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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

OutPostChoir - Be Out, Sing Out




Now, here's an inspiring & innovative project, OutPostChoir. It's an online LGBTQ choir where folks from all over, even where there are no choruses near them, can add their voices, taking a pride through unity approach and really doing it, globally. Imagine the good feeling participating in this could give an LGBTQ person "stranded" far away from an actual community.


Above is the Sydney Gay & Lesbian Choir performing the song "You Make Me Proud," and below see how the vision has evolved to include more and more choruses and individuals, a growing work of art. Click to View the Video.



Monday, November 12, 2012

Haberdashery, A Synthpop Delight




"Haberdashery is electropop that incorporates multi-layered cinematic sounds with pop sensibilities." Well, that's what the website says and I think that sums it up perfectly. What is not immediately obvious is that it's not a band, it's the work of one person, Chicago artist and musician Stephen Pearlman. He writes, arranges and records all of his music, and he's been quite prolific. 

Since his debut release in 2004, he's released five full albums, and over twenty singles...with the singles having multiple mixes each. And I love the designs of his album covers, which have a very distinctive style.




 Here's the cover of his latest CD, "Tonight the Angels," and then a few videos:


 






 Would you like some free downloads from his Christmas EP? 
He keeps adding tracks to it, and now there are six.



Monday, November 5, 2012

Declan Bennett Interview


Okay, this is a shameless plug for my latest OutRadio show...and I think Declan Bennett gave me a terrific interview. And he was oh so patient with me, as I tend to dig deep into someone's career. We talked for a solid hour and it was all good stuff,  so I wanted to share all of it. It became the first two-hour interview on OutRadio. It covers a lot of territory: his sting in the boy band Point Break, his Broadway and West End acting career, and his three solo albums. And of course I've fit in some obscure goodies. It's on my November show, which also includes two other hours of the best of recent GLBT music.

 




Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Tom Goss Is Naked


Okay, I won't be the first, or last, to write about the new video by Tom Goss. It's just too delicious to not mention in this blog. He took his song "Make Believe," from his CD "Turn It Around," and decided to make himself a work of art, (not that he wasn't already). Now, I would have used a wrist watch instead of the clock, but that's just me. Enjoy the Video!


Official Website

Remixes of the song are available at iTunes & Amazon, Etc




Sunday, October 28, 2012

Songs About Billy Tipton


Billy Tipton was a jazz musician who achieved only modest regional success in the 40's and 50's. His career included live radio shows with Big Bands and evolved into jazz quartets and trios playing in night clubs. In his 74 years, in addition to being a band leader and a booking agent, he was a husband 5 times and adopted three children. After he died in 1989 in Spokane, a coroner revealed that he was much more, and the mysterious story ran wild on the wire services: Billy Tipton was a woman.

It seems that Tipton's decision to adopt a male disguise was likely motivated, at least at first,
by practical reasons: It was the depression, people were desperate for work, and it was
especially difficult for women to get work playing in jazz bands. So, at 19, Dorothy Tipton began cross-dressing to get a job in a band. She cut her hair, put on men's clothing, bound her breasts and re-christened herself Billy Tipton, eventually fooling 5 wives and the world for more than 50 years. Tipton left no letters of explanation, so we can only speculate on what drove her, but we can learn much of what there is to know from a biography by Diane Wood Middlebrook called "Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton."


While I felt it necessary to give that short history in case some had not heard it, this blog entry is really concerning Songs About Billy Tipton, as the legend inspired a few songs. And the first was from Phranc, known as the "All-American Jewish lesbian folksinger." The sound clip begins with Phranc talking about the song, taken from my QMH September 2005 interview with her.







Jill Sobule's song remains unreleased, but is not difficult to find on the web. And the heavy metal "Legend of Billy Tipton," by Video Dead I guess is a tribute; I often have trouble understanding lyrics in that genre.



Steve Schalchlin (with lyrics by Paul Zollo) wrote "Brilliant Masquerade" about Billy Tipton, and it's already been recorded by two choruses. He's well known for the musicals written with his partner Jim Brochu, such as "The Last Session," and "The Big Voice: God or Merman," and his solo project "New World Waking."



 The most recent song is by a self-proclaimed Diva, known as Pasheen
It's called "Cross Dress," and is from her 2011 CD "The Big Purr."


Honorable Mention:


 
"The Slow Drag," was a 1998 musical starring Kim Criswell, and included jazz standards (no songs about Tipton). It had a plot inspired by Tipton's story, with the lead character named Johnny Christmas. Of course just listening to the CD gives no sense at all of the story you could see during a performance.

*******

The Billy Tipton Memorial Saxophone Quartet was a Seattle area band taking their name to honor Tipton. Under that name they were active from 1989 through 2002, when the name was changed to Tipton's Sax Quartet. Founding members included Amy Denio, Jessica Lurie, Marjorie de Muynck, and John Otto.

As a side note, at the time of its founding Otto was named Babs Helle and performed with them until 1990. Per Wiki he coined the group's name, and has gone on to become a transgender activist. Pam Barger (earlier of Two Nice Girls) played drums on at least two of their early CDs. In their career under both names they have released ten albums. I have only three in my collection and do not know if any songs on other CDs were actually about Billy Tipton.



 And, for more info I recommend Diane Wood Middlebrook's book "Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton."





Thursday, October 25, 2012

Animal, No Bitch




Everything is appealing to me about this artist: 

1. S/he goes by the name Animal.

2. S/he was part of the duo Bitch & Animal, that toured the world for ten years, and released three albums on Ani Difranco's label, Righteous Babe Records.

3. S/he identifies as a "transperformative artist." Or, as Outfront Colorado more colorfully states, “Prufrock is a badass bipolar cosmic tranny with a new album written for gender warriors.” [ By the way the "s/he" term is from Animal's website, I would never be so bold to choose that term myself ]

4. S/he is also currently pursuing a PHD in Transformative Studies developing theories around gender variance, creativity and theatrical collaboration.

5. The new solo CD is also available on vinyl.


But the first thing I noticed when I got Animal's solo CD "congratulations; thank you & I'm sorry," was how fresh and inventive it is, with intriguing titles like "Emotional Boner" and "0 + 0 = 0." The CD was released in 2010 and, by the way, was produced by Ani. My two faves though are...well, I'll let you hear them:





Below, the Bitch & Animal CDs: 
"What's That Smell?" (1999)* 
"Eternally Hard" (2001)
"Sour Juice & Rhyme" (2003)

*(which by the way, contains the gem "Drag King Bar")



Saturday, October 20, 2012

Bibi Andersen




Bibi Andersen is a Spanish transsexual actress, singer and model who parlayed her sex change in a career in film, including appearing in films by Pedro Almodóvar. Born in 1954, she grew up in Malaga and moved to Barcelona to find her success. It was her first film though, "Cambio de Sexo (Sex Change)," in 1977, that provided her the celebrity to also release an album and several singles.  And, of course that she had recordings is what caught my attention.

Her only LP, in 1980, was just called "Bibi Andersen" with the songs about evenly split between sung in Spanish and English. "Call Me Lady Champagne" got a single release, as did "Sálvame," and you can hear those below, along two others that caught my fancy, "Girls Will Be Boys," and a cover of the Herman's Hermits song "I'm Into Something Good." All are on the album, and she had one other single, not in my collection, called "Canto," in 1982. Listen to:




and if it's your thing, google can find you nude photos of her