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Get Ready For Summer With Clairy Browne's 'Pool': BUST Premiere

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ClairyBrowne Pool 5x5 RGB 1Clairy Browne provides us with a whole new pop sound, on her latest solo album Pool, exclusively premiering on BUST.com! The Australian born singer/songwriter’s mix of R&B and pop music feels like she's calling summer to ask if it wants to hang out. This album is a departure from her last release, Clairy Browne and The Bangin’ Rackettes which had a much more retro vibe.

Here, Browne was influenced by artists like Grace Jones, Tina Turner, Nicki Minaj and Beyoncé. On Pool, she channels the lineage of strong women and gives us a throwback to pop’s past. 

Browne told BUST, “I made this album with the intention of finding new ways to express myself through my music. I set out to write and record without any rules and to allow myself to freely explore, expand and evolve without being pigeon holed into any one musical style or being held back by expectations of what my music should sound like.”

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For the album, Browne collaborated with executive producer and songwriter Amanda Warner a.k.a. MDNR, Jesse Shatkin, Jimmy Harry, Rob Kleiner, and Peter Wade. 

“Working with MNDR on Pool was such an energizing and motivating experience. I feel so deeply happy with what we achieved. The album feels truly, authentically me. It's a rebirth of my musical journey," she said.

On the 11-track album, you'll find pop culture references, skillful rhymes and big soulful ballads galore, which pair especially well with Claire’s incredible voice and all-around talent as a singer/songwriter. 

Pool will be released on April 15th on Vanguard Records, and will be available on iTunes and Amazon. Check out Clairy Browne's website to learn more and follow her on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

 

Photo credit: Harold David

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The Prettiots Go Retro In These Vintage-Inspired Fashion Photos

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Next-big-thing N.Y.C. band the Prettiots head into the country, decked out in some sweet, retro-inspired fashionsprettiots9 copyON KAY: WOOL CASHMERE BLEND SWEATER BY RHIE, RHIESTUDIO.COM

prettiots1ON LULU: GRAY BOMBER COAT BY MANTÚ, BERGDORFGOODMAN.COM. ON RACHEL: LEATHER MOTORCYCLE JACKET BY JACK HENRY NY, JACKHENRYNEWYORK.COM; BABY ALPACA CROPPED CARDIGAN BY FOXX + WALSH, KISANSTORE.COM; PLAID WOOL CREPE SKIRT BY RHIE, BARNEYS.COM; SOCKS BY PENDLETON, PENDLETON-USA.COM; NECKLACE AND BOOTS, RACHEL’S OWN.

prettiots3TEXTURED JACQUARD COAT BY ORLA KIELY, ORLAKIELY.COM; JACQUARD STRIPE SWEATER BY DEMYLEE, STEVENALAN.COM. MAKEUP: TOO FACED CHOCOLATE BAR EYESHADOW PALETTE; KEVIN AUCOIN CREAMY GLOW BLUSH (IN ISADORE); LANCÔME HYPNÔSE DRAMA MASCARA (IN EXCESSIVE BLACK/NOIR); NARS VELVET MATTE LIPSTICK PENCIL (IN WALKYRIE).

prettiots4FLAPT-EAR CAP BY FEDERICA MORETTI, CREATURESOFCOMFORT.US; PLAID RAGLAN JACKET BY NOVIS, NOVISNYC.COM; SWEATER BY DESIGN HISTORY, DESIGNHISTORYNY.COM; MAKEUP: NARS VELVET MATTE LIP PENCIL (IN DOLCE VITA); SMASHBOX BLUSH RUSH (IN BARE); STILA EYE SHADOW (IN DRIFTWOOD ADN CLAY); L'OREAL VOLUMINOUS SMOLDERING EYELINER (IN BROWN).

prettiots5ON KAY: PLAID SHIFT DRESS BY PENDLETON; PLAID BASE-BALL JACKET BY NOVIS; BLACK PATENT LEATHER LACE-UP SHOES BY AGL, NORDSTROM.COM. ON RACHEL: CROPPED WOOL AND LEATHER JACKET BY SKOTISON, SKOTISON.COM; CROPPED SWEATER BY LEVI’S, LEVI.COM; PLAID CULOTTES BY NOVIS; SOCKS BY PENDLETON; BOOTS, RACHEL’S OWN. ON LULU: STRIPED SWEATER BY DEMYLEE; RIBBED WOOL AND CASHMERE SKIRT BY FOXX+WALSH, SHOPJUMELLE.COM; SOCKS BY PENDLETON; BOOTS, VINTAGE.

prettiots6ON RACHEL: PARK STRIPE PULLOVER BY PENDLETON. ON KAY: STRIPED CASHMERE SWEATER BY DEMYLEE; NECKLACE AND BRACELET, KAY’S OWN.

prettiots7BABY ALPACA CABLE KNIT SWEATER AND HIGH-WAISTED FLARE SKIRT BY FOXX+WALSH; SOCKS BY PENDLETON; LEATHER BROGUE BOOTS BY WOLVERINE 1000 MILE, WOLVERINE.COM; JEWELRY, LULU’S OWN. MAKEUP: MAKEUP FOREVER AQUA CREAMLINER (IN MATTE BROWN); STILA EYE SHADOW (IN DRIFTWOOD AND HONEY); MAKEUP FOREVER SMOKEY EXTRAVAGANT MASCARA; MARK JUST BLUSHING POWDER (IN CHARMED); TOO FACED MELTED LIQUIFIED LONG WEAR LIPSTICK (IN NUDE).

 

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Photographed By Glynis S. A. Carpenter
Styled by Tiffany Wilkinson-Raemer
Hair by Liz Morache
Makeup by Christie Lee for RJ Bennett Represents, using Nars Cosmetics

Modeled by the Prettiots (Kay Kasparhauser, Lulu Prat, and Rachel Trachtenburg)
Prop styling by Inez Foose

Rent this Pine Plains, NY, Cabin at homeaway.com (#P905547)
Car Courtesy of John wilber, Pine Plains, NY

This article originally appeared in the October/November 2014 print edition of BUST Magazine. Subscribe today



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Blazing To Beats: A 420 Playlist

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Ready to roll up and rock out? A special 420 playlist for BUSTies who burn has been born. Curating classics like "I Love You Mary Jane" by Sonic Youth and Cypress Hill and catchy riffs from rookie Courtney Barnett's "Lance Jr.," this is designed to puff and pass to. Themes include marijuana, blazing, and being a bad bitch. Luxuriate, relax, and vibe to these hazy toking tunes.

Image from Instagram

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Prince Has Passed Away At Age 57

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We are so sad to report that Prince has passed away at his home, Paisley Park, in Minnesota.

TMZ broke the news to a sad and confused public, hoping this was a hoax. We remember that, on April 15th, Prince's plane made an emergency landing to rush him to the hospital, due to flu-like symptoms.  

Shortly after the hour, Prince's publicist Yvette Noel-Schure confirmed to the Associated Press that the singer had indeed passed away. He leaves behind a legacy of seven Grammy Awards, an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, and over 100 million albums sold worldwide. His fans are in mourning and his talent will be sorely missed.

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John Waters Talks Love, Sex And Friends With Benefits: From The BUST Archives

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A Date with John Waters

FROM THE EARLY, gross-out cult films like Pink Flamingos and Female Trouble to the later, more mainstream escapades—like Hairspray and Cry-Baby—esoteric music has always been central to the John Waters cinematic experience. So it should come as no surprise that the director/actor/writer/photographer has branched out yet again as the musical curator of bizarre holiday-song collections. Hot on the heels of last year’s irreverent A John Waters Christmas, New Line Records is releasing A Date with John Waters just in time for Valentine’s Day; a love-song compilation crammed with raucous rock ‘n’ soul, crazy novelty tracks, beloved Waters’ film alumni, and more. Here, the iconoclast talks to BUST about records, rowdy behavior, and, of course, romance.

