Bikini Kill - C or D?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (212 of them)
This thread brings up something that I've been noticing fer awhile now- I've never met a female of the species who likes Rrrriot Grrrrl music. I (heart) Bikini Kill, Le Tigre, Sleater Kinney etc., but all my female friends simply *cannot* stand them.

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 21 September 2002 12:05 (twenty-three years ago)

um, apparently you've never been to my town then.

jess (dubplatestyle), Saturday, 21 September 2002 14:43 (twenty-three years ago)

I've never met a female of the species who likes Rrrriot Grrrrl music.

You've obviously never been to the west coast u.s., then...

donut bitch (donut), Saturday, 21 September 2002 16:45 (twenty-three years ago)

I've never met a female of the species who likes Rrrriot Grrrrl music

I take it you've never been to a Ladyfest. Any of the 40,000 of them.

I find Riot Grrl - philosophically - far too simplistic for the issues that they claim to address. And my whiny freshly lesbian 20 year old tolerance is pretty low. Musically - it just does not do it for me.

I think that the movement STARTED with some pretty interesting ideas and concepts (Suzy has a collection of inspiring zines and things from a decade ago) but got completely derailed.

Anyway, we've had the Riot Grrl: Classic Or Dud discussion before, I seem to remember.

kate, Saturday, 21 September 2002 17:45 (twenty-three years ago)

it's not something that's gone away or can be covered completely in one conversation, i think...

jess (dubplatestyle), Saturday, 21 September 2002 17:48 (twenty-three years ago)

Come to think of it, all my female friends who hate Rrriot Grrrl connect it with an obnoxiously extreme feminist viewpoint that seems to irk them, so they probably know girls who dig 'em. Teach me to post with a headache...

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 21 September 2002 18:34 (twenty-three years ago)

haha beth, if you google this, i'm in apartment B18.

The Gossip should change their name to The Thieves. Jess keep a real good eye on your stuff. Don't ever invite them over to listen to records.

brg30 (brg30), Saturday, 21 September 2002 19:58 (twenty-three years ago)

That phone message reminds me: Watt and company do a great cover of "All Hands on the Bad One."

"Feels Blind" from the "Revolution Girl Style Now" debut cassette is one of those few songs that truly "changed my life," and seeing them live was one of the few concerts that did the same. I liked Huggy Bear's "Her Jazz" and a few other tunes, but there's just no comparison. BK's music was unique (girl-group meets Iggy surf meets soul), their politics were new, their confrontational stance was classic.

They has sex, controversy, cred, a real "movement," good records/CDs/tapes. I think there's one absolutely classic compilation to be made of all their stuff but riot grrrls apparently don't believe in box sets.

Pete Scholtes, Saturday, 21 September 2002 20:28 (twenty-three years ago)

I think the claim that Riot Grrl (or any movement) is too "simple" to deal with the issues it raises is on dodgy foundations, because it would seem to assume that it is in fact possible to deal indepth with a complicated idea in a two minute pop song; I mean, I've never heard "Free Nelson Mandela" but I doubt it starts by arguing that democracy is a better ideology than totalitarianism before bringing in the specifics of Mandela's case and then says Free Nelson Mandela.

this is probably a matter for another thread, though.

I like Bikini Kill, although I like Le Tigre more; I think 'Hot Topic' might not do much to develop the argument that we need to re-evaluate our cultural output from an outlook with less of a masculine bias, but that doesn't make it any less catchy.

thom west (thom w), Sunday, 22 September 2002 00:38 (twenty-three years ago)

riot grrrl is not and was never simplistic. the movement is as varied as the women/men who participate. the idea that riot grrrls all think/do the same "simplistic" things is decidedly offensive. and yeah, obv daniel has never been to auckland.

