Hemlines – Bandwidth http://bandwidth.wamu.org WAMU 88.5's New Music Site Tue, 02 Oct 2018 15:23:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.2 D.C. Label DZ Tapes Is Now Five Years Old — Wizened By DIY Standards http://bandwidth.wamu.org/d-c-label-dz-tapes-is-now-five-years-old-wizened-by-diy-standards/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/d-c-label-dz-tapes-is-now-five-years-old-wizened-by-diy-standards/#respond Fri, 08 Jul 2016 19:55:38 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=66315 Brett Isaacoff holds the secret to keeping something going for five years without burning out: relax.

That could be the motto of DZ Tapes, the D.C.-based record label Isaacoff started in 2011. At the time, he had decided that simply running a music blog — the now-defunct DAYVAN ZOMBEAR — wasn’t enough. He wanted to take it to the next level. And this Saturday the digital-and-tape imprint celebrates its fifth anniversary with a marathon show at local DIY venue Hole In The Sky.

Brett Isaacoff of DZ Tapes (photo: Julia Leiby)

Brett Isaacoff of DZ Tapes (photo: Julia Leiby)

How did DZ Tapes get here? Back in Isaacoff’s blogging days, he says, he kept receiving great submissions from indie artists — “so much so that I really want[ed] to find a way to share the work that was coming around my e-desk,” the D.C. resident says. “So I figured I might as well put out a mixtape.” He launched a successful Kickstarter campaign to put out a compilation. The label followed in its wake.

Now DZ Tapes has several cassettes under its belt, featuring both artists from here and elsewhere. It focuses on bands bringing new energy to D.C. and Baltimore’s underground rock scenes — label alumni include shoegazers Wildhoney and Big Hush, punks Hemlines and the fuzzy Nice Breeze, among others.

Sustaining any project for half a decade is no easy feat — perhaps doubly so considering the volatility of the music industry. But Isaacoff has figured out the formula: keep your expectations low and your planning short-term.

“It’s as hard as you want to make it, really,” Isaacoff says. “I’m just trying to have fun and enjoy myself and help people out.” By booking shows and working with interesting bands, he aims to give back to the scene that gave him — an avid showgoer himself — so much.

Hemlines "All Your Homes," released on DZ Tapes

Hemlines “All Your Homes,” released on DZ Tapes

Keeping his day job as a business analyst at a solar startup has helped grease the gears at DZ Tapes. “If I could make money off of [the label] I would, but it’s not something that I want to really force,” Isaacoff says. “I feel like blending the lines between quote-unquote business and pleasure might get a little messy.”

A steady path is as good a marker of success as any, though there have been certain high points — like when Rolling Stone published a piece about Speedy Ortiz right before they were to play D.C. house venue The Dougout, a show he booked. “Filled to capacity” isn’t quite the correct phrase for it — the 70-capacity venue was overflowing. “It was an extreme fire hazard, looking back on it,” Isaacoff says.

DZ Tapes’ future remains both certain and up in the air. There’s this weekend’s anniversary show — “It’s gonna be a banger,” promises Isaacoff — and a few more releases slated for the rest of 2016. But for the future-future? Isaacoff isn’t interested in pressuring himself. DZ Tapes is going “wherever it wants to go, really,” Isaacoff says.

DZ Tapes celebrates its fifth anniversary July 9 at Hole in the Sky

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D.C. Punk Band Hemlines: ‘When You Get On A Stage, That’s A Feminist Act Alone’ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/d-c-punk-band-hemlines-when-you-get-on-a-stage-thats-a-feminist-act-alone/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/d-c-punk-band-hemlines-when-you-get-on-a-stage-thats-a-feminist-act-alone/#comments Wed, 30 Sep 2015 15:41:47 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=56914 The origin story of D.C. punk band Hemlines is straightforward: Two musicians aspired to start a feminist band. So they did.

hemlines-EPKatie Park wanted to make feminist punk rock in particular. Dana Liebelson shared the same dream. They recruited a drummer — Julie Yoder, a founder of the Girls Rock! DC camp — through Craigslist. Their pal Ian Villeda, the sole guy, joined on guitar. Hemlines came screaming into existence.

The band represented a new direction for both Park and Liebelson. Both abandoned their primary instruments: Park swapped out her usual bass for a guitar, and Liebelson traded her violin for a bass.

“I had been in a pretty laid-back indie-rock project and I really wanted to start something that was explicitly feminist, and it seemed like I needed a louder instrument in order to do that,” Liebelson says, laughing.

Hemlines hit their target on All Your Homes, the band’s searing debut EP, released last week on DZ Tapes. The cassette opens with “Agenda,” a track that confronts the negative connotation that word has picked up over the years.

“Agenda” was inspired by a frustrating and all-too-common situation Liebelson came across, in which a college administrator told a sexual-assault victim that she was supporting a type of “rape culture agenda.”

“The phrase ‘rape culture agenda’ got in my head,” Liebelson says. She bristled at the idea that a sexual-assault victim’s pain and outrage could be dismissed as an agenda. “I was thinking, ‘OK, in that case, yeah, I want to reclaim this and say, ‘I do have an agenda. This is an excellent agenda that I want to be behind.'”

Writing a song on the subject proved cathartic.

“I remember hearing about the scenario and being upset about it and not quite sure what to do about it,” says Liebelson. “I channeled that straight into writing. Now I feel better every single time we perform it.”

Also cathartic for Hemlines are songs that deal with more personal matters, like mental health. Women’s mental health in particular, Park says, has historically been given short shrift, chalked up to hysteria rather than legitimate health issues.

“It makes a huge difference to put that into words and then be very loud about it,” says Park. Listeners can find something relatable in the subject matter, too.

The band recorded the EP this summer at Columbia Heights studio Swim-Two-Birds, tracking live and finding synergy with engineers Ryan Little (an occasional Bandwidth contributor) and Brendan Polmer.

“The [D.C.] community is very supportive. I don’t think any of us have ever felt like we’re imposters or we don’t deserve to be up on stage playing an instrument that’s new to us.” — Julie Yoder of Hemlines

“It was a seamless experience compared to other recording sessions I’ve been involved in,” says Yoder. “I felt like the engineers were really intuitive with when to suggest and when to back away. I had a really good time. It didn’t feel like work at all.”

The band always wanted to play punk, but it’s also worked out to be the ideal genre for other reasons, Yoder says.

“I just feel like punk is one of the most accessible genres, especially when you are starting out on a new instrument,” the drummer says. “The community is very supportive. I don’t think any of us have ever felt like we’re imposters or we don’t deserve to be up on stage playing an instrument that’s new to us.”

Yet while D.C.’s punk scene has lain out a welcome mat, the music industry overall can still be a challenging environment for female-identified musicians. Thus the importance of labeling Hemlines a feminist band.

“I would say we’re still at the point where when you get on a stage, that’s a feminist act alone,” Liebelson says, “but I just want to remind people of it. I don’t want to be like, ‘This is kind of feminist,’ I want to be reminding people that it’s feminist.”

Eventually, the band hopes, there will be nothing remarkable about women playing music.

“The act of women getting up on stage and performing should be normal,” says Park. “Yeah, it should be,” Liebelson agrees, “but it’s not yet.”

Hemlines plays an EP release show Wednesday, Sept. 30 at Black Cat.

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