Minutemen - My Heart and the Real World

seen from Sweden
seen from Germany

seen from Norway
seen from China

seen from Indonesia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from T1
Minutemen - My Heart and the Real World
Born on this day: post-punk No Wave chanteuse Cristina (Cristina Monet Palaci, 17 January 1956 – 1 April 2020) who made precisely two barbed, weird and distinctive albums - released by the cutting edge Ze label - that flopped commercially and then retired from music. Cristina’s trademark is setting scathing observations to perky music, and she mostly sings and writes within the persona of a jaded party girl or gold digger (a tradition that dates to Mae West and Eartha Kitt). Self-titled debut Cristina (1980) (reissued in 2004 as Doll in the Box) is her mutant disco album. Lushly produced by Kid Creole, it’s campy fun with Latin rhythm in its hips (if you like cowbell, this is the album for you!), but I prefer the 1984 follow-up, the tougher, darker and more cutting New Wave pop of Sleep It Off. Cristina’s venomous, spikily funny lyrics work as wry poetry already, but then she enunciates them in an alienated, deadpan can't-be-bothered snarl (she has “resting bitch voice”, occasionally punctuated with a Johnny Rotten sneer). Here’s a sampling of her wit and wisdom: “My life is in a turmoil / My thighs are black and blue / My sheets are stained, so is my brain / What's a girl to do?” from What’s a Girl to Do? is as lacerating as anything found on Lydia Lunch’s 1980 magnum opus Queen of Siam. “Don't tell me that I'm frigid / Don't try to make me think / I'll do just fine without you / Don’t mutilate my mink” from her punk masterpiece “Don’t Mutilate My Mink”. (In their obituary for her, The Guardian describes it as sounding like Audrey Hepburn fronting the Sex Pistols). See also: her icy Christmas classic “Things Fall Apart.” Like many abrasive early eighties New York punk funk musicians (see also: James Chance of The Contortions), she may initially work best in small doses and for many may be an acquired taste. But think of Cristina as analogous to Campari – once you acquire that taste, you wondered how you ever lived without it.
Miles Davis at the Newport Jazz Festival 1969
from Sample Credits Don’t Pay Our Bills
NEW ALBUM BY THE ULTIMATE MUTANT ROCKERS DROPS IN '83 -- A POST-HARDCORE WAVE IS RISING IN REAGAN'S AMERICA.
PICS INFO: Mega spotlight on record release party flyer design for the BIG BOYS second studio album, "Lullabies Help the Brain Grow," held at the Record Exchange in Austin, TX, USA, on June 24, 1983.
PIC #2: BIG BOYS flyer design for a gig at the Soap Street Saloon in Austin, TX, USA, with band's BUTTHOLE SURFERS and NO TREND supporting. A "Lullabies..." LP release show.
Sources: https://austinpunk.wordpress.com/category/soap-creek-saloon, Flickr, various, etc...
Alien Ant Farm - Smooth Criminal (Michael Jackson cover) [ANThology, 2001]
Surrender - Cheap Trick
Rick James & Teena Marie
Rest In Peace Rick and Teena.