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 03:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Huggy Bear are WAAAY better - 'Pansy Twist" has more classic riffs than BK came up with in their whole career. BK are fun, sure but more than a little over-rated i feel - the whole sound was 60's punk (good stuff) with catchy lyrics. The best thing the band did was open a dialgue which still continues, and for this reason are important and deserve respect - but the music is not as powerful as the message itself. If their wasn't a movment for them to have been the flagship of, they would have vanished without trace. All very hypothetical.
I was lucky enought to help organise a big all-ages show in my home town - Hobart, tasmania and BK came and played. they were cool and as has been pointed out, 'Feels Blind' is a great moment. I respect them but i never listen to the records any more. I also know stacks of girls who liked them, who played music and started bands because of BK. This is wonderful and i miss bands that inspire like that.

threemetalinsects (threemetalinsects), Sunday, 22 September 2002 07:42 (twenty-three years ago)

riot grrrl is not and was never simplistic.

YES. IT. FUCKING. IS.

For exactly the reasons that that Thom described in his posts above and more.

(overgeneralisation alert!) 90% of the "riot grrls" that I have met have been 20 year old girls freshly politicised by college with little to no experience of real life sexism and real life dilemmas. Their philosophies are as simplistic as their experiences, black and white, clear cut and as dogmatic and inflexible as this post is probably sounding.

Yes, I've met exceptions to this rule. But...

the movement is as varied as the women/men who participate.

Yup. That says it right there. College age, white, suburban, middle-class and freshly politicised. REALLY varied movement, Riot Grrl is.

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 09:41 (twenty-three years ago)

And yet another reason why Bikini Kill = DUD. You CANNOT have a discussion of their music that does not focus MAINLY on politics.

I can discuss the music of AC/DC without discussing their overwhelming sexism. I can't discuss BK without discussing their feminism. Why?

I don't have anything AGAINST political bands, I mean, more power to them for addressing something non-ephemeral. But when the politics overpowers and becomes more important than the CHOONS, then I think that there's something wrong there.

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 09:43 (twenty-three years ago)

i knew the next post on here would be from you kate, before i even looked at the thread. and i knew exactly what you were going to say. discussions like this are soooo unproductive.

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 09:51 (twenty-three years ago)

Riot grrl FAILED as a political movement.

Riot grrl as a MUSICAL movement is as outdated as Grunge or Crusty or anything else that was floating around concurrently.

*YOUR* answer is so typical of every riot grrl I've ever met. As soon as I make valid critcisms, riot grrls shrug and refuse to discuss the issue rationally, as dogmatic as all born agains.

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 09:56 (twenty-three years ago)

hey i just don't wanna argue. i realise we are both opinionated people who aren't going to change each others opinions, thats all. yes your criticisms are valid. the point is that you even admitted that you are overgeneralising, so i think its rash to write off the entire movement. i don't see myself as fitting into your categorisation of riot grrrls, and yet finding out about women making rock music was one of the best things to happen to me (and other women i know). for that reason alone, it was not a failure. do you think all punk music is outdated, kate?

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 10:30 (twenty-three years ago)

All women making rock != riot grrls.

That is one of the fundamental problems that I have with riot grrl, is their and/or the press's wish to dismiss ALL female rockers as being part of a tiny subculture. That is marginalisation, and that is wrong.

That's as insulting and dismissing as say all black musicians = rap. It's just not true.

Do you consider yourself a Riot Grrl, Di? That's a serious question.

To clarify matters, I am NOT one, yet the moment I start shooting my mouth off about feminism, I get dismissed as one by the mainstream. Yet to "real" Riot Grrls, I bear about as much relation to one as a liberal does to a Marxist. (Maybe that is part of why I dislike the movement... nah. It's just insult to injury.)

do you think all punk music is outdated, kate?

Yes. I think most punk music IS outdated. (Most ROCK in general is outdated, but that doesn't stop me from playing it.) Punk was a reaction to certain socio-economic constraints and cultural mores. To play punk in 1970s UK or late 80s/early 90s US was a revolutionary political and musical statement.

Now it stinks of retrofetishism. Don't play your grandparent's music as a form of rebellion against your parents.

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 10:41 (twenty-three years ago)

but i didn't say that all women making rock music are riot grrrls. i just meant its a useful way of finding out about (some) women making rock music. i was under the impression that it wasn't riot grrrls who wanted to define all female rock musicians as riot grrrls but that that was a misinterpretation from popular press. which obviously you have been affected by. thats the fault of mainstream media, and i believe thats one of the reasons why the riot grrrls did the whole press blackout thing, cos they kept getting misquoted and misinterpreted etc etc.

yes i do consider myself a riot grrrl, although i often make music that doesn't fit into the olympia-style format. and i also believe punk is important too, though obviously not in its neo fake blink 182 form. if it weren't for punk and riot grrrl i would never have picked up a guitar. everyone has to start somewhere, right? i don't subscribe to the idea that everyone has to be a master at their instrument before they can make interesting original music. but i also don't believe that people should stick to formulas either.

