Suffragette City: The Chicago Women's Liberation
Rock Band by Ben Kim(1994)
(Editor's Note: This is a somewhat abridged version of an article
that appeared in Chicago's alternative paper, New City
in April of 1994)
Changing
the lyrics, controlling the equipment, making low the mightythese
are obvious [although difficult] tasks of a feminist, humanitarian
music. Divesting rock of its sexism, however, leads to a startling
development apparently, one cant simply make nice, clean
revolutionary rock without the rock itselfthe musical
formchanging. Maybe the quality of that energy which
so characterizes relic is modified when it is used for dancing
and celebration rather than as an insistent, repetitive power
trip to keep the audience awed, obedient, and flat on its
back
Naomi Weisstein and Virginia Blaisdell from Feminist
Rock: No More Balls and Chains (1972)
Wanna
start your own rock band, its easier than you think, claims
an article in this months Sassy. In Kicking
Out the Jams: A How-To Guide, Mary Ann Marshall breaks
it down neatly, from step one: Learn to play an instrument,
to step 11: Shop your demo to labels. The band illustrated
is comprised like Sassys targeted readership, of adolescent
girls.
Notwithstanding
prevailing sexism on the radio/video airwaves, in clubland,
on the charts, and in the industry in general, things have come
a long way: the Sassy article isnt some fantasy,
its a nuts-and-bolts guide to what hundreds of women can
do, will do, are doing. The riot-grrl phenomenon, which welled
up just a few years ago in a bright-hot fusion of postfeminist
politics and postpunk rock, selected the guitar as a tool every
girl should have to build a secret world apart. As never before,
its a time for women to rock. But 24 years ago, a group
of Chicagoans said it was time. And they were early. That is,
they were first.
The Chicago Womens Liberation Rock Band was the self-
described agit-rock arm of the Chicago Womens
Liberation Union. Founded in 1969, the union was an umbrella
organization, rooted in principles that came to be identified
as socialist feminism, focusing on projects in education, service,
and direct-action, by and for women (This predilection for action
distinguished the union from its more theoretically oriented
counterparts across the country, which emphasized consciousness-raising.)
These
projects included the Liberation School which predated most
womens studies curricula), Graphics Collective, Legal
Clinic, Prison Project, Direct Action for Rights of Employment
(DARE), Speakers Bureau, Action Coalition for Decent Childcare
(ACDC), Rape Crisis Center, and the renowned Abortion Counseling
Service, Jane.
Naomi Weisstein organized the band in March of 1970. Though
later in the decade punk rock would affirm that indeed anyone
can play, feminism spread that plain truth to women early
on. Our early womens movement said that any woman
could do anything Weisstein writes. (Due to ill health,
Weisstein could not conduct a personal interview. Her comments
are drawn, with consent, from a recent essay and correspondence,
cited at the end of this piece.) As long as a woman wanted
to learn an instrument or wanted to sing, I included her as
a member, believing that with positive expectations and a good
deal of enthusiasm she could quickly learn what she didnt
know.
Many lent their efforts during the initial months, and the band
debuted in Grant Park that summer with 12 singers and 4 guitarists:
by all accounts it was a musical disaster, proving the open
membership policy untenable. Soon after, the bands core
lineup solidified: Susan Abod (bass, vocals), Sherry Jenkins
(guitar, vocals), Patricia Miller (guitar, vocals), Linda Mitchell
(manager), Fania Mantalvo (drums), Suzanne Prescott (drums).
and Weisstein (keyboards).
We were trying to tackle the form, recalls Abod.With
the exception of Sherry, we were all coming from classical or
folk backgrounds so it was a real challenge for us. We were
just trying to get our technical skills together and get a strong
backbeat. If the bands musical quality was initially
shaky, the enthusiasm of the audience more than compensated.
I remember one of our first gigs, in January of 1971,
at Alices Revisited (a popular coffeehouse on Wrightwood),
recalls Pat Solo, formerly Patricia Miller. We were just
terrible. And we got a standing ovation. Clearly it wasnt
just for the music.
Abod remembers the gig, too. The place was packed to the
gills with women. After I sang my first song they roared. Musically,
we were schlocking our way through. But there was so much love
and support for what were trying to do. They just thought we
were the greatest!
Like the union itself, the band was about action, but steeped
in ideology, born of it. The band theorized its purpose, debated
its role, and even documented the course of its thoughts. In
a Work Group Analysis, written late in 1972, the
band saw itself expanding the unions scope in a vital
way. (In the union) there was no awareness of how a culture
shapes what people want and how they should want it. Aspects
of culture such as music, poetry and art were frivolous (The
union should) recognize the seriousness of our commitment to
the Womens Movement. We are more than an entertaining
way to break the tensions that. come from serious
political work.
Every band, to some extent, concentrates on extra-musical details,
everything that might possibly define what it stands for
todays indie rockers, for example, focus enormous attention
on graphic design.
As an explicitly political entity, this band treated its every
move as explicitly politicalas a nominally leaderless
collective, the band hashed out every decision at length. We
were riding this wave of tremendous change, Abod notes.
And when you do that, stuff comes up. What are we going to say,
how, and why. Who can and cant do what and who says so.
What does it mean for our power structure. It was political
self-analysis at its gutsiest.
