had her poetry collected and published in one book, The Beautiful. I wish that I could sit here and present sample after sample of her writings and poetry, but I’m not going to do that for sensible reasons. I can, however, help point you in the right direction.
In my opinion, her autobiography The Chelsea Whistle is one of her best put together works. Though Valencia is usually her most discussed (and argued) novel, it’s hard for me to construct a full and coherent review of it. Valencia tends to be one of those novels that is either ardently treasured or utterly hated, and I find myself confusedly on the fence. It is a lot to take in and a lack of information all at once, leaving the reader intrigued but ultimately disconnected. Because of this, I will instead provide a small excerpt from The Chelsea Whistle. This excerpt is from the opening portion of the novel, which I’ve always considered memorable and effective.
The Chelsea Whistle, “Sicko”:
“Childhood is morbid. That’s a word that I learned from my mother. You kids are morbid, she said, spying on me and my sister, small Madeline, playing with our cousin Allen, who everyone said was going to turn out gay from all the dolls his grandmother bought him. It was the era of “William Wants a Doll,” a tune that didn’t quite reach Chelsea, Massachusettes, a town five minutes from Boston that might as well have been five hours, five days. People in Chelsea went to neighboring towns like Revere, Everett, East Boston–similarly connected to the big city and all its culture but, like Chelsea, sealed off, retarded by the local yokels’ fears of big cities and all the different people who dwell there. Not that you’d call the sort of stunted human that occupied my town a yokel. Yokels were trailer trash living in wild rural areas deep in the jungles of America, a television myth. These low-ballers were “townies”, and they were proud of it. As if being born into this grimy pocket of New England were a cosmic lottery hit. East Boston–Eastie–had a tunnel that shot you into Boston, and in Chelsea we had the big green bridge that looped the edge of town, a dead warehouse district. You had to pay a guy in a little booth fifty cents to pass into Boston. That made sense. The city was holding us hostage. What didn’t make sense was having to toss the guy quarters on your way back, too. A toll to get into Chelsea? Its cracked pavement and trashy curbs, plastic playgrounds stained with spray paint and mean kids on every corner, wanting to kick your ass–that was Chelsea, and they made you give them two quarters to get into it. Like being bullied out of your lunch money. They’ll nickel and dime ya to death, my parents would often lament, and I’d think of this phrase as the twin coins were tossed into the giant basket on the Tobin Bridge, tumbling into the hole that would lift the bar and allow our car entrance to Chelsea. Outside of our misanthropic city, in Boston, children were free to be you and me, and William was serenaded for his dolly desires, bit it never reached us. It was like a cable station we just didn’t get…”
Other works of Tea’s that deserve your attention: Anything she has written is worth a look. This includes the handful of collections that she has edited and contributed to, such as Pills, Thrills, Chills, and Heartache: Adventures in the First Person, Baby Remember My Name: An Anthology of New Queer Girl Writing, and Without a Net: The Female Experience of Growing Up Working Class.
All of Michelle Tea’s books can be purchased at Amazon.com. Go check one of them out!
~
Women Who Rock
In keeping with the theme of female ‘firsts’ for me, let’s talk about Gina Young. In my mind Gina Young is the Michelle Tea of music, if that makes sense. Like Tea I stumbled across her by mere chance (though on the internet), and like Tea I knew I had found something significant from the moment my eyes adjusted to the sight. I looked at the album cover, I read the album title, and I knew that I had found just what I was looking for at just the moment that I needed it most.
Intractable. A CD that is so evilly advertised on Amazon.com though never actually available, except through isolated resellers. There she was looking just like every girl that I wanted to know, holding up her modest sign like the welcome wagon at an airport; Here I am just for you; this is the very ride that you need. Back then it was unavailable, “out of print”, I believe, and not much has changed since then. This was a mere obstacle for me though, I could not be so easily dissuaded. I searched the internet for “Gina Young” and “Intractable” until I came across cdbaby.com for the first time (a source that I would use many times in the future, thanks Gina) and purchased myself a copy.
A few lyrical samples to wet your taste buds:
“…I’ll set the scene
Your eyes were lime green,
your nails dug into me,
we shared a quiet scream.
We were dreaming
that this was liberty
but found that bleeding
is still a girl thing…”
(Intractable, ” Intractable”)
“Clinic bombings,
racist lynchings.
wonder why
I don’t feel like smiling.
what’s that smell?
it’s books burning.