The Valentine’s album is amazing! Are all the songs from your private collection?
These were all in my private collection, pretty much. Actually, Tonight You Belong to Me [by Patience & Prudence] was the very first record I ever had, and I stole it. I was with my mother. She turned her back in the drugstore, and I just put it up my coat. I was about eight.

I have to tell you, my favorite song on the album is All I Can Do Is Cry [by Ike & Tina Turner]. When she starts screaming, I just wanna throw myself on the floor.
Ah, yes. Me too. I love that record. She goes so insane. Tina was such an influence on Divine and me. She and Ike would play at a place in Baltimore, and they would come in a beat-up green mini school bus, and she had a little bit of a mustache and an old mink coat and Spring-O-Lators [heels] and processed hair, and Ike looked so much like a pimp, and they were so great together. We were obsessed with her.

Do you have a favorite song of all time?
I’ve put them all in my movies. If you cut through the soundtracks from the beginnings of my movies, they’ve always been my favorite songs. They’re usually rockabilly, country novelty, and really down-and-dirty rhythm and blues. Plus, I love rap. I just got Snoop’s new [record]. I’m also for K-Fed. Who I really wanna date now is Kevin Federline. I hope he gets the kids.

There’s hardly anything ever written about your love life...
Oh, I know.

Do you try to keep it that way? Are you seeing anyone now?
Let’s say this: I “see” some people and they’re friends, and they’re regulars, and they’re very great friends. Maybe they’re...I don’t know...friends with benefits?

Sure.
Know that term?

Absolutely. Do you believe in true love forever?
No...well, yes. My parents have been married for over 60 years, and they love one another very much. But I think it’s not the kind of love they make movies about It’s a different kind of love than the passion you’re talking about in a Douglas Sirk movie. So, do I believe in true love? Yes, but I think real love is caring about people and growing old and all that kind of thing. [Do I believe in] an insane love like when you first meet somebody and you’re incredibly turned on and wildly in love for a hundred years? No! I don’t think that happens, but it turns into something else that’s probably a lot less taxing.

Is that kind of love something you’re looking for?
I don’t think I’m looking for it, no. I have a really good life as a single man, but I’ve certainly been involved with three major people in my life. I’m friends with all of them now. Though there were times when I wasn’t. I’ve had my heart broken, like everybody.

Since your album is called A Date with John Waters, I was wondering what your ideal date would be like.
That’s complicated, because I have lots of different types. They’d be funny, they’d be smart, they would’ve been arrested once in their life, and they would not want to go to a movie premiere with me. If someone says they’ve never seen my movies, it’s like saying “I love you,” to me. I always thought a glamorous date would be robbing a 7-Eleven with somebody. But not in real life! I wouldn’t do that, but I love the idea of doing it and then running and then, like, having a couple of drinks and counting the money and having sex. That would be a fun night.

That would be the best.
Well, I hope you have a lovely Valentine’s Day. Play All I Can Do Is Cry, and act it out alone in your bedroom!

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By Emily Rems

This article originally appeared in the Feb/March 2007 print edition of BUST Magazine. Subscribe today



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Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’ Is Here And We’re Stunned

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Beyoncé has done it again. After weeks and months of teasing us with the surprise release of “Formation,” her Super Bowl performance, her new tour, her ELLE interview about feminism, and a mysterious HBO teaser trailer, Beyoncé finally released her new album — and it’s perfect.

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Lemonade is a stunning, genre-spanning visual album that, divided into chapters, tells a story of marital infidelity, anger, grief and reconciliation. The visual album incorporates spoken word poetry by Somali-British poet Warsan Shire. Filmed partially in New Orleans, Lemonade features unforgettable images including Beyoncé breaking car windows with a baseball bat and smashing cars in a Monster Truck, as well as initimate home footage of the Knowles-Carter family. 

Lemonade

Lemonade also features cameos from other groundbreaking black women (and in Amandla Stenberg’s case, nonbinary) celebrities, including Stenberg, Serena Williams, Zendaya, Quvenzhane Wallis and Winnie Harlow, as well as the mothers of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner and Michael Brown, whose deaths at the hands of white police officers sparked the #BlackLivesMatter movement. Musical collaborators include Kendrick Lamar, Jack White, The Weeknd, Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and James Blake. Beyoncé also incorporates numerous musical and spoken word samples, including, powerfully, a Malcolm X speech about the vulnerability of black women.

Lemonade


Lemonade has already sparked countless memes (people are confusing Food Network chef Rachael Ray with designer and rumored Jay Z mistress Rachel Roy), quotable lines (“You better call Becky with the good hair”; “Ashes to ashes, dust to side chicks”; “You try this shit again, you gonna lose your wife”), and renewed speculation about those Jay-Z cheating rumors and what exactly happened in that Met Gala elevator in 2014.

Lemonade

But we’re more interested in the way Beyoncé’s examines black womanhood, police brutality, family trauma and healing. I am absolutely not qualified to try to unpack all this, but I can direct you to a few places that are.

Lemonade

If you haven't yet watched Lemonade or did but missed many of Beyoncé's references, a great starting point is Kiana Fitzgerald's piece for NPR. She writes, “Lemonade has been made possible by the cultural, social and political upheaval we're in the midst of, triggered by the deaths of boys and fathers and women, who will never be forgotten.” 

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Also well worth reading are The Cut’s and MTV’s roundtable reactions and Winnie Harlow’s interview with ELLE about her participation. This morning, Roxane Gay tweeted that she’s working on a piece about Lemonade for SPIN, and I’ll be refreshing the homepage every five minutes until that’s published.

Also, of course, WATCH LEMONADE. You can stream it on TIDAL or download it on iTunes. There’s a free trial available for TIDAL if you need it, but for Lemonade, Beyoncé deserves all your money and more. 

Lemonade

Photos and gifs from LEMONADE

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Listen To The New Songs BUST Is Jamming Out To

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Every month BUST selects some of the best new music out there. Our April/ May issue was full of artists that will have you ready to walk through the park, earbuds on, taking in some fresh new music. Here is a playlist of our favorites, so get ready to rock out with Tacocat and Parquet Courts, ponder the meaning of life with Frankie Cosmos, and just vibe out with Iggy Pop. Listen Below.

 

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Kim Gordon Takes Us On A Journey Of Her Life — Through Photos: From the BUST Archives

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gordonI loved this dress. It was made out of paper-like leather, so light that I could just throw it in my suitcase. The shoes were open in the back, and they were silver. Seattle was always one of the most fun places to play.

