L7 (band)
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L7 | |
---|---|
Origin | Los Angeles, California, USA |
Genre(s) | Grunge Punk rock Riot grrrl Alternative metal [1] |
Years active | 1985 – 2000 |
Label(s) | Epitaph Records Sub Pop Slash Records Man's Ruin Records |
Website | http://www.smelll7.com/ |
Members | |
Donita Sparks Suzi Gardner Janis Tanaka Demetra Plakas |
|
Former members | |
Jennifer Finch Gail Greenwood Roy Koutsky |
L7 was a band from Los Angeles that was active from 1985 to 2000. Due to their sound and image, they are often associated with the grunge movement of the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Contents |
[edit] History
L7 was formed by Donita Sparks and Suzi Gardner on shared electric guitar and shared vocals. A year previous, Gardner had performed backing vocals on the Black Flag song "Slip It In". The punk rock duo were soon joined by Jennifer Finch on bass guitar and Roy Koutsky on drums. Koutsky left shortly after and Demetra Plakas ("Dee" for short) became their permanent drummer.
The band took its name from a 1950s slang phrase meaning "square," but is often mistaken as a reference to the sex position, "69". "L7" also happens to be the first letter and the number of letters in the word "Lesbian". The slang phrase "L7" can be heard in the classic Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs song "Wooly Bully" ("Let's not be L7, come and learn to dance..."), and in the Rick James song "Bustin' Out" ("L7- just a little too damn straight...").
In 1991, the band formed Rock for Choice, a Pro-Choice women's rights group which was supported by other prominent bands of that era, including Pearl Jam, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Nirvana, and Rage Against the Machine. Rock for Choice still exists and organizes concerts today. [1]
Their 1992 third album Bricks Are Heavy, produced by Butch Vig, was featured in Rolling Stone's May 1999 list of 'Essential recordings of the 1990s', and is widely considered their classic.[2] [2]
The band gained a certain amount of notoriety for their performance at the 1992 Reading Festival, when Donita Sparks removed her used tampon off-stage and threw it into the crowd yelling "Eat my used tampon, motherfuckers!" in protest against the mud being thrown by the crowd.[3] In the UK, the band are most famous for an appearance on the popular late-night entertainment programme The Word, in which Sparks pulled her pants down to reveal her pubic area. During a live show in London in 2000, the band offered a one night stand with Dee Plakas as a raffle prize; the winner claimed his prize of sex with her on the tour bus.
L7's fourth album, Hungry for Stink, was released in the summer of 1994 during their Lollapalooza tour, where they shared the stage with Green Day and Nick Cave, among others.
Jennifer Finch left the band during the recording of their next album, so Sparks and Greta Brinkman played bass on their fifth album The Beauty Process: Triple Platinum, after which Gail Greenwood, (formerly of the band Belly) became the bassist.
The band's most recent album, Slap-Happy, was released in 1999 and did not chart on either side of the Atlantic. Greenwood then left the band and was replaced by Janis Tanaka, formerly of the San Francisco band, Stone Fox. (Janis would later go on to play bass for the famous singer Pink). Gail Greenwood would later play with the singer Bif Naked).
However, by 2001 the band was no longer touring. According to the band's website: "L7 are on an indefinite hiatus. We know that's vague, but that's just the way it is. The future of the band is a bit up in the air at the moment." L7 appears to be defunct for all practical purposes, as Donita Sparks is currently pursuing her own solo career, along with drummer Dee Plakas and two other guitarists in the band Donita Sparks and The Stellar Moments. Jennifer Finch is working in a punk-rock group called The Shocker.
The band made an appearance in the 1993 film "Point of No Return" starring Bridget Fonda, and an appearance in 1994's John Waters film Serial Mom under the name "Camel Lips", a reference to the visual imprint of a woman's vulva in the crotch of tight jeans, also known as a Cameltoe. Their songs have also been featured on at least twenty compilation albums throughout their career; most notably the song "Shitlist" appears on the soundtracks of the movies Natural Born Killers & Pet Sematary II. The Prodigy covered the "Hungry for Stink" track Fuel My Fire on their 1997 album "Fat of the Land". "Shirley" appears on the "Foxfire" soundtrack."Shove" appears on the soundrack of the movie Tank Girl, and "Pretend We're Dead" appears on the soundtrack of the video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas and can be heard on an in-game radio station. The band was also the subject of a concert film made by former Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic.