Shh, don’t tell
the little witch is learning…”
(Intractable, “Fire, Fire”)
“I built my house of straw, he said
out of the blue
it’s not like
I even asked him.
And I thought
to myself,
it’s funny how I
only ever had
tampon boxes to play with,
and he had straw, it’s funny.
they never told me that…”
(She’s So Androgynous, “Straw House”)
“…and I object
not just to this war,
but to all of the things
that you stand for.
Like dropping bombs
to lower the price of gas,
I guess the constitution
is just some piece of scrap paper
that you use to wipe your ass,
you bastard!”
(She’s So Androgynous, “An Open Letter to the President”)
Back when I first stumbled across Gina Young I also happened upon two very different reviews of her music. One of them (like most of them out there) had nothing but praise for Young, commending her for her “political awareness” and unabashed sincerity at such a young age. Her lyrics were called clever, witty, and in your face. The other review, however, found these same sincerities and their delivery to be nothing more than childish. Young, they said, was no revolutionary; she was just a bratty young girl with opinions that she didn’t mind shoving down your throat.
So which review is right? Perhaps a bit of both. Young’s lyrics may not be groundbreaking, but they aren’t complete b.s. either. She may not be the next leader of the free world, but for a decent handful of infuriated young women she’ll make a hell of a lot of sense. The girl definitely has opinions (how many of us aren’t guilty of that?), but she often finds clear and attractive ways of getting them across. She most certainly does have charm, and she most certainly does have an edge of wit. There are a few of her songs that verge on a “diary-like” whine, but even these small stagnant pitfalls are entertaining and are often followed by modest bursts of sheer strength and brightness. I have felt myself slowly grow out of this music, but I will always maintain the opinion that Gina Young is a woman that you should experience.
Folks, this woman existed to me before Ani Difranco. Before Liz Phair, before Patti Smith, hell– even before PJ Harvey I heard Gina Young. Out of sheer luck, sheer chance, I tripped over the obscurest of voices– and found the most familiar. I haven’t always given her as much attention as she deserves and she’s since released two other albums (which progressively lose the magic of Intractable in my opinion), but like with Michelle Tea I occasionally plug myself back in and realize why I was so mystified the first time around. I hear the same fire that kindled my young feminist ego and feel the same chills, experience the same desire for a loud-mouthed revolution. Once again I am diesel-fueled into an all out feminist rage, ready to kick butt and take names and leave no prisoners (yes, all cliché statements– but who gives a damn?). Gina Young is a woman that deserves your ear, so take a minute to give her a listen, will you?
Gina Young- Supergirl (Intractable)
Gina Young- Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? (Intractable)
Gina Young- Punkrockdyke (She’s So Androgynous)
(This is by no means the best of Gina Young. Each and every song on Intractable is memorable and catchy as hell, and She’s so Androgynous isn’t a waste of time either. It was a damn difficult decision for me to choose which songs to post; if you enjoy these songs than you should most definitely purchase the full CDs and support the artist. You can purchase Intractable at cdbaby.com, and you can purchase both Intractable and She’s so Androgynous at iTunes. Go get ‘em!)
You can also visit Gina Young’s official site here.
Filed under: Art, Music | Tags: Devics, Female Artists, Indie Rock, Janine Antoni, Music, Performance Art
Janine Touches the Horizon
Another contemporary female artist that I’ve only recently learned of is Janine Antoni. Though Antoni is often placed into the category of performance art, she considers her own work to be more about the process of creation instead of the act of performing. Antoni utilizes her body and mind to orchestrate multi-faceted pieces that exist and evolve over a period of time, often at the hands of her own insistence. This desire to organically construct and alter her work is apparent in pieces such as Gnaw and Lick and Lather. In both of these pieces Antoni begins with a solid and basic form; Gnaw begins with one healthy chunk of lard and one of chocolate, Lick and Lather‘s core consists of chocolate and soap. In Gnaw Antoni transforms the two cubes by chewing into them, using the bits that she extracted with her mouth to make a box of chocolates and tubes of lipstick. Lick and Lather also begins with two vague forms, though she sculpts these into busts of herself. Gently she licks the chocolate bust of herself, and gently she washes her body with the bust of soap. Though both of these acts come across as tentative and loving, one can eventually see that the fine features on both forms are slowly being erased– washed away down the drain or dripping down the back of the throat of the artist.
