Violent Femmes - Violent Femmes (self-titled) Vinyl LP
Regular price
$32.00
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Album Facts
Violent Femmes - Violent Femmes (self-titled) Vinyl LP
Debut from jazz/folk inspired alt rock from 80s Milwaukee
Price $32.00
Format 1xLP
Label Craft Recordings
UPC 888072055131
Color Black
Year 1983
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint
Album Facts
Debut from jazz/folk inspired alt rock from 80s Milwaukee
Price $32.00
Format 1xLP
Label Craft Recordings
UPC 888072055131
Color Black
Year 1983
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint
When Violent Femmes first started playing their strain of jazz- and folk-inspired alternative rock in Milwaukee in the early ’80s, there wasn’t much precedent for the music they were making. No one would give them a gig, so they played on city sidewalks with an acoustic guitar, an acoustic bass, and a drum kit made up of one single tom with a steel washbasin flipped on top of it and a pair of brushes. “People in the punk scene—if they were walking and they saw us up ahead, they'd cross the street and act like they didn't know us,” Gordon Gano, the band’s singer, guitarist, and principal songwriter, tells Apple Music. “We were the opposite of what people thought was cool.”
The band’s sound—which mixed the nervy sexual energy of punk with the improv of free jazz and a folk combo’s instruments—wasn’t intended to be a rebuke of what was cool. “We loved punk, so it's not like we were disavowing it,” says bassist/multi-instrumentalist Brian Ritchie. “But it was becoming codified and predictable. And we realized we could hear the words better with acoustic instruments, rather than drowning it out with rock clichés. So we were able to develop a new sound and approach, and still retain the elements of what we considered important about punk music, which was the drive.”
The band’s sound—which mixed the nervy sexual energy of punk with the improv of free jazz and a folk combo’s instruments—wasn’t intended to be a rebuke of what was cool. “We loved punk, so it's not like we were disavowing it,” says bassist/multi-instrumentalist Brian Ritchie. “But it was becoming codified and predictable. And we realized we could hear the words better with acoustic instruments, rather than drowning it out with rock clichés. So we were able to develop a new sound and approach, and still retain the elements of what we considered important about punk music, which was the drive.”