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 10:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Courtney Love punching Kathleen Hanna = classic.

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Fair enough, that the movement was misquoted and misrepresented by the press. ALL feminist movements are misrepresented as bra-burning lesbian witches in the mainstream press. I've just met such a high percentage of freshly lesbian 20 year olds within riot grrl.

and i believe thats one of the reasons why the riot grrrls did the whole press blackout thing

If they'd stuck to the original press blackout thing, fair enough. But these days... having been part of a rugby style pile-on of neo-riot grrls stabbing each other in the back to get access to The Mainstream Press, well, it makes one a bit cynical.

Maybe my problem was that I was too OLD for riot grrl. My first exposure to women in music was NOT riot grrl, I had already been in a band for a couple of years when it exploded. So it seemed simplistic and overstating the obvious, to me.

I think that the original Riot Grrls knew that from its inception, the movement was going to be misunderstood and misinterpreted, but my understanding was that, the British version at least, (which I have slightly more respect for than their American cousins) was BUILT with an expectation that it would explode and end, like situationism, like dada. Hence why I get so irritated when people are still at it 10 years later, like don't you UNDERSTAND the point? The Riot Grrls I have the most respect for are the ones who grew up and took their political and feminist ideals out into the world, instead of just staying in this treehouse club.

if it weren't for punk and riot grrrl i would never have picked up a guitar. everyone has to start somewhere, right?

Fair enough. If it wasn't for the Shop Assistants and Sonic Youth, I'd probably have never picked up a guitar. I don't believe everyone has to be a prodigy to start a band, but I do believe that you should aspire to aquire some technical skills as you go on. (Kathleen Hannah still has to have Amy Ray change her guitar strings for her onstage! sheesh!)

All musical movements stultify and stagnate as they mature, and become reduced to formulae. It's happened to punk, too.

When music as an artform becomes secondary to philosophy or politics, that's where I get off. I dislike that in all artforms, be it punk rock or conceptual art.

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:14 (twenty-three years ago)

CL punching Kathleen Hannah = utter CLASSIC.

One of the many reasons I love the woman.

(Why is it every time I type CL, I want to type CTCL, much like I can't type Blue without automatically typing Blur?)

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:15 (twenty-three years ago)

CANNOT ANSWER ANY MORE!!! MUST GET IN SHOWER AND GO TO REHEARSAL!!!

My god, three posts in a row, I'm turning into Doomie! Help!

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:20 (twenty-three years ago)

it sounds like you have some pretty bad experiences with riot grrrl kate. i have to admit i've been isolated from it as a "movement" as such... there are no riot grrrls where i live (i don't think any of my bandmates/former bandmates would use the label although most have been influenced by it...), this is probably why i do not shirk the definition. though i think if i were from auckland i would see things very differently... riot grrrl up there is from all reports pretty cliquey and hegemonic, and dominated by a band who have been playing the same setlist for years (though i hear that they are finally developing, after 5 years about time too!).

but I do believe that you should aspire to aquire some technical skills as you go on
i wholeheartedly agree with this. thats what i meant regarding people not sticking to formulas.

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:30 (twenty-three years ago)

women fighting with women = dud. i don't like courtney love at all. (though i admit i like early hole)

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:31 (twenty-three years ago)

I can't stand early bikini kill, I have to take it off halfway. The singles are fantastic and reject all american is easily my fav riot grrl record. i don't really see the point in arguing about riot grrl, because it seems pretty much over to me. I still listen to a lot of it and riot grrl pretty much is my "thing" I guess. Oh and it was really exciting discovering riot grrl when I was 15 and hopeful.

But really - "Eats meat, hates black, beat yr fucking wife, it's all the same thing" DUD DUD DUD. Really Kathleen. I can't help but disagree with her a lot. I must say I do think Courtney Love is way more annoying.