Perhaps my most favorite piece of Antoni’s is not one that is about the evolution of forms, but it is about process. In 2002 Janine Antoni performed Touch, a piece that she diligently prepared for by learning to tightrope. Once she finally felt comfortable with her balance (or lack thereof) she took her portable tightrope home with her to the Bahamas and proceeded to tread the familiar horizon of her childhood. When Antoni’s foot meets the sea line it certainly doesn’t feel like all that lies below her is a string of rope and air; one can almost feel the absolute concreteness and shaking certainty that she has touched down on what is undeniably real and fathomable. One is almost envious, for Antoni surely seems to have made sense of the intangible, made use of the impossible. For those few moments she is boundlessly free.
View Touch here.
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Women Who Rock
As with most people, I’ve been through quite a few musical evolutions in the course of my short life. I’ve grown out of music in a matter of years, months, and on some strange occasions even weeks or days. There are really only a few bands that have managed to snag a back seat and progress with me, and one of the few that I can readily remember is the band Devics.
I don’t really even remember how I first came across this band, I just know that I was lucky enough to find them when I was in a quite depressing musical phase (literally — Switchblade Symphony, Theater of Tragedy, Dead Can Dance). Though Devics isn’t really a good choice if you need a cheering up either, they still had the versatility to filter into each and every genre that I obsessively dug my nails into for years to come. Their sound has changed a bit since I first came across them; the CD that they released in 2006 feels a bit more polished than some of the songs off of The Stars at Saint Andrea and My Beautiful Sinking Ship. Still, to this day I sit back and listen to songs like “Connected by a String” and “My Beautiful Sinking Ship” and am transferred to a tarnished land of brass and velvet where the women wear their their hair in tight curls and swoon onto ornamental chaises in the most dramatic and elegant of poses. In the curling sound waves of these songs there are people strolling along muddied and barnacle-clad wharfs on fantastically gray days, parasols and walking canes on the ready. There are old cities, buildings with many windows that look out to the dark romantic streets of Europe, used up carnivals and the faded gray crime scene-like Polaroids of your previous generations. Yes, it’s a bit of an over-the-top and theatrical description, but this is a band that evokes and encourages the dramatic and theatrical.
Give them a listen!
Devics- My Beautiful Sinking Ship
Devics- Connected by a String
Devics- Heaven Please
Filed under: Art, Music | Tags: Female Artists, Marina Abramovic, Music, Performance Art, Post-Punk, Punk
Who Creates the Limits?
Marina Abramovic is one grossly underrated performance artist. This is a statement that I can now make, having just learned of her recently myself. She is perhaps best known for her collaborative work with fellow performance artist Ulay, but it is her own personal pieces that have the strongest effect on this art geek. Whether her piece is a matter of seconds, minutes, or hours, Abramovic never seems to fail to kick the very core of me with her frank sexuality and personal destruction. The woman can appear before you as the most alluring of figures, only to degrade you and herself to nothing more than a mere joke. She can figuratively cut you as she nicks her own flesh, bruise you exhaustively as she drudges herself down to nothing on her pristine white stage. She is comedy and tragedy rolled into one, a farcical disaster, a fabulous calamity. The woman will show no mercy for herself or anyone else, and you are by no means an exception.
In case you aren’t familiar with her collaborative work with Ulay, here is a slight recap. Marina Abramovic and Ulay (Uwe Laysiepen) met in 1976 in Amsterdam, where they both discovered that they were born on the same day. Marina says that for her there was an instant attraction. For a span of about 15 years they continued to create pieces that dealt with human interaction in various forms; many of their pieces involved the exchange (and destruction) of energy from one person to another. Other themes included reliance, trust, and testing the limits of a strong bond that two people may share. Here is a link to one of their more famous pieces, “Expansion in Space”.
Marina’s own pieces often speak much more about isolation, desperation, and internal conflict. She will switch from a seemingly high sense of self to an apparent self-loathing in one breath, sometimes stroking her skin sensually and sometimes tearing at it with knives and other menacing items. One can never know if she is just that remarkably comfortable with herself, or if she simply never has been.
Below is a link to her video piece The Star (1999), which illustrates a remarkable range of the different humors, agonies, and absurdities that she expresses in her performances. Though this seems to cover a wide range of her work, it is not really even a scratch on the surface. She has created so many effective pieces over the course of her life that one cannot sit down and discuss them all without putting aside a good amount of time. This is especially the case when considering her newer works, which of course are not mentioned in the video due to the date of production.
Lastly I would like to post a link to a wonderful question-answer session with Marina Abramovic, conducted by the Tate Channel. It’s hard to not be at least slightly inspired by her answer to the question, “how far is too far?”.
