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#petrol girls
grooviestencils · 9 months
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I love the protest feel their music has
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savealifekillacop · 4 months
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My domain my temple and my territory my pleasure
Cut cut cut it out
My desire my right to choose or to refuse this encounter
Cut cut cut it out
My agency that non consensual contact tries to take from me
Cut cut cut it out
My fucking mind you undermine my sense of self you pressurize
Cut cut cut it out
Its my body and my choice
It's my body
My fucking choice
My power my psyche and my energy my decision
Cut cut cut it out
My passion could never be ignited by such aggression
Cut cut cut it out
My liberty my body as the base of my autonomy
Cut cut cut it out
I need to see us make progress towards accountability
Cut cut cut it out
Its my body and my choice
Its my body
My fucking choice
My lips my thighs my wrists my mind
My lips my thighs my wrists my spine
My hips my neck my tongue my mind
Touch me again
And I'll fucking kill you
Touch me again
And I'll fucking kill you
Touch me again
And I'll fucking kill you
Touch me again
And I will fucking kill you
Touch me again
And I'll fucking kill you
Touch me again
And I'll fucking kill you
Touch me again
And I'll fucking kill you
Touch me again
And I will fucking kill you
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I posted a whole collage of albums on Insta, but I’ll keep it to ten albums on here
Big Thief - Dragon New Warm Mountain... Ghost - Impera Florence + the Machine - Dance Fever Orville Peck - Bronco Pusha T - It’s Almost Dry The Beths - Expert In a Dying Field The Weeknd - Dawn FM Steve Lacy - Gemini Rights Adeem the Artist - White Trash Revelry Petrol Girls - Baby
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sindirimba · 2 years
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rhuberb · 2 years
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francofuego · 2 years
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triebwerk wiener neustadt 2022 | petrol girls live (snapshot)
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o-the-mts · 1 year
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2022 Year in Review: Favorite Albums
2022 Year in Review: Favorite Albums
Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Harry Styles, and Lizzo all released acclaimed albums in 2022.  But you don’t come to this Very Small Blog to hear about that ! I posted 44 Album of the Week reviews this year (which includes 3 albums from last year and 1 reissue from 1966).  Here are 10 of my favorites I’ve culled from the list. Check out my lists of favorite albums from 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020…
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hiljaisuudesta · 1 year
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I get by in the worlds I conjure Clinging to the thought of some things that once were I survive though I often wonder Think up other lives, live an internal war I get by with the words I conjure Longing for something more /// What if we are pouring into pre-made moulds A future told, bought and sold And I want to be held but not held back What if we set hard and crack Brittle in the face of change Splinters of who we were caught in our chests
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Top 10 albums of 2022
runnerups:
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10. An Abstract Illusion - Woe (progressive death metal for fans Opeth but modernized)
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9. Stick To Your Guns - Spectre (post-hardcore, metalcore for the revolutionary spirit)
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8. Wormrot - Hiss (grindcore, at its absolute peak)
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7. Petrol Girls - Baby (riot grrl, post-hardcore, raw feminist punk)
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6. Fjort - nichts (post-hardcore, the best Germany has to offer)
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5. Birds in Row - Gris Klein (emo, post-hardcore, the best France has to offer)
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4. Ada Rook - UGLY DEATH NO REDEMPTION ANGEL CURSE I LOVE YOU (electro/industrial, metal, really just excited that this album exists, it feels like the logical continuation of Black Dresses)
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3. Soul Glo - Diaspora Problems (hardcore punk, punk rap, this album is everything punk should aspire to be, it feels both modern and like a throwback to the hardcore punk of the 80s, packed to the brim with lyrics exposing every uncomfortable truth you don't want to hear)
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2. Sigh - Shiki (avant-garde (folk, progressive, doomy black) metal, I don't know much about Sigh, but this album is like polishing all these rough gems of metal genres into a beautiful amalgamation of precious gems)
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Ashenspire - Hostile Architecture (avant-garde (jazzy, neo-classical, progressive black) metal, it's hard to put into words what this album does to me, but luckily I can let it speak for me. Finding this album is like when I first listened to Liturgy, it feels like ascension, but this time I could make out what the music was telling me, and I knew how to relate. It's a different type of ascension, into revolutionary rage and anger)
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fin.