Elisabeth (Elisabeth), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:33 (twenty-three years ago)

Which band do you mean Di?

Elisabeth (Elisabeth), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:37 (twenty-three years ago)

Oh this is too hard to follow. Early BK is crap, late (ie New Radio onwards) is superb. There is my opinion. I can "discuss" (geez) BK's music without mentioning their feminism. I don't know. I actually was an, um "Riot Boy" or something when I was 17 or so, so maybe I cannot say. Also I'm too tired. GET "Reject All American", basically.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:37 (twenty-three years ago)

yeah what band? Fake Purr? I am baffled.

Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:38 (twenty-three years ago)

tell you on e-mail. i don't think they need googlefuel.

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:39 (twenty-three years ago)

Yup, I've had some horrible experiences with Riot Grrls etc. If I judged the movement only by what I'd read in the press, I'd probably be gung-ho for it.

Just one more comment before I go to rehearsal (famous last words... I'm going to be late for the first time ever because of this):

About the technical proficiency issue. The world of music is loaded with stories of bands who were so wildly creative that they did not fully know how to play their instruments when they recorded their first album (Echo and the Bunnymen, Joy Division, etc.) but this does not reflect badly on the artists in question, for some reason, in fact, it only serves to build their legends.

One of the principles of Riot Grrl was that passion and having something to say were more important than technical ability. Yet instead of underlining *their* native genius, somehow this gets filtered as support for the wildly innaccurate press view that girls cannot play guitar.

Is this entirely the fault of the press, or is riot grrl somehow complicit in perpetuating the stereotype? I can't answer that question, I'm biased.

But anyway, back to Bikini Kill - I CAN never and WILL never be able to get past the abrasive quality of Kathleen Hannah's vocals. I just can't do it. Didn't we have a thread on that topic? I should really go post her on it. Might actually be tempted to like the band if it wasn't for her voice.

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 11:49 (twenty-three years ago)

Kate, are there any bands who deal with political issues that do so in a way you wouldn't call simplistic?

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:04 (twenty-three years ago)

One of the principles of Riot Grrl was that passion and having something to say were more important than technical ability. Yet instead of underlining *their* native genius, somehow this gets filtered as support for the wildly innaccurate press view that girls cannot play guitar.

Is this entirely the fault of the press, or is riot grrl somehow complicit in perpetuating the stereotype?

good question. i guess this depends on how you define riot grrrl. i have a pretty loose definition, such that i would say sleater-kinney count as riot grrrls, even though they have long since rejected the label. they can definitely play their instruments (carrie, oh my godess). however because they seem to be the only riot grrrl band that counts as far as the music press goes, i think they get treated as the exceptions that prove the rule. so yeah i think it is mostly the fault of the press (although bands like the c**lies - and i'm sure there are bands like that everywhere, certainly don't help to nip that myth in the bud).

di smith (lucylurex), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:09 (twenty-three years ago)

john: only if they have lots of cute boys with shaggy haircuts, tee hee!!

jess (dubplatestyle), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:17 (twenty-three years ago)

''women fighting with women = dud. i don't like courtney love at all.''

nor do i (only if it's MUD FITE!).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:21 (twenty-three years ago)

and please, no one can really claim to feel the stultifying effects of riot grrl (such as they are), until they live at ground zero for a while.

julio's a good reason of why it was good that riot grrl existed.

jess (dubplatestyle), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:22 (twenty-three years ago)

''Just one more comment before I go to rehearsal (famous last words... I'm going to be late for the first time ever because of this)''

oh no! the curse of ILM!! oh no!!!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:22 (twenty-three years ago)

''julio's a good reason of why it was good that riot grrl existed.''

Jeez...it was only a joke (you riot gurls take things far too seriously).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:24 (twenty-three years ago)

you riot gurls take things far too seriously = "I thought my joke was funny, therefore you should too" = jess's point is spot-on and may go a ways toward explaining why a scene like oly's sort of NEEDS to exist, somewhere

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:35 (twenty-three years ago)

if it still does, which i'm not convinced of. (there's NOTHING going on here, right now. in any way.)

jess (dubplatestyle), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:37 (twenty-three years ago)

Jess you got IM?

