Meri St. Mary

Meri St. Mary is a punk poet, singer, musician and artist.

Career

Meri St. Mary was part of the early punk music scene in Hollywood, California.[1] She was involved in many projects, including a Ramones video and the punk film Suburbia as well as television shows (new wave theater) and movies. She also starred in Suicide Line, an underground punk film on 8 mm film, featuring people from the punk scenes of San Francisco and Los Angeles. During the same period she was in two short-lived bands in Hollywood: "Toejam” with Maggie Ehrig, Christina Beck and Suava Smootha (playing KK Barrett's Radio, and introduced by Ice T), and "Roadhog" with Nickey Beat, Smog Vomit, Rhys Williams (playing Cathay de Grande with Fear and The Minutemen. Known in early Hollywood as Meri (wagon) Housecoa,t she was photographed by Bruce Kalhberg (and featured in NO magazine), as well as other photographers around the punk scene including Moshe Brakha, Gary Leonard, Eric Mueller, James Stark, Karl Hinz and Gywn Waters. Early influences were live show by the Screamers, the Weirdos, the Dickies and The Mau Maus, the latter of whom eventually became friends, mentors and inspiration in art, music, visuals.

In the early 1980s she moved to San Francisco and started the band Housecoat Project with Eric Rad Yuncker, Michel Schorro and Erol Cengiz. The band opened for punk bands including Flipper, The Mutants, Skankin' Babylonians, Faith No More, Romeo Void, Richard Hell, Weasel Contingent, A31, Poison Idea, MDC, Afflicted, Smashed Weekend, Three Day Stubble, Spot 1019, World Entertainment War, Frightwig, Bambi Lake, White Trash Debutantes, Seahag, Sister Double Happiness, Tragic Mulatto and Jah Big. until Yuncker died onstage at the Mabuhay Gardens, leaving St. Mary to begin again with a new lineup. Housecoat Project released their first album Wide Eye Doo Dat on Subterranean Records. They also played the New Music Seminar in New York City,at the Pyramid Club in the lower east side; then toured the US. The band disbanded after their second recording in the late 1980s.

In the 1990s St. Mary started a band called "Sex is A Witch" in San Francisco (Mia Simmans, Mark Pino, Rachel Thoele) another short-lived project that played shows like "Making Waves" on Market Street to The Visitation Valley Street Fair, the Valencia St. New College, "Bottom of the Hill" and a benefit for Kathy Peck's H.E.A.R. at 50 Oak Street. That venue had a Vibathon Floor for deaf participants to take in the music as well as the hearing. This show was the first webcast show in history. In 2007 she resurfaced as an award-winning broadcaster at KVMR in Nevada City with her show The Underground Sound.[2] In 2009 she recorded with Lemon de George [3] and produced her first acoustic solo CD [4] “I’m Back”, distributed through Subterranean Records. She began performing again acoustically with a backup band or solo, collaborating with Michael Belfer, Craig Gray, Debora Iyall, Dominique Leslie, Ronni Guitar, Tyler Cook, Caleb Lee Friedenfeldt opening for Fancy Space People, Mr. Lucky, The Mole, Aaron Ross and others in Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York.

Meri St. Mary has been featured or interviewed in Punk Globe, RE/Search Pubs, KALX, KUSF, KXLU, KDVS, KPFA, Mutiny Radio and independent stage and television. In 2009 and 2010 she had her poetry published for the first time in the Chiron Review and the San Francisco poetry magazine OutofOur, as well as prose published in Primal Urge: A Journal for Diverse Humans in 2011. Dave Boles of Cold River Press wrote Homage to A Word (For Meri St. Mary) in 2011 as well. The 1989 Housecoat Project album Girlfiend has been remastered and released on vinyl through Subterranean Records with new artwork (October 2010). Housecoat Project's LPs on Subterranean Records are SUB 61 & SUB 66 catalog numbers.[5]

In 2007, while driving her father to the hospital, she was arrested in San Francisco. Police there suspected her of being Robin Resovich, a fugitive whom St. Mary had never met, and who looked markedly different.[6] She was released after questioning, once police realized their mistake.

In July 2009, the Housecoat Project (Meri St. Mary, Jay Crawford, Bob Bartosik, Mike Simms, Whitey Cox) performed a reunion show in San Francisco [1] and has continued to perform. In September 2012 Meri St. Mary's first book of poetry and art, YOU TORE US was released on Cold River Press[7]

Meri St. Mary also hosts a second award-winning (in 2011) radio show "Underground Sound", with podcasts, featuring notable figures of counterculture on KVMR radio.

In September 2012 her song Time To Die was used in an independent film Pig Death Machine by Apathy Productions, which screened at Artists' Television Access in San Francisco.

References

Meri St. Mary 2014 Berlin Tour The Union [8] V.Vales Research Newsletter [9] Punk Globe Hot Gossip [10] PROTAGONISTA! new Meri St Mary Berlin CD release Nov 2014 [11]