The iconic Sonic Youth frontwoman can do it all, and if her new memoir, Girl in a Band, is any indication, she already has. Here, the indie rock pioneer, style idol, and art star takes us on a visual journey of her life, from her surfer girl days to her latest incarnation in the music/art duo Body/Head.

gordon2Surfing in Hawaii on my little Hobie surfboard. That was my first two piece bathing suit. The slightly padded top made me feel so grown up.

gordon3When I was 10, we lived in Hawaii. This house had a lanai (patio) with a screened wing enclosing the side where my bedroom was. The tropical scents were always intoxicating, and fed my preadolescent fantasies.

gordon4The room where I smoked pot, painted, and listened to records by Joni Mitchell, Billie Holiday, Bob Dylan, Tim Buckley, Sandy Bull, Buffalo Springfield, and more. My dad’s friend put together a cool stereo for me, but sadly, it was destroyed in an earthquake in the early 1970s.

gordon5My brother Keller, surfing off Latigo Shore Drive in Malibu in the early or mid-1960s. Sometimes I’d get up early and go with him to Oxnard or Ventura. We’d stop and get a dozen fresh-out-of-the-oven donuts from the Fairy Tale Bakery on Pico at 5 a.m. and eat all of them on the way up the coast.

gordon6Backstage on the Goo tour in Seattle, talking with a pre-Nevermind Kurt Cobain.

gordon7Playing an Australian festival (after the release of Dirty). It was so hot that my dress kept shrinking from sweat.

gordon8When my daughter Coco was six months old, Sofia Coppola and I went to Tokyo to put on an X-Girl fashion show before a Beastie Boys concert. It was a whirlwind weekend of interviews and madly trying to find girls who would walk in the show. We went out into the streets and asked girls if they would participate. Yoshimi from the Japanese band Boredoms helped us a lot. Having a small baby thrown into the mix was hard; between the breastfeeding and the jet lag, I remember it being so exhausting. But when I look at this shot of Coco and me amidst the chaos of Tokyo, I don’t see the dark circles.

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By Kim Gordon
Photos from Kim Gordon, Charles Peterson, and DEY Street Books

This article originally appeared in the April/May 2015 print edition of BUST Magazine. Subscribe today

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The 10 Greatest Songs About Literary Heroines

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It’s easy to understand why powerful women and girls in literature have often proved to be inspirational characters for songwriters. Authors have already created compelling characters and storylines for lyrics, so the addition of a decent tune should equal a hit. Check out these ten top tunes, all sparked by fictional females:

Charlotte Sometimes

Penny Farmer’s haunting children’s book Charlotte Sometimes (1969) is the inspiration for this single by The Cure from 1981. It’s the story of schoolgirl, Charlotte, who travels back in time and exchanges days of her life with Clare, a girl who lived during World War One.

Anyone who knows the song will find the first line of the book very familiar: “By bedtime all the faces, the voices had blurred for Charlotte to one face, one voice.” Lots of the lyrics are lifted from the book with very little alteration.

The song is a great favourite with fans of The Cure, although the video was slammed by their biographer as a major mistake and one of their worst.



Dorothy at Forty

What would Dorothy Gale be like, thirty years or so after her adventures in Oz? American indie rock band Cursive say she’s unfulfilled and that her amazing dreams have only ever held her back. Singer Tim Kasher urges middle aged Dorothy to wake up and go to work.

Author L. Frank Baum, who wrote fourteen novels based in the Land of Oz, would probably have been surprised (and perhaps somewhat alarmed) to hear this. His Dorothy eventually made her permanent home in the Land of Oz. Of course, in the popular 1939 film, Oz turned out to be a dream, and it’s this idea that "Dorothy At Forty" plays with.

The Dog

Vampire child Claudia is the inspiration for this sinister sounding album track by The Damned. Claudia is one of the main characters in Anne Rice’s 1976 novel Interview with the Vampire.

More people will be familiar with the 1994 move of the same name, which starred Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt and eleven-year-old Kirsten Dunst in the part of five-year-old Claudia.



Mrs. Robinson

"Mrs. Robinson" was recorded by Simon & Garfunkel as part of the soundtrack to the 1967 movie The Graduate, based on a novel by Charles Webb. It was the pair’s second US chart-topper, as well as being a worldwide hit.

Their first effort at a song for the film was rejected by director Mike Nichols, so they quickly adapted a song which had originally been written as a tribute to former First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt. This may explain why some of the lyrics, such as, “Going to the candidates debate,” don’t quite fit with the idea of the Mrs. Robinson in the film and book.



Wide Sargasso Sea

Dominican author Jean Rhys wrote Wide Sargasso Sea in 1966 as a "prequel" to Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre (1847). Set in Jamaica and England, the novel tells the story of Mr. Rochester’s first wife and explains how she ended her days locked in the attic of Thornfield Hall.

In 2011, Stevie Nicks, best known as lead singer with Fleetwood Mac, released this track on her 7th solo album, In Your Dreams. Lyrics like, “She burned his house down saying, you may have forgotten me, but you’ll remember this,” add a nicely melodramatic touch to this soft rock ballad.

Ophelia

In Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the character Ophelia descends into a form of madness that would in those days have been called "erotomania," a condition said to stem from woman’s biology and emotion. The male equivalent was melancholy, then thought to be a disease of the intellect.

The title track of Natalie Merchant’s second solo album depicts Ophelia as many different women, an array of female tropes in fact, implying that female characters in popular culture are often viewed as objects in relation to others, rather than being portrayed with a depth that befits "real" human beings, men.

Merchant’s song suggests that rather than being driven mad by love, Ophelia was only perceived as "mad" because she didn’t fit into the gendered expectations society placed upon her. The song is an exasperated swipe at narrow minds and gender stereotypes, the message delivered via Merchant’s signature bittersweet vocal style.



My Antonia

My Antonia, published in 1918, is one of the best known works by American author Willa Cather. As is often the way with female authors, Cather was ignored by male critics and teachers and her work slipped into obscurity for many years. She regained prominence after her works were republished by feminist publishing house Virago, in the 1980s.

Emmylou Harris wrote the wistful song "My Antonia" for her 2000 Grammy award winning album Red Dirt Girl, where she performs it as a duet with Dave Matthews.



Julia

"Julia" was written by Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart as part of the soundtrack to the film of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four.

The novel’s protagonist, Winston Smith, initially hates Julia, who appears to be a zealous advocate of the totalitarian regime where everyone exists under the watchful eye of Big Brother, but the two become lovers and together defy the power of the Party until their short lived affair is discovered.

The song is a spare and poignant track and the video, which films Annie in close up for the entire song, proved to be an inspiration for Sinead O’Connor seven years later with "Nothing Compares 2 U."

Wuthering Heights

This has to be one of the most well-known literary songs ever written. Kate Bush was only nineteen in 1978 when it made her the first UK woman to have a number one hit with a self-penned song.

Sung from the point of view of Cathy’s ghost, the spirit of a woman compelled to wander the moors until she can be reunited with the soul of her earthbound lover, the song evokes superbly the mood of Emily Brontë’s nineteenth century novel of the same name.



White Rabbit

Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland (1865) was the inspiration for this psychedelic 1960s single by Jefferson Airplane. Songwriter Grace Slick has told interviewers that the book was often read to her as a child, and remained a vivid memory into adulthood.

Considered to be one of the defining songs of 1967’s "Summer Of Love," many people associate White Rabbit with hallucinogenic drugs. Slick has talked about how lots of children’s stories contain references to mind-altering substances.

Pink performed a cover version of White Rabbit for the soundtrack of Tim Burton’s 2016 movie, Alice Through the Looking Glass.

Tricia Lowther is a writer and campaigner from the North of England. Her writing has been published by NewStatesman, The Guardian and Bitch Media, amongst others. She also blogs and does social media for the Let Toys Be Toys campaign, which she helped to found. Follow her on Twitter @TrishLowt

Top photo: Disney's Alice In Wonderland

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Kesha Releases First New Song Since 2013. Will Dr. Luke Keep Her From Releasing More?

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The New York Times reports that Kesha and Zedd have released their new collaboration "True Colors," with the permission of Kesha's producer, Dr. Luke. The song comes amidst the continued legal battle between Kesha and Dr. Luke—Kesha sued her producer back in October 2014, accusing him of sexual and emotional abuse. It's Kesha's first new song since 2013.

Zedd clarified on Twitter that the song was issued with the permission of Dr. Luke's label—Kemosabe and RCA—another Sony subsidary. "We didn't use any loopholes," he tweeted. Chillingly, Dr. Luke responded: "Thanks for the clarification @Zedd…”

It's unclear if this means that we'll be seeing more new music from Kesha soon, or if Sony allowed this song because either A) it's a collaboration, not a solo track or B) public backlash. But we certainly hope that we'll have another Kesha song soon.

