In all the stories that she tells, I consider her to be an unreliable narrator... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unreliable_narrator
A reply to a thread was posted: Lydia Lunch
She can be kind of a bitch.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E92qnnRlQ2w
To be fair, she was hardly the only person to have small patience with Nardwuar in the 90s. I wouldn't judge her too badly from this.
A reply to a thread was posted: Lydia Lunch
They are all about Lydia's favorite subject: Lydia Lunch.
This is a woman who can talk about herself uninterrupted for over an hour.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMyqh0gDb-c
But I suppose few people are as interesting as she is, so she has some license to do this.
A reply to a thread was posted: Lydia Lunch
Yes, she was hot.
But she's also very good with words. She's written several books.
https://www.lydia-lunch.net/books
The first was Paradoxia from 1997 and since then she's been still kicking.
Here are some excerpts from So Real It Hurts, written in 2015.
https://www.howlarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/LunchEssay_NoWaveNow.pdf
https://www.howlarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/LunchEssay_WillWorkForDrugs.pdf
A reply to a thread was posted: Lydia Lunch
Her career began during the 1970s New York City no wave scene as the singer and guitarist of Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, which is the era of her work that I'm most familiar with.
This is the discography of that band:
https://lydialunch.bandcamp.com/track/baby-doll
You should listen while reading...
No Wave
It's noise music with the instrumentation and aesthetic of punk rock. The most interesting thing about it is that it occurred along side and was contemporary with the earliest 1970s New York punk and yet it sets the stage for every flavor of post-punk genre to come.
While 1970s punk might have started in dingy clubs with musicians that were not trying to blow up, it instantly became the commercially viable pop rock of the era. It's interesting that while that evisceration of punk culture was going on, there were extremely influential and authentic punk acts that would push the genre into the directions we would see develop further in the 80s.
As far as I see it, 80s hardcore music owes its entire existence to the no wave scene.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_wave
In this thread, we're going to look at Lydia Lunch in 1970s New York.
A new thread was posted: Lydia Lunch
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
A reply to a thread was posted: Vintage Girl
Step back in time and immerse yourself in the charm and elegance of vintage and retro fashion.
From the glamorous 1920s to the chic 1970s and beyond....
A new thread was posted: Vintage Girl
Back when I was mainly a Yung Lean fan, the only thing that made me notice Bladee at all was this video.
The cinematography has some vaguely black metal music video vibes: a lofi recording of Scandinavian guy in the woods, except instead of corpse paint and lurking around like a goblin he's a rapper with sun glasses and an iced out chain around his neck.
Fake blood drips down his wrists throughout the video as he sings in autotune about bleeding in the club. It doesn't make sense; it's almost laughable. But something about it just goes hard. I never imagined this guy's name would carry as much weight as Lean's.
A reply to a thread was posted: Sad Boys and Drain Gang
A reply to a thread was posted: Sad Boys and Drain Gang
Unknown Death 2002 was pretty cool but what put these guys on the map was Kyoto.
https://soundcloud.com/yung-lean-doer/kyoto-prod-yung-gud
Can't leave out Ginseng Strip 2002 either.
A reply to a thread was posted: Sad Boys and Drain Gang