Pinkwash – 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 Even After Its 10th Release, D.C. Punk Label Sister Polygon Is Still Stoked http://bandwidth.wamu.org/even-after-its-10th-release-d-c-punk-label-sister-polygon-is-still-stoked/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/even-after-its-10th-release-d-c-punk-label-sister-polygon-is-still-stoked/#comments Tue, 21 Apr 2015 01:21:47 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=50952 When a band gets stamped with the label “DIY,” that usually means it’s got independently released music on Bandcamp and a string of house shows under its belt. In other words, DIY could describe a lot of bands that are just starting out.

“It seems like a useless word to me because if you’re doing a band, aren’t you already doing it yourself?” says D.C. punk vocalist Katie Alice Greer, 26. “It’s a word that has totally lost its meaning, except that it’s a marketing term. It’s marketable to people.”

sister-polygon-logoBut “DIY” fits Sister Polygon, the label that Greer and her bandmates in Priests have been running since 2012.

“We just wanted full agency over how our music was coming out,” Greer says.

With Sister Polygon, Priests certainly has that — down to the smallest detail. Greer usually handles the imprint’s publicity; bassist Taylor Mulitz deals with design. Drummer Daniele Daniele (a pseudonym) oversees accounting, which sometimes includes tempering her bandmates’ expensive ideas.

“When the rest of us are like, ‘This is a great idea to print on sparkly, glow-in-the-dark paper,’ Daniele will be like, ‘Beautiful. That’s not possible,’” Greer says.

pinkwashPriests guitarist G.L. Jaguar (also a pseudonym) handles the process of packaging each release and slipping them in the mail. If buyers find Cyndi Lauper trading cards in their packages, that’s because he found them recently and thought people would really enjoy them. (He also came up with the label’s name. It’s a reference to a song by Sicilian band Silver Bullets.)

This month, Sister Polygon celebrated a milestone of sorts: It put out its 10th release, Pinkwash’s Cancer Money 7-inch. The heavy Philadelphia band is friends with Priests. So is Cigarette, the slocore ensemble from D.C. that has a 7-inch coming out on the label, possibly this year.

But for Greer and Jaguar, running the label isn’t just about supporting their pals — it’s also about finding music that speaks to them, made by people who are just as passionate.

“When we see music and people who are putting in their all, it’s not just bleeding out your guts with your emotions — that’s important, too — but people who are really trying to express something where there is not space or dialogue for already. That is stuff we want to get behind and try to support,” Greer says.

It’s important to Sister Polygon that it picks artists who have some praxis behind their politics. One of the label’s bands, Downtown Boys, includes members involved in advocacy work.

“We’re a very political band and label, to a certain extent,” Greer says.

Yet Sister Polygon seems fueled not just by ideology, but by its own enthusiasm. Running the label is a labor of love that Priests seems more than willing to do.

“Sister Polygon: very stoked,” Jaguar says, improvising a tagline for the label.

Greer agrees. “Probably annoyingly so,” she says, laughing.

Stream Sister Polygon’s label sampler via Soundcloud:

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Viking’s Choice: Pinkwash, ‘Cancer Money’ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/vikings-choice-pinkwash-cancer-money/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/vikings-choice-pinkwash-cancer-money/#respond Fri, 03 Apr 2015 10:35:00 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=50153 When you play punk rock with someone for 10 years, communication goes beyond words: The heart speaks through fingers and screams. Joey Doubek and Ashley Arnwine have a long history together in the D.C. punk bands Mass Movement Of The Moth and their own duo, Ingrid, but with Pinkwash (and a move to Philly), there’s an ecstatic pulse that guides their frantic, id-exploding punk rock.

With striking gold-on-purple artwork and a provocative title — both of which nod to ’80s Swans records — “Cancer Money” finds catharsis in head-bashing repetition. Where the band’s debut cassette dealt with Doubek’s mother dying of breast cancer, and found Doubek raging against the medical system in abstract ways, here there is no filter.

Over a squawking, muscle-spazzing riff, Doubek yelps, “Cancer money making you grave,” with a voice somewhere between Daniel Martin-McCormick’s nervous screams for Black Eyes and Nicolas Cage on fire. Arnwine is ruthless with her drumkit, punctuating every riff with a sledgehammer-powered exclamation point and cymbals that shriek like static. The duo closes with two minutes of a single, ugly riff — really, just an open power chord — that becomes an unsettling, wordless mantra, surrounded by eerie ambient noise.