"It’s a miracle when someone gives you a chance at finding your voice again!!” Kesha tweeted, adding, "this is more than a song. it's a declaration of my truth." 

Listen to “True Colors” below:

 

Image via Kesha / Instagram 

 

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The Julie Ruin’s Sara Landeau On How She Met Kathleen Hanna And Why She’s Not A Feminist: BUST Interview

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I met Sara Landeau, lead guitarist of The Julie Ruin, for tea at Koneko, America’s first cat café. I’d like to say that I thought of it because a Japanese cattery set in New York’s East Village perfectly encapsulates The Julie Ruin, which, drowning out the noisy din of punk nostalgia, has emerged as something completely new, vibrant, and irresistibly playful. But no. Sara suggested the spot, and knowing her for year as I have, it seemed to fit naturally with our shared cat-obsession.

009cdffb 8767 41c9 b506 ff6c6a0b9a59Sara at Koneko (the cat cafe)


“This is my dream place,” Sara says as we get comfortable on a couch surrounded by 11 rescue cats. We talk about the making of the band’s new album Hit Reset, which is set to release July 8 (“I Decide,” the first cut off the album, just had its world premiere). Sara tells me about being the first person in her family to go to college, how she first met Kathleen Hanna, her multidisciplinary pursuit of art, gear, and a lifetime of learning.



Sara is extremely modest (the Midwesterner in her), soft-spoken, a dedicated ally of female musicians at any age, can shred on the guitar, and is quick to laugh. She grew up in Racine, Wisconsin. You could say she’s the first person in her family not to go into the tractor business. Sara’s grandfather, father, and older brother all worked in the local tractor factory until its closing. Of her grandfather— who never passed the 5th grade — Sara says, “[My grandfather] had a lot of great and sad stories and is my hero. I don't have a tattoo, but if I get one, it will be his name.” Her brother started Sara on music. She says, “He was into music, but I was really into music. I was really into music. But I didn’t know I could play... I guess girls weren’t doing that yet.”

"I didn’t know I could play... I guess girls weren’t doing that yet.”


As a teenager, she slipped into clubs in Milwaukee and Chicago. At 18, she got her first drum kit at a yard sale. She bought a one-way ticket on a Greyhound bus to L.A. She was following a drummer she met while he was touring— Don Bolles of a little punk band called the Germs, who let her crash permanently. At 21, she lugged that drum kit, a “'60s Ludwig,” to New York City with hopes of becoming a visual artist. She continues to play that Ludwig to this day.

1711b432 1fc6 445f b6e5 29ccbc97375b Sara onstage at CBGB's drumming for her band The Chicklettes

For ten years, Sara worked at CBGB’s as a cocktail waitress and bartender. First, she attended School of Visual Arts to get her grades up. Then, at 25, she applied to Columbia University and got in: “It was heaven.” She studied Art History because she felt you need to know history to be a good artist. At CB’s, Hilly Kristal was like her surrogate father. It was there that she learned to play guitar and bass, as part of an all-girl, all-employees band called the Chicklettes. Sara and her bandmates would hunt other bands with a girl member—which was a rarity— and see their shows.

Of the hundreds of female students she’s taught to play music since, she says, “Some of them have started at 10, and now they’re young ladies in college and they still play guitar... they grew up that way. It makes me cry, because I’m so proud of them.” In addition to working at Willie Mae’s Rock Camp for Women and Girls, Sara teaches private and group guitar, drum and bass lessons full-time at the Brooklyn Music Studio for Women and Girls—the music school she founded in 2003. She’s coached and taught at the rock camp from the birth of the Brooklyn chapter. It’s where she first met Kathleen Hanna. In November, the camp honored the two with the Artist/Activist Buddy Award for 10 years of continuous service. According to its website, it has "served more than 1,000 girls in 58 NYC zip codes" since 2005.

b7cefdb7 293e 4783 bd07 adf7db683c11Sara onstage with the Julie Ruin

Before The Julie Ruin formed, Sara imagined she’d teach and write music and probably never perform again. But she’s always loved Kathleen’s voice, and felt she was out there screaming the things Sara herself feels and believes. The two bounced around the idea of collaborating very casually for five years, until one day Kathleen gave her a call, “and said, I’m ready.”

One day Kathleen gave her a call, “and said, I’m ready.”

Their first album, Run Fast, with Kenny Mellman (keyboards), Carmine Covelli (drums), and Kathi Wilcox (bass) would take three years to complete because of Kathleen’s health. Their new album, Hit Reset, took the band roughly a year because Kathleen is enjoying a moment of relative quiet in her struggle with Lyme’s disease. Sara says with genuine awe, “She’s a pro.” Though every member of the band lives in New York they wrote Hit Reset over Dropbox, passing bits and riffs back and forth. I ask Sara if she likes writing that way, and, she says, “I do...” then her attention is pulled away by an adolescent calico cat for a good minute before she finishes the thought, “I like it because it gives you time to think.” Being in close contact with so many cats has had an intoxicating effect. Leave it to the Japanese to figure out you can get high on cats.

0b8c95a6 e794 4419 b76a 730292bda9c1Sara onstage in a homemade macaron dress

Readers of BUST are all pretty aware of the badass and girly appeal of The Julie Ruin. Sara is the leading girly-fying force of the band, her love of fashion is infectious to her bandmates. Aside from being a self-made woman, she is self-made up woman, sewing her own clothes (mostly mixed patterned shirts and skirts or dresses) that she wears on stage. Kathi also makes clothes for herself and Kathleen. “We’re are going shopping tomorrow for fabric for the next tour. Me and Kathi, we’re going to Mood at 10am,” Sara says, then giggles. “We always arrange our outfits,” she says. “Kathleen says it’s like playing with Barbies.” But, no matter what, “Kenny has the best outfits.” When I point out it seems like a really fun band to be a part of, Sara says, “if you’re a fashion junkie, like we are, and you like patterns and stuff. Totally. But if you’re the kinda, you know, person that doesn’t care about it, that’s fine. I care about it, I love it.” She is often very fair in this way, direct and light, and not prone to making generalizations, finding instead a secret little joke in being very precise.

“Right now there’s a [guitar] pedal and fashion magazine in my purse.” Sara has forgone the word “feminist” for “gender equality” because, again, precision. She also doesn’t think that “girly” is a pejorative. “You can look super girly and do really masculine music— masculine music? ...It’s supposed to be fun. So to me as a teacher, I tell a girl you can have blonde hair, you can be into make up... or you can not do any of that and be really into your guitar scales and your shredding.” I’d be a criminal if I neglected to mention Sara’s obsession with gear. She is constantly hunting out the right sound for her gear. To our meeting she’s carried a bag harboring a busted-out guitar pedal called Big Muff. She reads manuals cover to cover and annotates them, for fun. She's produced and engineered for the bands Penis, Mascara, The Catch, Petal Wars, and Pink Veins. She continues to draw as well— my favorite piece is a watercolor series on her blog called "Items from NY Magazine Gift Guide 2015 that I can't afford.” She also does free-form embroidery. She says her new thing is Noise Music and “experimenting with sounds, which kinda goes back to art.” Currently, she and experimental drummer Jane Boxall are forming a duo (yet unnamed) creating noise music inspired pop songs.

Sara has forgone the word “feminist” for “gender equality.” 