Tate Channel interview with Marina Abramovic
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Women Who Rock
Instead of discussing one single band this time around, I think that it’s time for more of a ‘themed’ music post. Here are a few songs from various (highly obscure) female-fronted punk bands that are all about women’s traditional domestic obligations and how they feel about them. Enjoy!
Vital Disorders- Let’s Talk About Prams
The Petticoats- Normal
Androids of Mu- Bored Housewives
Filed under: Music, News | Tags: Crass, India, Music, Punk, Riot Grrrl, Sexual Assault
Making Noise
I just recently learned of this campaign in India titled the Blank Noise Project. Started by Jasmeen Patheja, this project targets the largely uncontrolled sexual harassment that women in India undergo daily. Though women are sexually harassed all over the world, India is one example of a country where things are especially out of hand. I was surprised to hear that the popular term for sexual harrasment in India is “eve teasing”, a phrase that only shrinks the seriousness of the offense and makes it seem like mere bullying. I don’t know about you, but I never considered a stranger grabbing a hold of my breasts or butt as ‘teasing’.
The women and men that take part in the Blank Noise Project utilize just about anything they can to get their message across; flyers, photos, whistling in the busy streets of India and walking in pairs after dark to “take back the night”. They encourage women who have been ‘teased’ to speak out about their experience instead of weighing the blame on their own shoulders, to confront their harassers, and even to take a picture of the perpetrator. And that is only the beginning.
Check out their blog to learn more about what they’re doing (and what you can do to help) here.
Whether or not you live in any proximity to India has nothing to do with the importance of this project. Be aware of it, be aware of what you can do, and be aware of what’s going on around you that can change things for the better. There are other campaigns similar to this one in other parts of the world, to check out just one example head here: Take Back the Night
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Women Who Rock
One not so well known piece of feminist punk greatness came from the anarcho-punk band Crass. In 1981 they released the album Penis Envy, which only featured the vocals of female band members Eve Libertine and Joy De Vivre. The opening song “Bata Motel” speaks out about abusive relationships and violence against women using a sardonic and damn effective tone.
A sample of the lyrics:
Well today I look so good
just like I know I should
my breasts tempt inside my bra
my face is painted like a movie star
I’ve studied my flaws in your reflection
and put them to rights with savage correction
I’ve turned my statuesque perfection
shone it over in your direction
so come on darling, make me yours
trip me over, show me the floor
tease me, tease me, make me stay
in my red high-heels I can’t get away…
Give them a listen!
Filed under: Music, News | Tags: LiLiPUT, Music, News, Post-Punk, Riot Grrrl
Welcome to the very first post of “The Ovarian Fist”. The point of this blog? To inform men and women alike of women that they should know in music, art, literature, and whatever else floats my boat. If even one person stumbles across this blog, reads it, and finds the contents of it enlightening then I will be content. Mission complete!
Let’s get rolling.
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‘Cheap’ Women
Lisa Belkin recently wrote a very interesting article for The New York Times regarding the current economic recession and its affect on women in particular. What first looks like a positive change in the workforce is actually just more of the same; women are currently doing better occupationally– because men are doing worse. More and more workplaces are hiring women over men simply due to the fact that they’re cheaper, and thus more economically beneficial. This isn’t really much of an improvement from World War II, when women were permitted to join the workforce simply because the men were off in another country. Back then they were kicked back out of the workforce once the big strong men returned, what exactly is going to happen this time around as the recession declines?
Read the whole article:
“The New Gender Gap”
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Music: Women Who Rock
For this very first post I thought I’d start out with one of my favorites, LiLiPUT. For those who don’t know, LiLiPUT was a Swiss post-punk (and now considered riot grrrl) band that was active between 1978 to 1983. They are often compared to other better known (and also equally amazing) post-punk/riot grrrl bands such as The Raincoats and the Slits. Their music consisted of eccentric vocals by Regula Sing, catchy-as-all-hell guitar riffs by Marlene Marder, adamant drum beats by Lilot Ha, sex-steeped bass riffs by Klaudia Schiff, and the occasional more than welcome saxaphone.
An interesting fact: When they first began they were under the name Kleenex, until they ran into some legal trouble with the Kimberly-Clark Corporation, owner of the popular Kleenex tissue brand. Lyrics are sung in both English and German. Give them a listen!
LiLiPUT- Madness
LiLiPUT- Ain’t You
LiLiPUT- Nice
LiLiPUT- Turk