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Sunday, 22 September 2002 12:45 (twenty-three years ago)

''(there's NOTHING going on here, right now. in any way.)''

no, that's Jess' good point, which is why I'm in the ''jokey'' sunday afternoon, there's-nothing-here mood.

I don't care if you think it was funny or not maan!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 22 September 2002 13:06 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't care if you think it was funny or not maan!

I rather think that's the point.

Speaking from my silly ol' heart, both Kate and Di rock, and rock well. Different sources, different experiences etc. helped give them the desire to get on stage and actually do something, and as they said above, this is a case -- like so many other musical or artistic or social movements (and punk is as good an example as any in the larger scope) -- that what for one is cosseting and limiting is for another angle thrilling and liberating. All depends on where yer at, who you are, hell even when you were born.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 22 September 2002 13:56 (twenty-three years ago)

bloody absence of telepathy...

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 22 September 2002 14:53 (twenty-three years ago)

Bikini Kill were always my least favorite of first-wave Riot Grrrl. Musically, Heavens to Betsy and Huggy Bear always seemed more in line with what actual riot-based female music SHOULD sound like. I can still put on "Her Jazz" today and be blown away. When I hear early BK I just kind of cringe. That's not entirely BK's fault - lots of what they had to say got swept up and turned into cliche quickly. Then again, if you talk to my wife (no riot grrrl), she'll say BK was one of the best and most inspirational bands she ever saw - and that's hardly an isolated opinion. So there's clearly room to disagree.

I do think it's interesting that we're having the same kind of heated discussions over Riot Grrrl now that we did in 1991. You very rarely hear people discussing whether Nirvana sold out or why Ian MacKaye disapproves of drinking alcohol...but bring up Bikini Kill or Riot Grrrl, and it's like that cut still hasn't scabbed over after 12 years.

mike a (mike a), Sunday, 22 September 2002 15:20 (twenty-three years ago)

''You very rarely hear people discussing whether Nirvana sold out''

I have seen discussion of that actually.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 22 September 2002 15:23 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, but it's not as emotional or polarizing a discussion. Not usually, at least.

Mike Appelstein (mike a), Sunday, 22 September 2002 15:26 (twenty-three years ago)

John: Kate, are there any bands who deal with political issues that do so in a way you wouldn't call simplistic?

Jess only if they have lots of cute boys with shaggy haircuts, tee hee!!

Oh, GOD, no! If you're referring to Bobby G and Primal Scream, I canNOT BEAR to listen to that man going on about politics. But his political oversimplifications only prove his stupidity, and I find dumb men REALLY attractive in a himbo sort of way...

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 17:09 (twenty-three years ago)

such that i would say sleater-kinney count as riot grrrls, even though they have long since rejected the label

If they themselves have rejected and abandonned the label, is it really fair to continue to pidgeonhole them? I no longer thing of S/K as anything even approaching a riot grrl band.

(although bands like the c**lies - and i'm sure there are bands like that everywhere, certainly don't help to nip that myth in the bud).

Too many riot grrl bands still take this approach. We played with an Oxford riot grrl band who actually announced before their set "we didn't bother tuning. But it's OK cause we didn't bother rehearsing either." Someone in the audience yelled "Yeah, and it shows!" And it did indeed show, which I found incredibly frustrating, considering the amount of effort my band had put into rehearsing and preparing for the show. Yet WE get judged by the low criteria girls like THEM establish.

Julio: Jeez...it was only a joke (you riot gurls take things far too seriously).

Remember, Riot Grrls are still participating in the Great Feminist Humour Boycott of 1973. Womyn will boycott humour until equality is achieved!

Q: How many feminists does it take to change a light bulb?
A: That's not funny!

Q: How many riot grrls does it take to change a light bulb?
A: None, cause riot grrls'll never change anything.