Her passion for learning is voracious. She’s studied classical guitar and music theory at the New School and Juilliard. Inquisitiveness is the key to Sara’s art and her mission towards outreach. “I love talking to the people I work with, I think I get as much out of it as they do,” she says. “Learning instruments is really good for your brain... there’s so much there that can help you, in life.” Her secret for keeping teaching interesting for herself and for her students is to try out things she’s learning on them. “If I have gig coming up where I have to learn a cover song, I’ll go to my student, 'You like Rihanna, right?'”

a9b3da45 4d40 4633 86a5 f7fa6ee9a0dbSara with her dog Django in front of Adam Yauch Park

It seems the oxytocin in the room of rescue cats has taken over when Sara starts meow’ing the words of a song. I ask her what’s up— “If I need to sing back... a melody, it’s always ‘meow.’ Instead of ‘la’— who wants to go ‘la la la la’, you go ‘meow meow meow...’ So I teach my students that... if you can meow it, you can play it.” Words to live by.

Aidan Daley-Hynes is a writer of comedy scripts and articles about music, film, and strong ladies.  In her spare time, she performs improv comedy and crafts videos for the internet. She lives in NYC with her husband and two cats.  Read her non sequiturs on Twitter @aidandaleyh.

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Kathleen Hanna Doc 'The Punk Singer' Is A Backstage Pass To The Riot Grrrl Movement

Tacocat's Emily Nokes Talks The X-Files, The Powerpuff Girls And Stage Anxiety: BUST Interview

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Frontwoman Emily Nokes of our favorite modern riot grrrl band, Tacocat, chats about the evolution of feminist influences on new album, Lost Time.

Is there a person on Earth who wouldn’t have endless love for a band named Tacocat? From their gloriously rainbow-haired frontwoman Emily Nokes, to the catchy '60s styled punk pop tracks and fun and fancy-free music videos, it’s refreshing to see such a twee aesthetic for a feminist band, especially when it’s paired with a smart, sassy attitude.

Although they take more than enough influence from the raw anger of '90s riot grrrl (not to mention their shared birthplace), their soft melodies and tongue-in-cheek lyrics allow this feminist band to drift easily into the impressionable heads of young girls, meaning their first impression of feminism is in stark contrast to that overused stereotype of the unshaven and violent man-hater we are so tired of hearing about.

Their music may compel you to boogie, but it does anything but dance around the subject, so while the taste is sweetened by their ability to master surfer styled rock, the lesson they are giving isn’t so easy to swallow.

While the band’s last offering, NVM, tackled the idea of street harassment head on and outwardly mocked white supremacist skinheads, with their latest record, Lost Time, they show a less hard-hitting approach to dealing with feminist woes — but they assure us, there ain’t any less grrrl.

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Tacocat's blend of powder-pink pop and feisty-fierce punk makes them the obvious choice to record a brand new theme song for the reboot of '90s girls favorite, The Powerpuff Girls. After Tacocat opened for presidential candidate Bernie Sanders’ Seattle campaign rally and with a European tour on the horizon, we caught up with frontwoman Emily Nokes to discuss the new album, the influence of the X-Files and the excitement of immortalising their music on a cult classic cartoon.



BUST: Was having a less definite feminist angle on Lost Time deliberate or just down to varying and changing influences?

Emily: The songs on Lost Time are less “hitting you over the head” for sure, but over half the tracks are still fully about feminist topics, perhaps just more nuanced than our last two albums. The execution has definitely evolved (less shouting, less rough around the edges), which has a lot to do with the fact that more people seem to be listening to women and their allies these days. When we first started, it seemed like the only thing that could be effective was yelling or having these really didactic lyrics. Screaming is still important, it’s just that you don’t have to scream as much when people are right there with you!

BUST: The album title Lost Time and the first track ("Dana Katherine Scully") are both X-Files references. Are you all big X-Files fans and how did it shape you?

Emily: I was re-watching all the old X-Files around the time we were writing the album and was reminded how great the character of Scully is (see also: “The Scully Effect,” which is the correlation between her character and the rise in young women choosing to pursue careers in science, medicine, and law enforcement). Bree and Eric also started re-watching the series, although I think Bree cheated and skipped all the monster episodes.

The pilot episode of the X-Files touches on the “lost time” phenomenon, but I was also reading a lot of science fiction and it kept coming up there as well. We all really liked the sound of it and the various meanings that could apply.



BUST: Were these X-Files references injected into the album prior to the news that it was returning for Season 10, or after you heard the news?

Emily: Oh yeah, I had zero idea that was going to happen until after the song was written. I was excited to hear the news, but didn’t really know what to expect, like, this could rule or be really bad. It turned out to be both...

BUST: What were your main influences for this album? How have they changed from NVM?

Emily: Every album is a progression, and Lost Time feels more complex, more personal, more moody... more purple, less pink. I’m influenced by what’s around me, and the world has changed so much—in both great and terrible ways—since we wrote NVM. Erik Blood (who recorded and produced) was also a big influence on the way the songs came out. He’s a wizard!

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BUST: How do you feel you have developed as artists since NVM?

Emily: Lo these many, many shows later, we’re better definitely better, more experienced musicians. We’ve also been able to streamline our songwriting process and explore more visual ideas for our stage shows and merch. It feels like we have more creative energy than ever! On a personal level, I feel more confident and sure of my role as a singer and as a human female. I used to be really self-conscious about standing up there, singing about these personal issues in front of crowds that could be really sour or masculine. Now it feels like we’ve found our people, which is one of the best feelings ever.

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BUST: How do you first approach writing a song? Is it a conscious act or something that just pops into your head with a wave of inspiration?

Emily: A bit of both. For the lyrics, I jot down words, phrases, and ideas as they come to me, I have a lot of conversations that help me flesh out ideas and feelings. When it’s time to put words and melodies to music, I just comb through everything and get to writing.

BUST: You have covered some very interesting topics on Lost Time... including horse-loving girls! Where did the inspiration for this song come from?

Emily: Oh man, this one comes directly from Bree (bassist), who wanted a song about adolescent horse girls. She was a horse girl in high school, which is super funny because she grew up in LA and I grew up in Montana. I was not a horse girl, but I definitely appreciated them. All those books and figurines!

BUST: Tell us about recording the Powerpuff Girls theme! How did this opportunity come about?

Emily: Cartoon Network emailed us, and of course we jumped at the opportunity. I have no idea how they knew about us, but we were super excited. The process started with a few rough song ideas we sent them via cellphone recording and ended with us recording the track with a composer who flew from LA to Seattle for the three days of recording. I don’t think I’ve ever done so many layers of harmonies in my life!

BUST: Were you fans of the original series?

Emily: I was! I didn’t really grow up with a TV, but I would watch it at my grandma’s or at other friends’ houses whenever I could. I also had a buddy in high school whose entire car was decorated with Buttercup gear, which I thought was really excellent.

BUST: Do you think cartoons like The Powerpuff Girls and seeing other heroines in the media is important for young girls growing up?

Emily: Yes, of course! I think young people need as many good examples in media as possible, starting with cartoons all the way up through television characters and movie scripts. We need to demand more from everything all the time—for women, for queer folks, for trans folks, for people of color, and for everyone else who lives outside of the standard-issue, mostly-white/mostly-male representation across all platforms of expression.

Alice Patillo is a UK-based music, arts, and culture journalist. See more of her work on whothehellisalice.co.uk.

Follow Tacocat on tacocatdotcom.com, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. See their European tour dates below.