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animefredde · 2 years
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bimboficationblues · 2 years
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Touch me again and I will fucking kill you.
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omegaplus · 2 years
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# 4,127
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Petrol Girls: “Baby, I Had An Abortion” (2022)
The best punk and riot-grrrl bands are the ones who stand up to the status quo, who aren’t afraid to get right in the face of what’s fucked up and go head-on tear shit up and raise awareness. They’ll wind-up, stir shit, and flip everything upside down for their cause. That’s perfectly fine because considering how society and patriarchy has always pinned women to the wall, they need it. Petrol Girls released this once-orphaned single “Baby, I Had An Abortion” before the Supreme Court decided to throw shit at the fan by taking away rights for millions of women across the country and claim ownership of their bodies. It serves as a huge, loud fuck-you against the powers-that-are and a huge wake-up call for what’s at stake. Though Petrol Girls are from Bristol, they show that the issue of female choice and autonomy is always on the line and rings true everywhere in the world. “Baby, I Had An Abortion” isn’t pretty, but so isn’t the fight for women’s rights, either.
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luuurien · 2 years
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Petrol Girls - Baby
(Post-Hardcore, Noise Rock, Riot Grrrl)
Petrol Girls' latest album couldn't have come at a better time, their latest collection of furious post-hardcore that refuses to back down on any of its political messaging. As Ren Aldridge leads the band's signature feminist and anti-capitalist punk rock, Baby finds Petrol Girls at their most urgent and thrilling, a brilliant blend of unapologetic songwriting and clever, occasionally humorous storytelling with forceful, unyielding instrumentation that makes for a modern punk touchstone.
☆☆☆☆☆
Petrol Girls' music always seems to come around at the right time, but especially so with their third album Baby. Punk music might often be focused on the issues of the time, but it takes a special band to make those messages feel just as powerful and poignant years later, 2019's Cut & Stitch's fiery anthems of empowerment, anti-capitalism and self-determination still just as riveting to hear three years in the future as they were back then, and it's sure to be the same with this year's Baby. What makes Baby so special, though, is that Petrol Girls have kept the core of their music the same while modifying the music to be even more potent, eleven post-hardcore shotgun shells that burst in the air and leave imprints on the sky, cutting through anyone and anything in their way as the band joyfully and rousingly take their position in the fight for marginalized people and everything the world throws at them. From police violence to femicide to abortion rights to misogyny to abuse, there's so much that Baby takes on that it seems at first like it's an album primed to be dismal and depressed, but that's never been what Petrol Girls stand for. Instead, these songs are witty, confident, and full of life, never letting the world ground them down and keeping their heads held high as they scream their hearts out and fight for their beliefs. It's a deeply moving album in that way, but the best part of Baby is just how energizing it is to listen to. Ren Aldridge is still one of the best vocalists in punk right now, bar none. Her voice has only gotten better with time, and her ability to emote and play with her tone and delivery on Baby makes sure that the humor and lightness in these songs isn't lost in their direct, aggressive songwriting. Even on a track as upfront as the thrilling Baby, I Had An Abortion, she still finds a way to not make things feel too overwhelming - especially with the recent overruling of both Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey in the United States - delivering lines like "Oh, it's a god damn moral panic / Save the sperm because it's sacred" and "I'm a god damn incubator / But baby I'll see you later" with dramatic vocal leads and a loose, playful singing voice, making for an anthem highlighting the basic truth that abortion should be free and accessible to all who desire one while still shining light on those who wish to make that an impossibility, balancing political rhetoric with the escape music often provides like no other punk band is right now. They meet up with Janey Sterling of Dream Nails fame for two electrifying tracks, Fight for Our Lives and Violent by Design, sludgy guitars and noisy riffs soundtracking the former's protest of femicide - recorded in the same week as Sarah Everard's killer's trail, raped and murdered by Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens, a man who deserves nothing but hell for the rest of his life - and the latter's fitting rebuke of the police force as they consistently prove how untrustworthy and abusive an institution they are again and again, Aldridge's unforgettable full-throated scream of "The thin blue line is violent by design" one of Baby's most galvanizing moments. There's never a time where Petrol Girls lose sight of their goals with Baby, and the way they balance all its different elements is nothing short of masterful. These songs go unreasonably hard as well, making sure Baby's massive songwriting muscles are supported by a strong instrumental core, not ever letting things feel basic or like the bare minimum as they mix surfy guitars, cragged distortion, and pummeling percussion into one intoxicating listen. Feed My Fire's got a chorus catchy enough to put in a stadium pop song, but the tense guitars and rhythmic switch-ups in the verses make this chorus feel even more rewarding and euphoric in this punk rock context; the same goes for Unsettle's mellow verses blast into one of Baby's biggest choruses as Aldridge and the band shriek "Let's unnnnSETTLEEEE!!!! LET'S UNFOLD!!!!". Oftentimes the sound of each song doesn't just give it a unique instrumental flair, but directly contributes to how Petrol Girl deliver each of their messages, the visceral and muddy guitars on Baby, I Had An Abortion mirroring the song's confrontational nature and unapologetic pro-choice sentiments, while the oily surf guitars all around One or the Other bring a playful instrumental kick to the song as Aldridge pokes fun and aims to dismantle gender norms and limited perspectives on identity as well as societies inability to reckon with the multidimensionality of every person both good and bad ("She's a whore or she's your mother," "Can't be a victim and an abuser"), those little details that make it clear how much though and passion went into creating Baby as a whole, not just an album with powerful punk songs, but one that makes sure the declarations at the center of each song are as tightly wound as possible. When Aldridge explodes with anger on the visceral Sick & Tired or lambasts those unwilling to take a strong stance against brutality and oppression on Clowns, you know that the rest of the band is just as pissed as she is as they let all their feelings out through the wordless power of their instruments. It's an interesting question to ask whether or not politically focused albums will still feel fresh and poignant in three, five, twenty years. I can say without a doubt in my mind that Baby will be one of those albums that still feels equally as important as it does today years into the future, Petrol Girls' impressive instrumental chops and willingness to write songs on pressing topics that don't place themselves so squarely in our time that they lose sight of the fights we've had in the past and will continue to have in the future - a song like Violent by Design could have come out twenty years ago or release fifty years in the future and still be a chilling condemnation of the police regardless. While not enough time has passed to know if I'm really telling the truth or not, I've got a strong feeling Petrol Girls have the fuel behind them to keep this fire burning as long as it needs to, until all their demands are met and the world is rid of some of its most toxic and unforgivable aspects. Baby is a buzzing, vibrant blur of artistic protest, Petrol Girls unshakeable in their resolve and support of leftist political progression. Baby is the kind of album I hope influences punk bands years into the future: an album where the messaging is poignant with its attack on pressing political issues, but never devastated with hopelessness; with the instrumentation behind it to make for memorable and punchy songs that never stop vivifying you to keep that fight alive. Petrol Girls know exactly what they stand for, and they do a damn good job at supporting it all beautifully through their music with Baby.
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genericamentegiuseppe · 2 months
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The Chisel e SPRINTS, il paradigma del rock delle Giovani Marmotte
Il capolavoro è "senza tempo" o un tempo ce l'ha? Se togliamo il contemporaneo dal giudizio cosa succede?
Questo 2024 è stato battezzato da diversi album di cui probabilmente non parlerò mai, perché sono già talmente coperti che non vedo cosa potrei aggiungere francamente. Ma su Chisel e SPRINTS ho fatto una riflessione peculiare mentre mi rigiravo dolorante su un intercity notte, e ho pensavo valesse la pena discuterne. The Chisel • SPOTIFY:…
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