Thursday, September 30, 2010

September's Honorary Lady: Jona Bechtolt/YACHT


The “Honorary Lady” is a monthly feature we do on Girl Germs in an effort to discuss the boundaries that come attached to a radio show devoted to female artists. We wish to challenge what it means to be a girl or lady, and to recognize that artists who fall outside of this gender definition do make huge contributions to the music and culture we celebrate on the show.

Oregon native Jona Bechtolt performed for several years as part of (Girl Germs fave) The Blow, a visual art-meets-electronic music project led by Mikhaela Maricich (formerly of the Microphones). Before The Blow, Bechtolt, who also played in Allegro and The Badger King, had already started performing and releasing music under the YACHT name. He has always embodied the D.I.Y. spirit that is so prevalent in the Pacific Northwest--creating his own beats, producing his own music and releasing it on independent labels. He's also a talented multi-media artist who's been commissioned by the Portland Institute of Contemporary Art and New York arts nonprofit Rhizome, and is a founder and contributor to the Urban Honking blog. We not only love Bechtolt's contributions to art, music and the D.I.Y. music scene, but we love that he's collaborated with such talented ladies as Maricich and Claire L. Evans, who became an official member of YACHT in 2008.

But perhaps what we love most about him is: dude is NOT afraid to bust a move--even while having paint dumped on him.



Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Playlist for 09.28.2010

Puro Instinct California Shakedown Puro Instinct [EP]
Black Mountain Old Fangs Wilderness Heart
Hole Turpentine First Session [EP]
Vivian Girls Wild Eyes Vivian Girls
Y La Bamba Juniper Lupon
Dark Dark Dark Daydreaming Wild Go
A Camp Here Are Many Wild Animals Colonia
Those Darlins Cannonball Blues (Carter Family cover) Dig
Tina and the Total Babes Tell That Girl to Shut Up (Holly and the Italians cover) She's So Tuff
Annie Chewing Gum Anniemal
Santigold Starstruck (Diplo Remix) Santogold
Bei Bei and Shawn Lee Little Sunrise Into the Wind
Sarah Jarosz Song Up in Her Head Song Up in Her Head
Mountain Man Arabella Made the Harbor
Patsy Montana I Wanna Be a Cowboy's Sweetheart The Best of Patsy Montana
Laura Veirs The Ocean (Led Zeppelin cover) From the Land of Ice and Snow: The Songs of Led Zeppelin
Lykke Li Dance Dance Dance Youth Novels
Waxx Maxx Celine and Julie Go Boating Waxx Maxx [EP]
Grace Jones Pull Up to the Bumper Private Life: The Compass Point Sessions
Psalm One Southside Lady Woman @ Work 3
Edith Piaf Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien The Voice of the Sparrow: The Very Best of Edith Piaf
Amy Bezunartea Restaurants and Bars Restaurants and Bars
Ella Fitzgerald Autumn in New York Best of Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong
Cat Power  Sea of Love Covers Record
YACHT See a Penny, Pick it Up I Believe in You, Your Magic is Real
Dessa Dixon's Girl A Badly Broken Code
School of Seven Bells Half Asleep Alpinisms
Mavis Staples Last Train You Are Not Alone
Screaming Females Nothing At All Castle Talk
Strut and Shock Sexy Never Hurt Anyone Damn You Devil, Let Me Go

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Lady you should know about: Psalm One

Psalm One is the only woman signed to influential local label Rhymesayers (home to Atmosphere and Brother Ali). Born in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago and educated at the University of Illinois, Psalm One worked her way from performing at her college's student union to opening for artists like 50 Cent and being part of Warped Tour. Oh, and did we mention: she also happens to be a chemist? By night in the 2000s, she was hard at work on her prolific hip-hop career. But by day, she was hard at work testing nutritional values for food manufacturers.

We of course love her for her music (although we bet her chemistry's not bad either). Her signing to Rhymesayers and her subsequent release, The Death of Frequent Flyer (her fourth album) brought her even further into the national spotlight, and Psalm One will be releasing her long-awaited follow-up to Frequent Flyer in 2011. To tide us over, she's released three (yes, three!) albums on her own in 2010 - a series called Woman@Work. The best part? You can download them for free on her Bandcamp page.

Check out her video for the song "Woman at Work" and an interview with her on the status of women in hip hop.





Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Playlist for 09.21.2010

WE SWEAR. WE WILL GET LAST WEEK'S AND THIS WEEK'S STREAM UP. It's not for lack of trying. Thanks for continuing to check back and for listening!