2 May UK, Nottingham / JT Soar 
3 May UK, Edinburgh / Electric Circus
4 May UK, Glasgow / Broadcast 
5 May UK, Cardiff / The Moon Club 
6 May UK, Brighton / Sticky Mike's Frog Bar 
7 May UK, London / The Lexington 
9 May FR, Paris / Le Mecanique Ondulature
11 May CH, Luzern / Schüür
12 May CH, Geneva / Kalvingrad L'Usine
13 May DE, Schorndorf / Manufaktur
14 May NL, Tilburg / Extase
15 May DE, Hamburg / Aalhaus
18 May SE, Stockholm / Lilla Hotellbaren
19 May NO, Oslo / Internasjonalen
20 May SE, Lund / Mejereit
21 May DK, Copenhagen / Huset
22 May DE, Berlin / West Germany

'Hamilton' Star Renée Elise Goldsberry on Bringing Feminism and Diversity to Broadway: BUST Interview

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“I Think If She Were a Man, She Would Have Been President” 

Renée Elise Goldsberry already had a jam-packed resume when she auditioned for the musical Hamilton. The triple-threat actress listed several Broadway roles, as well as numerous hit TV shows including Ally McBeal, One Life to Live and The Good Wife, among her credits. But when joining Hamilton, the juggernaut musical that has taken Broadway by storm, Goldsberry can no include another addition in her skills set: rapping.

Goldsberry auditioned for the role of Angelica Schuyler, a spirited and intelligent woman of the American Revolution, who, when first introduced to the audience, proudly declares, “I’m looking for a mind at work.” Rather than apprehensive about the possibility of battles on her home turf, Angelica is thrilled by the spirit of the revolution that surrounds her.

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Calling Hamilton, Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hip-hop musical about Founding Father Alexander Hamilton based on Ron Chernow’s book, “revolutionary” has quickly become a cliché, as it is about the American Revolution and has changed and will likely continue to change the craft of musical theatre. After the Off-Broadway bow of the production that featured a multiracial cast of actors playing the forefathers of America, Hamilton quickly moved uptown and took up residence at the Richard Rodgers Theatre on Broadway, selling out for the foreseeable future. The cast has performed for a Democratic Party fundraiser, won a Grammy Award and had President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, Beyoncé, Jay Z and Meryl Streep among the celebrities in its audience.

On May 3, the musical made history again when it received 16 Tony Award nominations, breaking the previously held record, including one for Goldsberry for Best Featured Actress in a Musical.



This was not what Goldsberry had expected when she first tried her hand at rapping in the audition room. “I always tell people that you never necessarily know how your story’s going to go,” she said. “Especially in very young careers in entertainment and sports — at a very young age you feel like, ‘What I’ve done is what I’m going to do.’ It’s very surprising that at this time in my life I get to add rapper to the list of things that I do.”

The audience first gets a glimpse of Goldsberry’s skills when Aaron Burr tries to flirt with her as she and her sisters Eliza and Peggy walk the streets of New York, and she quickly informs him, “You want a revolution? I want a revelation!”

But it’s at the scene of Eliza and Alexander’s wedding that Goldsberry’s talents are displayed in full force. After watching her sister happily marry the ambitious revolutionary, the scene freezes. Angelica, standing stock-still center stage, accounts in rapid-fire rap how, when she first met Alexander, she immediately fell in love with him, but instead introduced him to her sister and became the maid of honor at their wedding, concluding that her own fate is to “never be satisfied.”

Hamilton

Watching Goldsberry perform the role of Angelica — a confident and fiercely intelligent woman unable to put her talents to use — performing this type of music is a welcome change from many rap songs that present women merely as objects or describe sexual encounters in less than consensual ways. Goldsberry has also performed with co-stars Miranda and Daveed Diggs on the BET cypher, rapping about famous women in history like Sojourner Truth and Rosa Parks. 


“It’s very much in line with what our show does and what women rappers do,” Goldsberry said. “They’re all very powerful — you have to be powerful to be a rapper. It seemed like a very natural fit, especially when our show is celebrating history to focus on powerful women.”

That focus is apparent as Angelica’s relationship with Alexander develops. Audiences witness him confiding in and being advised by her about his struggles with Congress. It’s no surprise when Goldsberry describes Angelica as a “foremother of America” and says, “I really think if she were a man, she would have been president.”

But she is quick to point out that Angelica is not the only empowered woman in Hamilton. Like any loving sister, she is eager to share the recognition with the character of Eliza, played by Phillipa Soo.



“I think the women that come across the most powerful are the ones that are the most aware of where real power is,” Goldsberry said. “I think that Angelica is the most aware that Eliza has the most of it, even though her demeanor might not demand the same kind of attention from the beginning.”

Playing powerful women is nothing new to Goldsberry, who spent seven years on the hit TV drama The Good Wife as District Attorney Geneva Pine on the critically-acclaimed, award-winning series, which concludes its run May 8.



“I stumble into really life-changing experiences,” she said of the show. “When I first went to an audition for The Good Wife, I had no idea that the role would turn into seven years. I was a part of every season on the show. Cumulatively that was a lot of time in that world. And The Good Wife — they’ll stop making new episodes, but its impact on TV ... that legacy is just set.”

Since its 2009 premiere, The Good Wife has been praised for its sensitive and complex portrayals of women. Many of its central characters are female, and they pass the Bechdel Test. But along with sexual diversity, the show has also embraced racial diversity — an action that took Goldsberry by surprise. She recalled a day when, having been told Anika Noni Rose, an African-American actress, would be on the show, she thought, “That’s great. I probably won’t be on the show.” But she was.

“Our surprise was that we were two African-American women on the same episode at the same show ... We were laughing at the shame that we felt for assuming that no show would ever do that,” Goldsberry said. “In the world that I lived in as an actor, my assumption was that if there was a brown woman with straight hair they won’t hire another. They have that box checked. The way they cast that show, they didn’t observe any of those limitations, any of those exclusions. It surprised us. We were so grateful.”

With the success of Hamilton reaching far and wide — a national tour will launch in March 2017 in San Francisco — Goldsberry has become accustomed to a new level of notoriety and fame. (She didn’t know what a GIF was until she was in one. ) While her gratitude for the show is evident in almost every sentence she speaks, she’s quick to say she wasn’t disappointed with her career before being cast in the musical.


Hamilton


“When people say to me, ‘I’m so happy for you, Oh my God! I can’t believe — finally!’ I always chuckle to myself. I really felt very good about my career before Hamilton. This is something that’s never happened to anyone before. It’s changed the world for me as well, but I’m always surprised when people admit how disappointed they were for me before Hamilton. ‘Really? Was it that bad?’”

Listing her Broadway debut, her first major role on One Life to Live and her first performance in Shakespeare in the Park as major moments in her career, Goldsberry added, “I’ve been in moments in my life before that felt game-changer-like, even much younger, because something can be a game changer if other people don’t recognize it. If it changes your game, then it’s impactful.

“I’ve had significant moments in my life before where people were like, ‘Renée, this IT! You are going to blow up!’ And even in my 20s, I always felt like I would smile at that statement and think, ‘Maybe, maybe not. I’m going to enjoy this for what it is at the moment.’ I always smiled and didn’t really listen but just hear the compliment and be in the moment and enjoyment.

“I feel that way about Hamilton, too. You have no idea what tomorrow holds, ever. You only know what today is. And today I get to be a part of this massive theatrical hit. I don’t even really have the words to describe what it is. And I’ll probably spend the rest of my life trying to formulate them.”

Carey Purcell is a New York based writer, reporter and theatre critic. Carey is a member of the American Theatre Critics Association, the League of Professional Theatre Women, the Drama Desk and the Outer Critics Circle. She has contributed to Elle, Jezebel, Salon, the Huffington Post, Alternet.org, Broadway Style Guide, HowlRound.com, TheaterMania.com, NewYork.com and WHERE New York magazine. She has also appeared on the TV show “Good Morning America.” Follow her on Twitter @CareyPurcell and read her writing at CareyPurcell.com.

