The Raincoats

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The Raincoats
Origin London, England
Genre(s) Post-punk
Years active 1977 – 1984
1993 - present
Label(s) Rough Trade Records
ROIR
Blast First
Smells Like Records
DGC Records
Website The Raincoats web site
Members
Ana da Silva
Gina Birch
Former members
Ross Crighton
Nick Turner
Kate Korus
Jeremie Frank
Palmolive
Vicky Aspinall
Ingrid Weiss

The Raincoats are a post-punk band and were formed in 1977 by Ana da Silva (vocals, guitar) and Gina Birch (vocals, bass) while they were students at Hornsey College of Art, London, England.[1]

Contents

[edit] Career

The line-up included Ross Crighton on guitar and Nick Turner on drums for the band’s first gig on 9th November 1977. Kate Korus, from The Slits and later The Mo-dettes, joined briefly and was replaced by Jeremie Frank. Nick Turner left to form The Barracudas and Richard Dudanski (exThe 101'ers and later Public Image Ltd. (PiL)] sat in on drums and film maker Patrick Keiller replaced Jeremie Frank on guitar.

Late in 1978, The Raincoats became an all female post-punk band, when joined by Palmolive of The Slits (drums), Vicky Aspinall (violin) and manager Shirley O'Loughlin. The band went on their first UK tour with Swiss female band Kleenex, in May 1979 after Rough Trade Records released their first single "Fairytale in the Supermarket"/ "In Love"/ "Adventures Close to Home".

Palmolive left the band after their seminal first album The Raincoats and Ingrid Weiss joined in 1980, when the band began recording their second album Odyshape, and toured Europe and the east coast of the USA. Guest musicians on Odyshape included Robert Wyatt, This Heat's Charles Hayward and Richard Dudanski.

In New York, December 1982, The Raincoats recorded a live album at the arts space The Kitchen. The Kitchen Tapes (live) was released on ROIR in 1983.[2]

The band recorded Moving in 1984 and began work on solo projects shortly after the release of this album. Gina Birch and Vicky Aspinall formed Dorothy and Ana da Silva worked with choreographer Gaby Agis on a series of dance projects and formed Roseland with Charles Hayward.

In 1992 Kurt Cobain of Nirvana went into the Rough Trade Shop in Talbot Road, London in search of a new copy of The Raincoats and Jude Crighton sent him round the corner to see Ana da Silva at her cousin's antique shop. Cobain wrote passionately about this meeting in the liner notes of Nirvana’s Incesticide album. In late 1993 Rough Trade and DGC Records released the three albums with liner notes by Kurt Cobain and Kim Gordon.

Shirley O'Loughlin persuaded Ana da Silva and Gina Birch to play a show at the Garage in London in March 1994 with Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth on drums and Anne Wood on violin to celebrate the album releases. They recorded a session for John Peel, which was released on Paul Smith’s Blast First and Steve Shelley’s label Smells Like Records. Kurt Cobain invited them to play on the tour Nirvana planned for the UK in April, but he died a week before the tour began. Ana da Silva and Gina Birch had written some new material and released a new album Looking in the Shadows on DGC Records and Rough Trade Records in 1996, produced by Britpop producer Ed Buller (who'd previously worked with Suede and Pulp) (see 1996 in music). Musicians include Anne Wood (violin, bass), Heather Dunn (drums) and Pete Shelley (Buzzcocks and solo artist).