Wink D Get Busy Ladies First: A Female Rap Mix
Diana Ross Upside Down Diana
Lovage Strangers on a Train Music to Make Love to Your Old Lady By
Janelle Monae Tightrope The Archandroid
Ponytail 7 Souls Ice Cream Spiritual
Brother & Sister B-E-S-T-S-I-S-T-E-R-E-V-E-R Brother & Sister [EP]
Celebration Evergreen The Modern Tribe
Marnie Stern Transparency is the New Mystery  Marnie Stern
Janis Ian Baby's Blue Society's Child
Liz Phair Shane Whipsmart
Is/Is Eating Hourglasses This Happening [EP]
Black Mountain Old Fangs Wilderness Heart
O+S Permanent Scar O+S
Fever Ray I'm Not Done Fever Ray
Raincoats Adventures Close to Home Raincoats
The Vaselines Turning it On Sex With an X
Sundae Girl Do You Do Dips Goody Good Ice Cream Man
Rubies I Feel Electric (feat. Feist) Explode From the Center
Yeah Yeah Yeahs Down Boy Is Is [EP]
Les Nubians Sugar Cane Princesses Nubiennes
Metric Succexy Old World Underground, Where Are You Now?
Lauryn Hill Everything is Everything The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill
Laetitia Sadier By the Sea The Trip
St. Vincent The Strangers Actor
New Bloods Doubles The Secret Life
Magic Dirt Friends in Danger Friends in Danger
Bikini Kill Rebel Girl The CD Version of the First Two Records
Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan Come Undone Hawk
Naomi Shelton and the Gospel Queens What Have You Done What Have You Done

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Playlist for 09.14.2010

Twin Sister Lady Daydream Color Your Life
Basia Bulat In the Night Oh My Darling
Electrelane The Greater Times No Shouts, No Calls
Nina Nastasia You're A Holy Man Outlaster
High Places On Giving Up High Places vs. Mankind
M.I.A. Pull Up the People Arular
Get Back Guinozzi Police and Thieves Carpet Madness
The Shirelles Mama Said 25 All-Time Greatest Hits
Frankie Rose and the Outs Little Brown Haired Girl Frankie Rose and the Outs
Screaming Females Normal Castle Talk
Blondie Dreaming Greatest Hits
Laetitia Sadier Ceci Est La Coeur The Trip
Marnie Stern Building a Body Marnie Stern
The Dead Weather Treat Me Like Your Mother Horehound
Black Mountain Queens Will Play In the Future
White Magic What I See Dat Rosa Mel Apibus
Juliana Hatfield Three My Sister Become What You Are
Puro Instinct I've Got Some Happiness Puro Instinct
Aimee Mann Today's the Day Lost in Space
Lucy Michelle and the Velvet Lapelles Peachy Keen Orange Peels and Rattlesnakes
Carly Simon You're So Vain The Best of Carly Simon
Beach House Heart of Chambers Devotion
The Breeders Happiness is a Warm Gun (Beatles cover) Pod
Fannypack Yo! Ghetto Bootleg
Talking Heads Road to Nowhere Sand in the Vaseline
Patsy Cline I Fall to Pieces 12 Greatest Hits
Ana Tijoux 1977 1977
The Hood Internet Pro Nails Forever Hood Internet vs. Chicago
Bluttat Flying Into Heaven's Doors Freiheit 
Pierced Arrows On the Move Descending Shadows
Thee Ohsees Ruby Go Home Help

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Basses Wild: Tina Weymouth of Talking Heads


"Basses Wild" is an opportunity for Girl Germs to showcase a female bass player in a band that we might not normally play on the show - a "wild card," if you will (get it?).

This week we're featuring Tina Weymouth of Talking Heads. Weymouth was the only female member of the band, and her funk/reggae-tinged bass lines were a huge part of what made Talking Heads so popular. Her trademark style has inspired bass players - male and female - since the '70s.

Weymouth (who is now 59, if you can believe it) also made a name for herself as one half of Tom Tom Club, a dancehall-tinged take on new wave. Check out video below and see Weymouth's awesomeness for yourself! (We just wish she would have gotten half the screen time David Byrne got...)




Here's some background behind the formation of Tom Tom Club and their first single, "Wordy Rappinghood." ("But Tina, you don't have to sing. There's this new thing; it's called rap!"):

Hello, Cho! The lucky winners are...

As you've no doubt heard via our Facebook and Twitter pages or at our Girls on Film series this summer, we're up to our eyeballs in Margaret Cho giveaways. This hilarious (and might we say, groundbreaking) lady is coming to the State Theatre on October 15. She'll be performing songs from her debut album, Cho Dependent as well as doing what she does best--making y'all laugh.

We drew names from those who re-Tweeted the Girls on Film screenings over the summer and those who liked and shared the events on Facebook. And the winners are...

Emily from Excelsior and Dan from St. Louis Park won copies of Cho Dependent!

Christopher from Minneapolis, Jenna from Jackson, Ohio and Matt from Minneapolis all won signed Revolution DVDs!

Sheela from St. Paul won the tickets to see Margaret live at the State Theatre!

If you haven't gotten your tickets to see Margaret, better hurry!


Congratulations to everyone, and thanks for supporting Girls on Film and Girl Germs.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Playlist for 09.07.2010

The streams for this week and last week are coming soon. We promise!

