Ad
related to: jd samson men
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
JD Samson & MEN, originally named simply MEN, was a Brooklyn-based band and art/performance collective that focuses on the energy of live performance and the radical potential of dance music. MEN spoke to issues such as trans awareness, wartime economies, sexual compromise, and demanding civil liberties.
In 2007, Samson and Fateman formed a new project, MEN, as a DJ, production, and remix team.After initial songwriting and outside remix work, Fateman took time off to have a child, and Samson recruited the members of her side band Hirsute, including Ladybug Transistor's Michael O'Neill and Ginger Brooks Takahashi, to perform live as MEN.
Fateman has continued to remix, write and produce music for other artists, often with JD Samson. Fateman, Hanna, and Samson wrote and produced the Christina Aguilera song "My Girls" featuring Peaches for Aguilera's album Bionic. Fateman wrote about the experience on the Le Tigre blog: "Together we tailored themes and specific references to her ...
By turning inward, Labor gives JD Samson & MEN greater accessibility. The reality that activist music can only go so far, this album serves to avoid restrictive genre terminology assigned to the band such as “ LGBT music ”.
Le Tigre members JD Samson and Johanna Fateman collaborated with Russian activists Pussy Riot during a concert organised by Vice magazine in 2014, performing Le Tigre's “Deceptacon”. [23] Later, in 2015, they reunited with Pussy Riot to record a song and video for Netflix series House of Cards .
Former President Donald Trump announced Sen. JD Vance as his running mate, sparking near-immediate backlash from LGBTQ advocacy groups. ... The platform says Republicans want to “keep men out of ...
"I'm with Her" has been described as an electropop song, and significantly more polished than Le Tigre's earlier songs. "I'm with Her" was initially composed by JD Samson and Johanna Fateman and offered to a musical artist; when the offer did not go through, it was offered to Kathleen Hanna.
The aphorism Vance attributed to McCarthy was not actually worldly wisdom from the late American writer but a bit of dialogue from Anton Chigurh, a vicious killer in his 2005 novel, “No Country ...