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The Mix: Ari Up, The Slits And The Women Of Post-Punk

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The Slits' Ari Up, who died on Oct. 20, was a true rock 'n' roll pioneer.
Enlarge Angel Ceballos/Blue Ghost Publicity

The Slits' Ari Up, who died on Oct. 20, was a true rock 'n' roll pioneer.

The Slits' Ari Up, who died on Oct. 20, was a true rock 'n' roll pioneer.
Angel Ceballos/Blue Ghost Publicity

The Slits' Ari Up, who died on Oct. 20, was a true rock 'n' roll pioneer.

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January 11, 2011

Ari Up, leader of the pioneering post-punk band The Slits, would have turned 49 on Jan. 17. She died of cancer last October (read All Songs Considered contributor Carrie Brownstein's remembrance here). In honor of the woman born Ariane Daniele Forster — not to mention my personal gateway drug into the world of post-punk — I've curated a mix of songs by other female artists inspired (both directly and indirectly) by her iconoclastic twist on punk, funk and rock 'n' roll.

These 56 tracks focus more on the rebellious and chaotic moments of the post-punk movement (we'll save goth rock and industrial music for the sequel). All of the bands include women who played a vital role in helping punk evolve past its three-chord roots. Bands such as LiLiPUT and Essential Logic were just as unorthodox as Gang of Four or Wire, even taking their sounds a step further with shrieking vocals and saxophone. The noise and raw experimentation only intensified as Sonic Youth and Teenage Jesus and the Jerks — two New York bands with prominent female members — gained considerable followings.

Post-punk made more than just a racket, though. Around the globe, punk started to breed with other genres, creating odd blends of dance music. Despite being an ocean apart, New York's ESG and France's Lizzy Mercier Descloux were shooting for roughly the same idea: disco beats with a rough and energetic presentation.

Women were also at the forefront of post-punk's more accessible moments, with underground and mainstream classics like The Waitresses' "I Know What Boys Like" and Romeo Void's "Never Say Never." Others recorded the movement's most memorable covers: Hearing The Raincoats' take on The Kinks' "Lola" brings even more comedy to the storyline, and the feeling of aggravation sung in "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" hits hard in The Slits' reinterpretation.

I've obsessed over a lot of bands in my time, and I'm sure I'll become infatuated with a lot more in the future. But no matter what my flavor of the month might be, this is stuff I can always return to. It's been that way since a vinyl copy of The Slits' album Cut made its way into my hands at a Connecticut record store. Ari Up may have passed on, but her music endures, here and elsewhere.

The Playlist

As Mercenarias, "Panico"
Au Pairs, "Come Again"
Au Pairs, "You"
Aunt Sally, "Subete Urimono
Brilliant Colors, "English Cities"
Bush Tetras, "Too Many Creeps"
Crass, "Systematic Death"
Crass, "Dry Weather"
Cub, "My Chinchilla"
Delta 5, "Mind Your Own Business"
Delta 5, "Now That You've Gone"
Dolly Mixture, "How Come You're Such a Hit With the Boys, Jane?"
Dolly Mixture, "My Rainbow Valley"
Erase Errata, "Tongue Tied"
ESG, "Dance"
Essential Logic, "Albert"
Essential Logic, "Collecting Dust"
Family Fodder, "Love Song"
Family Fodder, "Debbie Harrry"
Girls At Our Best!, "Getting Nowhere Fast"
Girls At Our Best!, "China Blue"
Grass Widow, "Shadow"
LiLiPUT, "Die Matrosen"
LiLiPUT, "Ain't You"
Lizzy Mercier Descloux, "Fire"
Ludus, "My Cherry Is in Sherry"
Lydia Lunch, “Stares to Nowhere"
Maximum Joy, "Stretch (Disco Mix/Rap)"
Mika Miko, "I Got a Lot (New New New)"
The Mo-Dettes, "Fandango"
The Mo-Dettes, "Paint It Black"
Model Citizens, "Shift the Blame"
The Passions, "Love On The Tube"
Pylon, "Stop It"
The Raincoats, "Fairytale in the Supermarket"
The Raincoats, "Lola"
Romeo Void, "Never Say Never"
Siouxsie & The Banshees, "Spellbound"
Siouxsie & The Banshees, "Head Cut"
The Slits, "Typical Girls"
The Slits, "Fm"
The Slits, "I Heard It Through the Grapevine"
Sonic Youth, "Orange Rolls, Angel's Spit"
Sonic Youth, "Sacred Trickster"
Suburban Lawns, "Anything"
Suburban Lawns, "Janitor"
Talulah Gosh, "My Best Friend"
Teenage Jesus & The Jerks, "Less of Me"
The Waitresses, "I Know What Boys Like"
The Waitresses, "Go On"
Weave, "Little Liar"
X, "Your Phone's Off The Hook, But"
X-Ray Spex, "Oh Bondage Up Yours!"
X-Ray Spex, "I Am a Cliche"
Y Pants, "Favorite Sweater"
Young Marble Giants, “Searching for Mr Right"

 

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