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Meghann Wright Rocks Out On New Song ‘River’: BUST Premiere

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Brooklyn-based blues rocker Meghann Wright is back with a stunning music video for her song “River,” premiering exclusively on BUST.com today. The haunting video cuts between Meghann singing in a graveyard and a spooky, bloody exorcism. “Don’t go down to the river, baby,” Meghann sings. “‘Cause ain’t nobody waiting for you there.”

“River” is part of a series of music videos that Meghann curated to accompany her debut full-length album, Nothin’ Left To Lose, which was released June 2015 on BlackTop Records. Meghann has already completed three national tours and is gearing up for a fourth, beginning on May 12 at Milkboy Philadelphia and coming to New York in June.

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Though her pierced, all-black, rocker look is all Brooklyn, Meghann hails from Makaha, Hawaii, and her sound takes influence from many genres and experiences; music critics have compared her to Janis Joplin, Emmylou Harris and Sheryl Crow. Outside performing, Meghann is the founder of The City & The Heart, a BUST-approved New York advocacy organization supporting independent female artists.

Watch “River” below,” and follow Meghann on her website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube, and find tour dates on BandsInTown.com

 

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Tacocat's Emily Nokes Talks The X-Files, The Powerpuff Girls And Stage Anxiety: BUST Interview

The Julie Ruin's Sara Landeau On How She Met Kathleen Hanna And Why She's Not A Feminist: BUST Interview

Kim Gordon Takes Us On A Journey Of Her Life Through Photos: From The BUST Archives

How Prince Convinced My Middle School Self To Change My Name To A Symbol: BUST True Story

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I used to watch a lot of VH1 when I was a kid. If it was Pop Up Video, the music videos would play and have fun facts about the song and artist pop up on the screen. If it wasn't, there'd just be the artist, standing on a mountain and singing, or in front of a green screen in space, or on stage, writhing on the floor and electrifying the audience, like Prince so often did.



I remember when I first saw Prince’s "When Doves Cry" video. It was the first song I heard that had a chorus that spoke directly on the affects of family on our personalities. “Maybe I’m just too demanding, Maybe I’m just like my father too bold,” Prince sang before moving onto the fault in his mother (“She’s never satisfied”) that he projected onto his love interest. It was an unusual love song that took on the pain of realizing that your parents will give you traits you wish you didn’t have. The truth that everyone must learn, we are so often not the self-directed individuals we think we are. It was incredibly human, and unlike anything I’d heard from the realm of pop.

This song found me long before I had any articulated thoughts about family that I could turn into a song, or an essay, or a poem, like I would later. I didn't know that writing would become a place where I found myself rather than a tool one used once they had been found. I didn't know why this song about family hit me different than the others, but it did.

Later, in middle school, I remembered something from my days of watching Pop Up Video — there was this musician named Prince, and one day, he decided that he would use a symbol for his name rather than letters, so he became the unpronounceable symbol, or, what the media turned into, "The Artist formerly known as Prince." This tickled my twelve-year-old funny bone so immensely that I had to try it on myself. I got to work on creating a symbol that would replace my given name, "Kerri."

I started experimenting with variations on the letter "K" and came up with something that felt to me like the mix between a K and a star. Something I could draw easily, but would be distinctive. I convinced a handful of teachers to accept it instead my name on the top of my papers — “like Prince," I told them. Each time I wrote it, I felt gleefully powerful.

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Middle school was entirely about power and creative freedom for me. I never wanted to be "on top" necessarily, I just wanted to be able to do whatever I wanted when I wanted to do it. “If I finish my work, can I go write a script for the next school TV show?” “If I have to do a group project, can they do the math and I'll cover the presentation?” “If we organize an assembly to pump everyone up for end-of-year testing can my 'partner in crime' Chandler and I host it?” “Is that brown duct tape? Can I put it on my shoe? Awesome!”

I found that being a good student was the quickest way to be able to do what I wanted, from the scale of perfectly reasonable request to totally bizarre (like writing parody Christmas Carols and convincing the teachers to let us perform them around at different classes). As long as I made good grades and didn't hurt anyone, I got almost everything I asked for.

But using a symbol instead of my name! That was the big one. That was the victory that stayed with me. At any moment, I could create a new identity for myself, just by saying it was so. What I used to do with a #2 pencil, I now do with creating a logo or a website. I am who I decide to be, whether that's Kerri, "The Student Formerly Known as Kerri," KAYLO (which stands for Keep All Young Loves Open and is my name when I perform spoken word poetry), or something else. Maybe even taking my fiancé's last name to become Kerri Van Kirk later this year, we'll see.

When I moved to New York at 18 and unexpectedly started writing songs while in acting school, most of them were about family. This shocked me. I never considered myself particularly attached to or preoccupied with families. I thought I was all about acting, about transforming my identity, not finding groundedness in where I came from.

The Love symbol was simultaneously a mark of individuality and a mark of the collective experience. We are born out of the male and the female union, which makes us at once ourselves, the people that we came from, and connected to every other human born on this planet. He captured that in all of his work.

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Prince was an artist that lived by example — that showed me that you can be out there, even outrageous in your choices and explorations, but that you can do that and also write about things as elemental as family dynamics. Being an artist means that the outward trappings of your identity might change, but as long as you're creating from an honest inner place, you'll continue to resonate. I come nowhere close to the outlandishness of a Prince performance, but his work has opened me up to the power of identity. To naming yourself — claiming yourself — and saying the things that other people don't say. I may just start pulling out that symbol again. I see now that it was not only a show of middle school bravado, but a mark of my personal power to choose, the reality of where I came from, and how we’re all connected beyond words and labels. Unpronounceable. RIP Prince, and thank you.

Kerri Lowe (aka, KAYLO) is a millennial feminist storyteller, writer and poet living in Brooklyn. You can check out her spoken word videos at www.callmekaylo.com and follow her on Twitter @KerriLowe.

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Ladies Who Spin: Two Los Angeles Based Artists Who Slay The Party

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Check out these awesome ladies for yourself! They will each be playing a set at the BUST Craftacular on Saturday, May 7th; located at the Superchief Gallery.

At every party, there is one key factor that determines whether it is good or bad: the music. And this all falls on the shoulders of the DJ; a person who has to the read the room, create the mood and keep the party-goers entertained while still focusing on their equipment whether it is queuing up the perfect set of songs from their laptop or grabbing the next vinyl record that will really turn the night into one you’ll remember. There are two incredible ladies who have these not-so-simple skills down-packed: LA native DJs Aubrey Henderson and Victoria Rawlins.

What makes Aubrey's sound special:
Aubrey Henderson, a self promoted “open format DJ”, brings her wide variety of music like “soul, rock, indie, and the slightest tinge of disco along with an array of dance,” to every party because she believes she “brings more than just good music.” Henderson understands the energy and focuses on the feeling of hearing music from “that nostalgic song that forces you to sing in public” to “the moment when you realize you’re dancing like you’re at home while your roommates are gone.” Henderson embodies fun and wants the fun to stay with you long after the party is over and she is successful. When you catch Henderson behind her two turntables and a mixer, let’s hope “you’re wearing comfortable shoes” because you are in for a night of dancing!

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Pictured above, Aubrey Henderson. Opening photo, Victoria Rawlins

What makes Victoria's sound special:
From her parents being professional musicians to sneaking records to her room from her sister’s diverse collection; Victoria Rawlins was immersed in music. She began her own collections of vinyl records after her sister moved out, leaving “behind a bunch of her LP’s and that became the beginning of [Victoria’s] own collection”. She didn’t start DJ’ing until she offered to play records in between band sets at her frequent hang out, Three Clubs, a Hollywood dive bar.

