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Arts, Miscellaneous, Playlist
On the Fradio: Regina Spektor Live on NPR

A lot of us feel pretty depressed and maybe even a little threatened right now, so here’s something to soothe you just a little, maybe:

NPR.org has posted the audio from a wonderful, 80-minute concert by Regina Spektor, performing at Washington DCs 9:30 Club. Ive become increasingly fond of Spektors most recent albums, 2004s Soviet Kitsch and 2006s Begin to Hope, but even so, this concert surprised me.

She starts out with a handful of tracks that I didnt recognize (perhaps from her earlier, self-released albums?) and really hits her stride after abot 33 minutes with a heart-stopping redition of Apres Moi that features some lovely Russian-language singing. If youre just looking for an introduction to Spektor, fast-forward to the encore, where she lays down favourite after favourite, much to the audiences delight. Her vocals are perhaps even better live than on record. I often get the sense that singing is some kind of serious play for Spektor: she blows through her anti-folk with an exuberance and child-like (and most unladylike) love of vocal noises that set her apart in that melodic sea of female singer-songwriters.

But I think my real favourite thing about this show is the high-pitched screaming before Spektor walks on stage. You can totally tell that the audience is like 98% girls.

Arts, Miscellaneous
Girl Monster Compilation Looks Monstrously Awesome

According to pitchforkmedia.com, Chicks on Speed’s Alex-Murray Leslie has put together a new 3CD compilation that “celebrates and reclaims music-by-women in several landmark ways”. I have mixed feelings about Chicks on Speed, and I know some of us were burned by the “Women and Songs” series (not to mention the dismal imitators that followed). But Girl Monsteras this compilation is calledlooks pretty stellar. It has an intriguing mix of musicians from a variety of genres and decades, and a bunch of previously unreleased tracks. I haven’t been this excited since the first volume of Alright, This Time Just the Girls!

Track listing, release date, and more information here

Arts, Miscellaneous
When Feminism Gets Wacky, In a Good Way

Feminists (and academics) have long had a reputation for being dry and humourless, which is why I love things like Cat and Girl.

Cat and Girl is a wordy, nerdy webcomic made by a grad student named Dorothy, who manages to transform complex academic theory into appealing panels and hilariously half-sensical dialogue. Imagine a Cultural Studies textbook acted out by a cartoon girl and a large anthropomorphic cat.

Check out Cat and Girls interpretation of Feminisms Supposed Victory in Mainstream Society