Sorry, I'm really enthusiastic. Rehearsal ROXORED today. I don't know when we turned into the sort of band that broke into impromptu covers of Back In Black halfway through middle 8s, but I *like* it. Take that, "Girls can't play guitar" Riot Grrl bee-yatchs!

kate, Sunday, 22 September 2002 17:30 (twenty-three years ago)

''Remember, Riot Grrls are still participating in the Great Feminist Humour Boycott of 1973''

Oops I forgot, must be more ploitically correct (and be more telepathic!).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 22 September 2002 17:51 (twenty-three years ago)

Kate with all due respect you must understand the position of American feminists -- without a women's movement women wouldn't even be allowed to vote in this country. Without the late '60s/early '70s branch of feminism that inspired Riot Grrrl, most women would be socially discouraged from working and limited to dull underling jobs, and being single would be regarded as a sign of a personality flaw. It's all fine & easy to bash feminism, but I hate to think what my country such as it is would look like had it not made the inroads it did.

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Sunday, 22 September 2002 21:40 (twenty-three years ago)

"I'm not / your bulletproof vest or your VI SA CA HAARD"

|Restore| |Restart| |Quit| (Doctor Casino), Saturday, 19 January 2019 21:25 (seven years ago)

Ok, then I guess it’s NOMB if fans who are big on that ideological aspect want to consider them sellouts.

i stan corrected (morrisp), Saturday, 19 January 2019 21:35 (seven years ago)

Finally, I assume many of their fans are, like the band, people in their 40s rather than “punters.”

If your argument is that actual fans of the band would not go to see them live because they are in their 40s, and therefore scalpers and youthful randos may as well have all the tickets, I can see why you're nonplussed!

do you really think most ppl buying tickets online don’t already have one (even if not Amex)?

hmmm

Is your take that this particular band is “selling out” if they’re not playing small venues that sell tickets for ca$h only?

I don't have a hardline take on that, I was volunteering to take a stab at interpreting ET's take

sans lep (sic), Saturday, 19 January 2019 21:43 (seven years ago)

i think the part that's annoying most of my friends is they all sold out in some kind of mysterious amex-exclusive "presale" before the 12 noon on friday that i was waiting for

|Restore| |Restart| |Quit| (Doctor Casino), Saturday, 19 January 2019 21:47 (seven years ago)

Well not all of them - I do not have an Amex and did not get it in the pre-sale. I was on at 12 and after two tries had a ticket by 12:02. I do understand from what I’ve read online that I got very very lucky and that most ppl were unable to get any.

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Saturday, 19 January 2019 22:02 (seven years ago)

If your argument is that actual fans of the band would not go to see them live because they are in their 40s,

xp My argument (or just assumption) was actually that most core fans of this band are at an age where they are as likely to have/use credit cards as fans of any other band from the ‘90s (even if they’re aging punks). It’s not like this is a young band that was playing all-ages house parties last week, and suddenly jumped to the big leagues. But if BK fans are more likely to be anticapitalist, than I am wrong there.

Obviously it suxx to be left out of an Amex presale if you don’t have a Amex card; that’s true for any band/show. My guess is that real ppl are buying that particular tranche of tix rather than scalpers, but that’s just a guess. I don’t know how to solve the bot/scalper problem, obviously limiting tix to ppl with particular cards isn’t a good way.

i stan corrected (morrisp), Saturday, 19 January 2019 22:04 (seven years ago)

My guess is that real ppl are buying that particular tranche of tix rather than scalpers,

$900 on StubHub

sans lep (sic), Saturday, 19 January 2019 22:30 (seven years ago)

Are those definitely the presale tix tho?

i stan corrected (morrisp), Saturday, 19 January 2019 22:32 (seven years ago)

(What I strictly meant was that I assume at least scalper bots can’t do the presale thing — maybe I’m even wrong about that — but it does stink if regular ppl are buying and flipping them.)

i stan corrected (morrisp), Saturday, 19 January 2019 22:33 (seven years ago)

not for nothin but while tix to that show are definitely, most obviously being scalped, most of them are in the under $200 range. any in the $700 - $900 are probably the same types of people who put tickets up for sale to non-sold out shows for ridiculous amounts, either as a placeholder, or some other weird reason. they never sell.

still tho...Terminal 5 show going for like $189 at the cheapest for a GA show.

fuck the NRA (Neanderthal), Sunday, 20 January 2019 00:42 (seven years ago)

Update from https://bikinikill.com

Hi everyone, we wanted to apologize to anyone who had a bad experience trying to get tickets to our upcoming shows. We weren’t aware of the pre-sale for people with a certain credit card in NY until it was too late and that will not happen in the future. Also as soon as we realized there were problems we tried to put as many obstacles in front of scalpers as we could and are trying to figure out a better solution going forward. Thanks for all the interest and support of these shows - it is beyond anything we expected and we are excited to play for you!