Meetings
and rehearsals placed heavy demandsa minimum of 15 hours
a week, excluding performanceson the members, all who
had full-time engagements as professionals or students. In this
band, working out your part meant more than learning notes.
The bands extraordinary self-consciousness combined with
its dutiful self--chronicling, yields a rare, deep look into
in idea in time. If its merely taking the stage was revolutionary,
the bands imperative to rock was radical in ways not readily
apprehensible, as explained in a Culture Paper submitted
to the union in early 1973:
We like rock and so do millions of others. There is creativity
and music and a sense of joy in all of us. What rock told
us, though, was that in order to be able to create this kind
of music, you had to be magic, and you had to be male. And
everybody accepted that. We accepted that, until the words
got through to us, and we realized that we were despised.
Why were we digging the celebrations of our degradation? Partly
hype, partly real content. The hype was that this music was
the new insurgency, that it was dangerous to the powers that
were. And the content had to do with the music...We should
tell it simply: we chose rock because we dug it so much. And
so did many other people: every 14-year-old listens to rock
music. Here was a cultural vehicle of great popularity, power
and appeal. Maybe we could use it.
So they used rock to build q revolutionary, socialist feminist,
humanist culture, first by writing politically charged lyrics,
like the wonderfully angry Secretary (See
Lyrics). But the band felt that lyrics werent enough.
We have to change the total experience of the rock performance,
the band writes in its Culture Paper. We have to involve
our audiences as equals, include rather than insult them,
respect rather than degrade them, play for them rather than
at them, acknowledge that our audience is our life, our understanding,
our spirit... We keep the house lights on them. We rap a lot
with them.. .We do theater for them and with them...We pass
out lyrics, teach them songs, and have them sing along.
The bands assault on male rock hegemony, simultaneously
straightforward and tricky, used both music and humor. The latter
came out primarily during the raps and theater. Abod recalls
one particular crowd-phasing routine. We did the Kinks
You Really Got Me but with a whole new set of lyrics
that started with Man, instead of Girl,
and we pranced holding our cocks like Mick Jagger.
Or whatever rock star we found really annoying, and it would
just look ridiculous. And the audience was totally into the
guerrilla theater of ittheyd shriek and grab at
our legs like groupies. It was so much fun, laughing at a culture
that had kept us down.
"We
have been able to create an alternative to the total macho rock
culture," the band wrote in its Work Group Analysis. In
moving apart, they created a dialectic with that culture, casing
Guyville and vandalizing its main street, mapping the regions
of disgust and awe in a Mick Jagger, world not of their own
making that would inescapably define their exile from itall
this around the time Liz Phair was gearing up for kindergarten.
All through 1971 and 72, the band racked up more gigs,
traveling to Colorado Springs, Indianapolis, Ithaca, Lewisburg,
Pittsburgh, Toronto and elsewhere, and playing locally at universities
(U of C, UIC) Wobbly Hall on Lincoln, and the Peoples
Church on Lawrence. Women are welcome to come with us
on out-of-town gigs as space and money permits, they wrote
to union members. Be willing to work a little and drink
some.
They
got better as they played. And though clearly making history
all along, the band was eventually able to freeze its moment
in vinyl for posterity. In the spring of 72 they journeyed
to Massachusetts, where, along with their counterparts in the
New Haven Womens Liberation Rack Band, they recorded on
album for Rounder Records. Mountain Moving Day was
released that fall, with each band contributing one side.
We were perfectionists, so we werent satisfied with
the product, admits Abod. We worked really hard
on our stuff, and it still wasnt where we wanted it so
be. Nevertheless, on Mountain Moving Music
the band displays more than a fair amount of musicianship and
spirit. The Chicago group contributes the mid-tempo rocker Secretary:
the bluesy Aint Gonna Marry, a rag called
Papa which transforms the traditional Keep
On Truckin' Mama into an attack on Rolling
Stones, Blood Sweat and Tears/Ive. taken that shit for
too many years, and the stirring title ballad. Though
Mountain Moving Music doesnt rock hard by
conventional standards, its strong convictions lend it considerable
weight. In a sense, its the mother of riot grrl. foxcore,
any rock by women who ask no quarter.
The band broke up in mid-1973, after Weisstein moved to the
East Coast. The union continued until 1977. The others wrote
to the union, upon dissolution, that expanding a feminist
vision through titanic will continue by the formation of new
bands, This, then, is the legacy of these women who played
hard and thought rigorouslythe very idea, so very empowering,
of women rocking, echoed today in the riot grrl call for."all
girls to be in bands."
"A
lot of women came up to me after our shows and said,'I want
to do that,' remembers Abod. "and we tried to make
them understood that they could. Any of them could. And I think
a lot of them did."
Our music is embedded in a context, Womens Liberation
and a vision of our possibilities as women, the band wrote
in its Work Group Analysis. The riot grrls dramatically
reclaim that context just as Sassy"This starting-a-
band business is quite a committment...but if its something
youre meant to do, youll breeze right through it"-blithely
accepts that birthright. And both versions--the battle still
raging, the victory wonfeel like progress. The vision
of the Chicago Womens Liberation Rock Band is a girls
picture of herself rocking today. Rocking like it can change
the worldlike its the most natural thing in the
world.