Since 1996, The Raincoats have played some special events such as Robert Wyatt’s Meltdown in 2001 and at Chicks on Speed's “99 cents” album release in Berlin in December 2003. Ana da Silva and Gina Birch recently recorded a version of “Monk Chant” for a compilation of The Monks songs called “Silver Monk Time” and performed the song live with the Monks in the Volksbuehne, Berlin in October 2006. They played at Ladyfest Leeds in April 2007 and the Nuits Sonores Festival in Lyon on 18th May 2007 on the Girl Monster stage with Chicks on Speed.[3]

[edit] Solo activities

Gina Birch worked with Mayo Thompson on The Red Krayola's 1981 Kangaroo? LP (see 1981 in music) and in 1988, and formed Dorothy with Vicky Aspinall releasing a series of 12" singles. She formed The Hangovers and released an album, Slow Dirty Tears, in 1998 on Kill Rock Stars and they toured in the United States as a full band, and in 2000 Gina Birch and Ida performed live at the first Ladyfest in Olympia Washington and in 2002 at the London Ladyfest. The Hangovers played in Moscow in February 2003. She continues to play mainly in London often accompanied by her film and video work and has also directed music videos, including those for The Libertines, 'Up the Bracket', 'Time for Heroes' and 'I Get Along', plus two for New Order, and also Beth Orton, Daisy Chainsaw, the Pogues, the Veils and others.

Ana da Silva worked with dancer/choreographer Gaby Agis on a series of dance projects between 1985 and 1988 composing the score for the film "Freefall" for Channel 4 and formed Roseland with Charles Hayward in 1986. She released an album called The Lighthouse on Chicks on Speed's record label in February 2005. Stuart Moxham of the Young Marble Giants collaborated on one of the album tracks “Modinha” and she recently performed in London, Germany, Portugal and at Ladyfestspain in Madrid and with Marina Rosenfeld's Sheer Frost Orchestra at the Tate Modern in May 2006. She continues to play with shows recently in London and Germany.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] EPs

  • 1983 - Animal Rhapsody
  • 1994 - Extended Play

[edit] Singles

  • 1979 - “Fairytale in the supermarket”/”In love”/”Adventures close to home”
  • 1982 - “No one’s little girl”/”Running away”
  • 1983 - “Animal rhapsody”/”No one’s little girl”/”Honey mad woman”
  • 1996 – “Don’t be mean”/”Vicious”/”I keep walking”

[edit] Compilations

  • 1990 - "No ones little girl" "A constant source of interruption" - [1]
  • 1993 - "In love" "Lipstick Traces - compiled by Greil Marcus author of In the Fascist Bathroom"[2]
  • 1995 - "Off duty trip" "Razor and Tie Music" [3]
  • 1995 - "In love" "Upsalapalooza" - "More live music from WFMU"[4]
  • 1996 - "Pretty" "Buy Product 2" [5]
  • 2001 - "Fairytale in the supermarket" -"Rough Trade Shops 25 years"[6]
  • 2003 - "Lola" -"Rough Trade Shops Post Punk 01"[7]
  • 2003 - "Animal Rhapsody" -"Chicken Lips DJ Kicks"[8]
  • 2004 - "Fairytale in the supermarket" "Left of the Dial: Dispatches from the '80s Underground"
  • 2006 - "Only loved at night" "Rip it Up - compiled by Simon Reynolds author of Rip it Up and Start Again [9]
  • 2006 - "Monk Chant" "silver monk time - a tribute to the monks" (29 bands cover the MONKS) label play loud! productions
  • 2006 - "Shouting out loud" "Girl Monster - 60 tracks of women's cutting edge music from the late seventies to the present day [10]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ “Women and the Rock Business, and the story of the Raincoats” The Open University 7 February, 2005 open.ac.uk - Retrieved: 28 July 2007
  2. ^ The Kitchen Tapes roir-usa.com - Retrieved: 28 July 2007
  3. ^ The Raincoats concert in Leeds 2007 ladyfestleeds.co.uk - Retrieved: 28 July 2007
  4. ^ Guardian review of "Little-known records with big influence" 20 July 2007 guardian.co.uk - Retrieved: 28 July 2007
  5. ^ Stuart Murdoch: My Top 10 albums observer.guardian.co.uk - Retrieved: 28 July 2007

[edit] Miscellanea

The line "bring your record player and your Raincoats 45s" appears in the song "Meet me by the water" by Saturday Looks Good to Me on the album All Your Summer Songs.

[edit] External links

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