The Cancer Money 7″ is out now on Sister Polygon.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
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Photos: Joy Buttons, Pinkwash, The Sniffs, And Young Trynas At The Dougout http://bandwidth.wamu.org/photos-joy-buttons-pinkwash-the-sniffs-and-young-trynas-at-the-dougout/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/photos-joy-buttons-pinkwash-the-sniffs-and-young-trynas-at-the-dougout/#comments Mon, 14 Jul 2014 16:25:29 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=35816 Local venues and bands have now hosted numerous benefits for the forthcoming In It Together Fest, and Saturday night brought another one at D.C. house venue The Dougout, this time with Joy Buttons (featuring members of Laughing Man and Typefighter), Philadelphia band Pinkwash (with members of Bleeding Rainbow and Hume), D.C. garage punks The Sniffs, and Young Trynas (featuring Taylor Mulitz of Priests). Photographer Michael Andrade—recently profiled by Bandwidth—was there to capture it. Here’s what Andrade saw.

Young Trynas

Young Trynas at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Young Trynas at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Young Trynas at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Young Trynas at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

The Sniffs

The Sniffs at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

The Sniffs at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

The Sniffs at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

The Sniffs at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Pinkwash

Pinkwash at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Pinkwash at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Pinkwash at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Pinkwash at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Joy Buttons

Joy Buttons at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Joy Buttons at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Joy Buttons at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Joy Buttons at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Joy Buttons at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

Joy Buttons at The Dougout, July 12, 2014

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Of Note: Channels, Chelsea Wolfe, And Other D.C. Shows To Hit http://bandwidth.wamu.org/of-note-channels-chelsea-wolfe-and-other-d-c-shows-to-hit/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/of-note-channels-chelsea-wolfe-and-other-d-c-shows-to-hit/#respond Thu, 29 May 2014 20:19:41 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=33231 Every Thursday, Bandwidth contributors tell you what D.C. shows are worth your time over the next week.

Channels, Soccer Team, Bells≥
Friday, May 30 at Rock & Roll Hotel, $12

Baltimore rock band Channels features J. Robbins (from Jawbox and Burning Airlines) alongside bassist Janet Morgan and drummer Darren Zentek of Kerosene 454. Their recorded output in their 10-year career has been relatively minimal (one album and one EP), and their live shows seem even more rare, so this is an excellent chance to check out these almost-locals. They’ll be joined by D.C. rockers Soccer Team and Brooklyn instrumental band Bells≥. (Catherine P. Lewis)

Foul Swoops, Nic Fits, Anchor 3, and Luke Reddick
Friday, May 30 at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church, $5 to $10

St. Stephen’s doesn’t host benefit shows as often as it used to, but it’s back at it this weekend with an all-local lineup that will benefit UNICEF’s work to help Syrian children. The show features Arlington rockers Foul Swoops, D.C. punkers Nic Fits, D.C. indie-pop band Anchor 3, and Alexandria’s Luke Reddick (of Dudes). (CPL)

Eels and Chelsea Wolfe
Saturday, May 31 at Lincoln Theatre, $35

This is Chelsea Wolfe’s “acoustic with strings” tour leg, which I hope means the gothic-folk/rock artist plans to perform a whole set of gorgeous tunes like this special version of one of her best songs to date, “Flatlands.” Wolfe’s last album, the synth-infused Pain Is Beauty, had plenty of memorable moments (especially the thunderous “We Hit A Wall“), but I always return to the seething, lower-key Unknown Rooms: A Collection of Acoustic Songs. Here’s hoping Saturday’s show (with headliner Eels) coaxes out more of that understated beauty. (Ally Schweitzer)

Outputmessage, Paperhaus, and The Effects
Saturday, May 31 at 945 Florida Ave. NW, free

A solid lineup of local performers, free admission, and dogs? I can’t think of many reasons to miss this show, co-presented by DCist.com, which takes place Saturday in the parking lot that formally hosted District Flea. Electronic wizard Outputmessage and indie-rock mainstays Paperhaus top the bill, but new band The Effects is worth an ear, too, featuring members of Medications, Buildings, and Deleted Scenes. The dogs come courtesy of Metro Mutts, which hosts a “Canines and Cocktails” happy hour before the show. (AS)

Priests, The Shondes, and Pinkwash
Monday, June 2 at Black Cat Backstage, $10

Local punk band Priests isn’t one for social media, but it’s all over the press, both locally (on Bandwidth and in the pages of Washington City Paper and the Washington Post) and nationally. The group finally drops its debut EP Tuesday—a step up from its previous cassette releases—but its DIY ethos still rages on. Opening group The Shondes joined this lineup after being booted from the Washington Jewish Music Festival because of their support of Palestine. (CPL)

Also recommended this week:
Internationally Known Global Hip-Hop Showcase at Tropicalia (Friday); Drop Electric, The Walking Sticks, and The Raised By Wolves at the Howard Theatre (Friday); Janel Leppin’s Volcanic Ash at Twins Jazz (Friday and Saturday); Queering Sound at Pyramid Atlantic (Saturday); The Menzingers, Lemuria, Pup, and Cayetana at Rock & Roll Hotel (Sunday); Br’er, Wei Zhongle, Three Brained Robot at the Paperhaus (Monday); Louis Weeks at Anacostia Arts Center (Wednesday).

These and other show listings can be found on ShowListDC.

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