Frightwig

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Frightwig
OriginSan Francisco, California, US
GenresPunk rock
Years active1982–1994, 2012–present
Labels
Websitehttp://frightwig.org
Members
Past members
  • Rachel Thoele
  • Susan Miller
  • Tanya
  • Paula Frazer
  • Lynn Perko
  • Bambi Nonymous
  • Alistair Shanks
  • Anne Harney
  • Robert Castenada
  • Dana Ross
  • Cecilia Kuhn

Frightwig is an all-female punk rock band from San Francisco, California,[1] formed in 1982 by Deanna Ashley and Mia Levin. After many line-up changes, Frightwig retired in 1994.

Frightwig reformed in 2012 with Rebecca Sevrin and Rachel Thoele. Frightwig's current line-up is Deanna Mitchell, Mia d'Bruzzi, and Eric Drew Feldman. In September, 2014, the band did a US east coast tour with Jane Lee Hooker.[2]

History[]

Ashley was raised by a "hippie" mother who introduced her to Buffy Sainte-Marie, Joan Baez, Jimi Hendrix, and the Beatles. When Ashley was 16 years old, she moved to San Francisco. She met Levin at a movie theater in the city. Ashley later described, "It was just one of those magic things when you meet your soul mate. But we also had a lot of angry shows. That’s like a lot of relationships: you get mad at each other, you go through all of everything. And that’s what makes a relationship."[3]

When the band first formed in 1982, Frightwig received a certain amount of attention for being female, including catcalls that made them feel it necessary to defend their "right" to be on stage with the men. On "A Man's Gotta Do, What A Man's Gotta Do", Frightwig invited men onto the stage to strip as "a sexist turnaround."

The bandmates worked minimum wage jobs to support themselves. As Ashley recalled, "In the 80s we could work our crappy little jobs and get minimum wage, which was, I remember, $3.25 an hour at the Egyptian and the Strand on Market Street. Our studio was opposite the Sound of Music; we had to carry our equipment at three a.m. downstairs in spiked heel shoes and really blotto drunk."[3]

In San Francisco, Frightwig played the Valencia Tool & Die, The Fillmore, Mabuhay Gardens,[4] the On Broadway, and The Farm. Frightwig toured the United States several times, British Columbia many times, and Europe in the fall of 1985, opening for D.O.A., and in 1994 for a Swiss tour. In New York City, they often performed at 8BC, which "became one of our homes."[3] The band gained momentary fame after Kurt Cobain was seen at Nirvana's MTV Unplugged concert wearing a Frightwig T-shirt. Frightwig also toured with Flipper, Funkyard, the Butthole Surfers, Snakefinger, GBH, Redd Kross and No Means No, and played with Dead Kennedys, Sonic Youth, Lydia Lunch, L7, SWA and Bikini Kill. Bands and performers who list Frightwig as influential include Hole, L7, Bikini Kill, and Faith No More.[5]

On May 4, 2017, band member Cecilia Kuhn died of cancer.[6] In 2019, Frightwig played a May show at Oasis in San Francisco to benefit RAICES and a September show at PRF West in Oakland, California.[7][8]

Most recent line-up[]

  • Deanna Ashley (Vocals/Bass)
  • Mia Levin (aka Mia d’Bruzzi) (Vocals/Guitar)
  • Cecilia Kuhn (1955–2017) (Vocals/Drums)
  • Eric Drew Feldman (Synthesizer)
  • Rebecca Sevrin (additional Vocals/Guitar on latest single)

Former members[]

  • Rachel Thoele
  • Susan Miller
  • Tanya
  • Paula Frazer
  • Lynn Perko
  • Bambi Nonymous
  • Alistair Shanks
  • Anne Harney
  • Robert Castenada
  • Dana Ross

Discography[]

Studio albums[]

Singles/EPs[]

  • Phonesexy EP (1990; Boner Records)
  • Hit Return EP (2013, self-released)
  • War On Women 7" Single (2014, self-released)

Compilations[]

  • Teriyaki Asthma Volume III (V/A compilation) (1990; C/Z Records)
  • Teriyaki Asthma Volumes I-V (V/A compilation) (1992; C/Z Records)
  • Wild Women Never Die (compilation of first two albums) (1993; Southern Records)

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Frightwig: 1980s SF Punk Band Still Feminist & Sassy". CounterPunch.org. 2019-04-05. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
  2. ^ "Frightwig announces September 2014 East Coast Tour | Grande Rock ezine". www.grande-rock.com. Grande Rock ezine. August 5, 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Alternative Voices | San Francisco Public Library". sfpl.org. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
  4. ^ "Wolfgang's, circa 1984 May 9". Cornell University Library Digital Collections. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  5. ^ frightwig – Discography
  6. ^ Jones, Kevin L. (May 8, 2017). "Cecilia Kuhn, Drummer for Influential Feminist Punks Frightwig, Dies at 61". KQED Arts. Retrieved October 9, 2019.
  7. ^ Raskin, Jonah (April 5, 2019). "Frightwig: 1980s SF Punk Band Still Feminist & Sassy". CounterPunch. Retrieved October 9, 2019.
  8. ^ "News". Frightwig. August 29, 2019. Retrieved October 9, 2019.

External links[]

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