Elvis Telecom, Tuesday, 22 January 2019 22:56 (seven years ago)

Bikini Kill has added 2 shows!
Thurs May 2, 2019
LA, CA @ Palladium All Ages.
7pm doors $39.50 https://t.co/DvXxvYrAps
LA on sale: Friday 1/25 Noon PT

Wed June 5, 2019
Brooklyn NY @ Kings Theatre
All Ages 7pmhttps://t.co/YZqVwHJBc8
NY tix on sale: Friday 1/25 Noon ET

— Kathleen Hanna (@kathleenhanna) January 23, 2019

Jeff W, Wednesday, 23 January 2019 18:19 (seven years ago)

four weeks pass...

Riot Grrrl pioneers Bikini Kill (Bikini Kill Records) will play a European exclusive show at O2 Academy Brixton on 10th June 2019! This will be the band’s first time in London in 23 years.

Tickets on sale Friday at 10am.

sleeve, Wednesday, 20 February 2019 02:58 (seven years ago)

two months pass...

We went tonight - killer show. Erica Dawn Lyle slams as hard as Brian James or the Young brothers and uncovers a hidden glam rock/pop sensibility that was obviously there all along. The entire Palladium singing along to "Rebel Girl" was an earworm the scale of the Sweet. In the merch line after the show we got talking to two women who drove 1200mi from Monterrey, Mexico to LA for the show. They said that 17 years ago they taught themselves how to play music by singing along to BK songs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6DXAIEEYZm0

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 3 May 2019 11:24 (seven years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMUQel9928M

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 3 May 2019 11:26 (seven years ago)

Awesome. I am so so so excited to see them soon.

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Friday, 3 May 2019 13:14 (seven years ago)

one year passes...

Okay, so if I only ever get one trip in a time machine, I will use it to travel to the early '90s so I can inform Kathleen Hanna that Billy Ray Cyrus's daughter is going to perform 'Rebel Girl' at the Super Bowl in thirty years.

Vladislav Bibidonurtmi (Old Lunch), Monday, 8 February 2021 13:19 (five years ago)

one year passes...

FWIW, if you're in NYC and would like to go to tonight's show at Irving Plaza, there's a TON of ridiculously cheap tickets on Stubhub.

https://www.stubhub.com/bikini-kill-new-york-tickets-7-9-2022/event/105268869/

I grabbed one for "$11" an hour ago (wound up being $19 after fees) but asking prices have dropped further.

IIRC, StubHub stops selling concert tickets four hours before showtime, so you only have 20 minutes as of this posting.

birdistheword, Saturday, 9 July 2022 19:39 (three years ago)

two years pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uegwd_rBek

an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Tuesday, 16 July 2024 13:46 (one year ago)

Just bought her book last week after Marcus raved about it.

clemenza, Tuesday, 16 July 2024 13:48 (one year ago)

(Kathleen Hanna, that is.)

clemenza, Tuesday, 16 July 2024 13:49 (one year ago)

one month passes...

Saw one of their revival shows at the Brooklyn Paramount last week. It was pretty great. Kathleen Hanna was quite the chatterbox, but it is nice when older groups talk about the old days and reflect on how their lives have changed since then, and even send out positive messages to the younger generation, all of which they did.

For NYC locals, the Paramount is a gorgeous venue, don’t hesitate to go there. Only problem is drink prices are outrageous, you won’t have more than one drink there.

Josefa, Saturday, 14 September 2024 20:11 (one year ago)

I missed their two Baltimore gigs due to conflicts. Haven't seen them in a long time. They had Birthday Girl DC (with one of Brendan Canty's kids, and one of Alec Mackaye's kids) open one night.

curmudgeon, Sunday, 15 September 2024 16:45 (one year ago)

currently reading Rebel Girl, it's good! not very far into it so I don't have much to say yet.

go polish your nose ring (sleeve), Sunday, 15 September 2024 17:12 (one year ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.