[edit] Band Members
[edit] Final members
- Donita Sparks – guitar/vocals (founding member)
- Suzi Gardner – guitar/vocals (founding member)
- Janis Tanaka – bass guitar (2000)
- Demetra Plakas – drums/vocals (1988-2000)
[edit] Past members
- Jennifer Finch – bass/vocals (1987-1996)
- Gail Greenwood – bass/vocals (1996-1999)
- Roy Koutsky – drums (1987-1988)
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
Year | Title | Label | Notes |
1988 | L7 | Epitaph Records | Debut album |
1990 | Smell the Magic | Sub Pop | Reissued in 1991 with three extra songs |
1992 | Bricks Are Heavy | Slash Records | Reached #1 on Billboard Heatseekers |
1994 | Hungry for Stink | Slash Records | Reached #2 on Billboard Heatseekers |
1997 | The Beauty Process: Triple Platinum | Slash Records | First album without bassist Jennifer Finch |
1998 | Live: Omaha To Osaka | Man's Ruin Records | Live album |
1999 | Slap-Happy | Wax Tadpole Records | Final studio album |
2000 | The Slash Years | Slash Records | Compilation of popular songs from 1992-1997 |
[edit] Singles and EPs
Year | Title | From album |
1990 | "Shove" | Smell the Magic |
1992 | "Pretend We're Dead" | Bricks Are Heavy |
1992 | "Everglade" | Bricks Are Heavy |
1992 | "Monster" | Bricks Are Heavy |
1994 | "Andres" | Hungry for Stink |
1997 | "Drama" | The Beauty Process: Triple Platinum |
1997 | "Off the Wagon" | The Beauty Process: Triple Platinum |
1999 | "Freeway" | Slap-Happy |
1999 | "Mantra Down" | Slap-Happy |
[edit] Videos
Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. |
- 1991 - "Fast and Frightening"
- 1992 - "Pretend We're Dead"
- 1992 - "Everglade"
- 1992 - "Monster"
- 1994 - "Andres"
- 1994 - "Stuck Here Again"
- 1999 - The Beauty Process - documentary about the band by Krist Novoselic
[edit] Compilation appearances
- The Melting Plot – "Yummy Yummy" (1988)
- Tantrum – "Bite The Wax Tadpole" (1988)
- Radio Tokyo Tapes – "Sweet Sex" (1989)
- Gabba Gabba Hey: A Tribute to the Ramones – "Suzy is a Headbanger" (1989)
- Alternative Tentacles – "Let's Lynch the Landlord" (1989)
- The Big One/City of L.A. – "American Society" (1990)
- Every Band Has A Shonen Knife Who Loves Them – "Bags" (1990)
- Teriyaki Asthma – "Bloodstains" (1990)
- International Pop Underground – "Packin' A Rod" (1991)
- Alternative NRG – "Shitlist" (1994)
- Natural Born Killers Soundtrack – "Shitlist" (1994)
- The Grunge Years – "Shove" (1994)
- Serial Mom Soundtrack – "Gas Chamber" (1994)
- Tank Girl Soundtrack – "Shove" (1995)
- Spirit of '73: Rock For Choice – "Cherry Bomb" w/Joan Jett (1995)
- The Jerky Boys Soundtrack – "Hangin' on the Telephone" (Blondie Cover)(1995)
- Foxfire Soundtrack - "Shirley" (1996)
- Twisted Willie – "Three Days" w/Waylon Jennings (1996)
- A Small Circle of Friends – "Lion's Share" (1996)
- I Know What You Did Last Summer – "This Ain't The Summer of Love" (Blue Oyster Cult Cover) (1997)
- Free the West Memphis 3 – "Boys in Black" (2000)
- Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas Official Soundtrack Boxset – "Pretend We're Dead" (2004)
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.foxytunes.com/artist/l7
- ^ Rivadavia, Ed. "Bricks Are Heavy: Review". All Music Guide. Retrieved July 11, 2005.