“I never thought of it as DJ’ing until people started dancing to the records I was putting on — that’s when I knew it was something that I enjoyed doing”

The rest was history! Rawlins has been DJ’ing for about ten years and what makes her unique is not only her skills of creating a lively atmosphere but the fact that she only spins vinyl. Playing only vinyl records goes beyond quality, vinyl records bring a sense of nostalgia and comfort to Rawlins.

“...My records represent something that is special to me and more visceral than just the music pressed into their grooves. When I flip through my collection, it’s like going through a box of photographs— each album cover brings me back to a memory of the first or last time I heard it. As a DJ, I’ve never really learned to spin with any format other than my records and that’s okay with me. The records I play tell my story. Each piece of wax is something that I’ve invested in and cared for. These records live with me in my home and it feels great to be able to share these parts of my life with the world.”

When Rawlins DJs, you know she’ll make that night, atmosphere and ambiance “tactile and tangible and ephemeral”.

As more music is written and produced, we are lucky to have two people who know how to curate all of it into a night of endless fun. 

PJ Harvey Is Back With A New Album And US Tour

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PJ Harvey

PJ Harvey, The Hope Six Demolition Project (Island
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PJ Harvey's latest, The Hope Six Demolition Project, draws inspiration from her visist to Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Washington, D.C. over a four-year period. The opening title track is the closest we get to a straight-on PJH pop/rock vibe. The rest of this concept album leans toward the operatic and theatrical, with most songs having a militiristic feel (like "The Ministry of Defence" and "Chain of Keys"), and often stretching standard musical conventions to accomodate Harvey's storytelling lyrics. Harvey has, once again, set the bar very high for herself. We can't wait to see where she sets it next.

U.S. Shows for 2016 Announced
August 16 — Terminal 5 - New York, NY
August 18 — Shrine Expo Hall - Los Angeles, CA

Tickets on sale Friday, May 13!

New album, The Hope Six Demolition Project, out now on Vagrant Records.

BOOB RATINGS                            
boobboobboobboobboob omg amazing

boobboobboobboob damn good

boobboobboob just ok

boobboob could be worse

boob don't bother

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By Michael Levine

This article originally appeared in the April/May 2016 print edition of BUST Magazine. Subscribe today


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YACHT Fakes Stolen Sex Tape, Apologizes—But It's Not Enough

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YACHT Tomboys

 

You may be sorry now, YACHT, but not as much as you will be.

On Monday, the band YACHT faked a sex tape in order to get hype for its new music video for the song “I Wanna Fuck You Till I’m Dead,” which it heavily considered not even releasing in the aftermath.

According to Jezebel, Gawker Media knew about the fake tape a month before it was announced to the public a few days ago, but no one said anything.

I'm absolutely disgusted over YACHT thinking this plan through at least a MONTH in advance to manipulate its fans into fawning over the fake leaked tape. Survivors of sexual exploitation are not a niche market, nor are they a marketing ploy. When famous people lie about being victims, as YACHT has, it undermines the actual survivors and makes it harder for them to get the justice they deserve. Also, sexual assault awareness advocates have worked long and hard for the broadening definition of consent, and their hard work doesn’t need to be taken advantage of.

The duo initially released an “apology” on Twitter that blasted the Jezebel article for comparing their fake tape to revenge porn, but today, a better written, more formal apology was posted on their official website.

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“We should not have hinged this entire project on the fiction that we were the victims of a leaked tape,” it says, “and we’re equally disappointed in ourselves for taking so long to get over being shocked at the response and write this apology. After all is said and done, of course you should be mad at us. We’re mad at us too.”

I’m going to assume we can thank YACHT’s PR company for its second apology, because nothing from this duo seems sincere anymore. I have no doubt that its fans feel the same way.

photos of YACHT and its apology from its website

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LUH Excels With 'Spiritual Songs For Lovers To Sing': BUST Review

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Lost Under Heaven or LUH, as they are commonly known , is comprised of the former frontman of the Manchester’s WU LYF, Ellery Roberts, and Dutch-based artist Ebony Hoorn. They met after Roberts split from his band and was looking for a new approach to creating music. Ebony is a recent graduate of the audio-visual department in Amsterdam’s prestigious Rietveld Academy. The two quickly found themselves in constant contact over the internet, sharing dreams and inspiration. Eventually Ellery left his refuge in London to make a life with Ebony in Amsterdam, and they were able to focus on a shared life project that resulted in the formation of LUH and their first release, Spiritual Songs For Lovers To Sing (MUTE Records).

The first and last tracks, the anthemic "I&I" and the semi-acoustic "The Great Longing," are companion pieces, designed to guide the listener back to the start. The rest of the album is filled with numbers like "Unites," "Here Our Moment Ends," and "Lament," which have a dreamy, mid-tempo, synth atmosphere that perfectly supports Roberts’ gruff (i.e. Nina Hagen and Tom Waits-type) and impassioned voice. Other songs like "Beneath The Concrete," and "$ORO" pick up the pace with added sporadic drum beats, seen especially in the rockin’, thrashing guitar sound of "Lost Under Heaven." Ebony's clear, smooth vocal style contrasts nicely with Ellery Roberts' much rougher one. On the etherial ballad "Future Blues," Ebony takes the lead and produces one of the standout cuts, with a very spacey, Velvet Underground/Spacemen 3-esque slow-mo tempo and ultra echoing reverb.

Ellery Roberts and Ebony Hoorn defintiely have a specific vision for their life and their music and together as LUH. Spiritual Songs For Lovers To Sing is one of the most interesting and enjoyable full-length listening experiences in 2016 so far. We're looking forward to hearing what they’ll be up to next. In the meantime, you can catch LUH live at the Pitchfork Music Festival taking place in Chicago, IL July 15-17, 2016. Check out mute.com for upcoming tour dates.

 

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Against Me! Singer Laura Jane Grace Says ‘Goodbye, Gender,’ Burns Birth Certificate Onstage

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Against Me! singer Laura Jane Grace, who publicly came out as transgender in 2012, sent a powerful message to transphobic legislators this weekend.

While performing in Durham, North Carolina on Sunday, Grace protested the state’s HB2 bill, which forces people to use the bathroom that matches the gender they were assigned at birth. Grace burned her birth certificate onstage while saying, “Goodbye, gender!”

On Instagram, Grace confirmed that it was her actual birth certificate and added, "BURN GENDER BURN! GENDER INFERNO!!!!"

 

Several musicians, including Bruce Springsteen and Pearl Jam, have canceled shows in North Carolina as a way to publicly protest the bill. Rolling Stone writes that Grace had previously told fans she would not do the same, tweeting, “It was suggested to me in an interview that we might cancel our May 15th show in Durham, NC because of the states HB2 bill. Hell no! I'm even more eager to play North Carolina 'cause of the bill! Let me know if there's any activist groups that can come table the show.”

Grace explained her decision to the Washington Post before the concert: “Bruce Springsteen pulling out of a concert has a noticeable financial effect. That’s lost revenue for the city. No one will notice that much if I cancel the show; it only hurts the fans and the people who have already bought tickets, and the people who could possibly be educated in a situation like that.”

At the show, Grace urged fans to fight against the bill, saying, “The way you affect change is by empowering the grassroots movement.”

In 2014, Grace released an album documenting her transition called Transgender Dysphoria Blues. She has also advocated for trans rights outside of her music, including speaking out against HB2. She previously told BuzzFeed, “I think the real danger with HB2 is that it creates a target on transgender people specifically. When you feel targeted as a trans person, the natural inclination is to go into hiding. But visibility is more important than ever; to go there and have the platform of a stage to stand on and speak your mind and represent yourself.”

Watch Grace burn her birth certificate in this video below:

Top photo: Instagram/Laura Jane Grace

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