Grand Ole Party Look Out Young Son Humanimals
Liz Brady  Palladium (The Hip) Swinging Mademoiselles
Gossip Heavy Cross Music for Men
Loretta Lynn Have Mercy Van Lear Rose
Nina Simone I Wish I Knew How it Would Feel to Be Free The Very Best Of Nina Simone, 1967-1972 : Sugar In My Bowl
Carole King Beautiful Tapestry
Jenny and Johnny Big Wave I'm Having Fun Now
Dolly Parton Jolene Ultimate Dolly Parton
The New Pornographers Mass Romantic Mass Romantic
Sleigh Bells Rill Rill Treats
Sugar Pie DeSanto I Want to Know Down in the Basement: The Chess Years
Pat Benatar Love is a Battlefield Greatest Hits
All Girl Summer Fun Band Video Game Heart 2
Throwing Muses Start University
Dirty Projectors and Bjork Beautiful Mother Mount Wittenberg Orca
Puro Instinct I've Got Some Happiness Puro Instinct [EP]
Screaming Females A New Kid Castle Talk
Babes in Toyland Laugh My Head Off Dystopia
Corin Tucker Doubt Doubt [single]
Marianne Faithfull Sex With Strangers Kissin Time
Drugstore El President White Magic for Lovers
Patti Smith Kimberly Horses
The Vaselines Sex With an X Sex With an X
Miriam Makeba Pata Pata Pata Pata
Diplo  Wassup Wassup (featuring Rye Rye) Wassup Wassup [single]
Veruca Salt Get Back American Thighs
Midnight Masses Desperate Man Rapture Ready, I Gazed at the Body
Bonnie Tyler Total Eclipse of the Heart Faster Than the Speed of Night
June Carter and Johnny Cash It Ain't Me Babe Johnny Cash's Greatest Hits Volume 1
The Moldy Peaches Anyone Else But You The Moldy Peaches
UUVVWWZ Jap Dad UUVVWWZ
The B-52's 52 Girls The B-52's

Monday, September 6, 2010

Lady you should know about: Miriam Makeba

South African musician Miriam Makeba wasn't just a Grammy Award-winning singer, she was a living, breathing testament to the global fight for equality. After making a name for herself as a successful musician and forming her own group, the Skylarks, Makeba left Africa in the '60s and, with the help of Harry Belafonte, became well-known in the Western world for her distinct jazz-meets-folk-meets traditional African sound. Together with Belafonte, she won a Grammy in 1966 for Best Folk Recording.

After testifying against apartheid before the United Nations, Makeba - who became known as "Mama Afrika" because of her civil rights work - found out her passport was revoked and she had been essentially exiled from her home country. By this time, Makeba had started to gain popularity in the United States, but after her marriage to civil rights activist Stokely Carmichael in 1968, her record deals and tours were canceled. Makeba moved to Guinea (serving for a time as one of that country's delegates - and as a Goodwill Ambassador - to the U.N.) and later to Brussels and back to South Africa, as Nelson Mandela himself had asked Makeba to return. Makeba continued to perform until her death in 2008.

August's Honorary Lady: Stephin Merritt

The “Honorary Lady” is a monthly feature we do on Girl Germs in an effort to discuss the boundaries that come attached to a radio show devoted to female artists. We wish to challenge what it means to be a girl or lady, and to recognize that artists who fall outside of this gender definition do make huge contributions to the music and culture we celebrate on the show.

August's Honorary Lady is Stephin Merritt, the singer and mastermind behind The Magnetic Fields, the 6ths, Future Bible Heroes and The Gothic Archies. Known for his deep, monotone voice and for his simplistic song style, Merritt might not seem at first like a shoo-in for Honorary Ladyhood. But listen to his lyrics. Merritt, who is gay, isn't afraid to look at the subjects of love and loneliness through an honest, candid lens (albeit sometimes a depressing or bittersweet one). In turn, Merritt and his music, which is sometimes referred to as "gay synth pop," have gained a sort of cult following among LGBT youth. Merritt has also worked with many talented ladies, among them vocalist Shirley Simms and longtime friend and bandmate Claudia Gonson, who has remarked that when the Magnetic Fields first started, "we purposely had one lesbian, one gay guy, one straight woman, and one straight man. The audience could identify with whomever they wanted."


July's Honorary Lady: David Bowie

The “Honorary Lady” is a monthly feature we do on Girl Germs in an effort to discuss the boundaries that come attached to a radio show devoted to female artists. We wish to challenge what it means to be a girl or lady, and to recognize that artists who fall outside of this gender definition do make huge contributions to the music and culture we celebrate on the show. You know July's Honorary Lady, and you no doubt love him. He is none other than David Bowie, one of the most groundbreaking (and gender-challenging) artists of our time. Besides being one of the all-around best singers and songwriters ever, he's played with the ideas of sexuality, androgyny, gender roles and traditional femininity/masculinity in his music, image and personal life, all while staying true to his artistic vision. Bowie remains just as relevant today as he was back in the '70s and has been a huge inspiration to ladies, gents and everyone in between.





And, hey - all that aside, we really, really, love Labyrinth