About This Event

Minimum Age:

21+

Doors Open:

11:00 PM

Show Time:

11:00 PM

Description:

justine d., dirty jean, ilirjana & aleix m. present...

Haiti Ladies: A Benefit for Doctors Without Borders

DJs...

Ari Up (The Slits)
Lady Miss Kier (Deee-Lite)
Kim Ann Foxman (of Hercules and Love Afair)
Allison Wolfe (Partyline/Bratmobile)
DirtyJean ( The Crucial Getdown)
Ilirjana (Apache Beat)
Aleix M (Girlie Action)
with more TBA

This is a general admission standing event.

Artists

Ari Up (The Slits)
Queen of the punky reggae party scene, the outernational superstar known as Ari Up is an extraordinary and provocative artist. Her commanding stage presence and agile steppers dance moves are as unique as her distinctive crown of tumbling dreadlocks and the sexy, flamboyant fashions she designs and rocks on and off stage. Memorable and original, Ari's sound is as fresh and futuristic as her style. "My music is extreme stuff," clarifies Ari. "It's the offspring of reggae, which was rebellious outlaw music, mixed up together with dub, dancehall, drum'n'bass and hip-hop and . . .the attitude of the Slits." - London's pioneering wild girl punk band that she fronted in the 1970s at the age of fourteen. The concept of Ari's delicate pan-urban brew evolved between Jamaica and the extremes of New York's progressive music spectrum, in dives on the Lower East Side, Brooklyn and Williamsburg. After much experimentation with different artists and producers, Ari put together her own band, the True Warriors, in 2003. In the rootsy but funky sound of musicians Jayson “Agent Jay” Nugent (guitar), Ira Heaps (bass), and Mike “Mikey General” Severino (drums) veterans of top New York dancehall bands Crazy Baldhead and the Jammyland All-stars, she found the accomplices who could help manifest the sound she'd been seeking. Together they have managed to put together an act that plays Slits' material like it was 1977 all over again and carries the sound onward and upward in Ari's new tunes. All the remarkable life experience and idiosyncratic phases of Ari's colorful existence are captured in her forceful solo material, like the sharply autobiographical tunes Baby Father and True Warrior, the anthemic Kill Them With Love and the eternal innocence of The World Of Grown-Ups. Each song has the colorful clarity and catchiness of a nursery rhyme or folk song, embedded in a truly contemporary fusion of dub steppers and the rhythms of today's global urbanism. Ari has earned the authenticity to manufacture and own such an eclectic, edgy sound. Her remarkable life is an unpredictable saga that flows from the basement punk clubs of London, to the bashment dancehall sound system sessions of downtown Kingston, where she's a regular on local TV shows, known as Madusa, the sinuous deejay-dancer with the legendary Stone Love sound. This extrovert performer has rootsy showbiz in her blood. Her grandmother was a gypsy dancer in Germany, whose marriage to a wealthy German publisher cut across class and cultural lines. Ari's mother, the striking Nora, promoted Jimi Hendrix shows in Germany in the 1960s, and Ari was raised on the road in a milieu of raffish haute bohemia. In her early teens, her eternally hip mother's London apartment became a salon for the rising stars of mid- 1970s punk, like the Clash and the Sex Pistols, whose lead singer, John Lydon, went on to marry Nora several years later. Ari has always been an original since she helped kick-start the Slits. "Punk was like rock, with that guitar, and we didn't fit into it. Even our early punk stuff was very tribal sounding," she recalls. "It had the bass and drum thing strong in there. We were many decades ahead of our time, and we had an influence; we put heavy bass and drums and the dub vibe into the so-called white world." The Slits' flavorful, sardonic, brutally real songs like Typical Girls and Shoplifting, still stand as classics of their era. Ari's distinctive, urgent vocals were also a feature of producer Adrian Sherwood's experimental reggae project, New Age Steppers. Pure artistic impulse and individuality have always guided Ari's choices. "In the 1980s yuppie years, I went retiring, living naked in real heavy jungle in Belize," Ari recalls. "There wasn't any money to spend in the jungle." The excitement of Jamaica's dancehall scene drew Ari back to her old Kingston haunts in the early 1990s, where she started developing the music that has now found fruition with the True Warriors. Truly a rebel soul, Ari is always in the forefront of global sound system creativity, melding the sounds of today's different cities into her own wicked riddims. "Dancehall is really a continuation of punk without them knowing it," she observes of the scenes that have shaped her and that she helped shape. "They both go crazy with clothes and hairstyles and that same attitude: we don't give a damn, leave us alone, we do what the hell we wanna do. We run our own world." -- Vivien Goldman LES, NYC 2003
Lady Miss Kier (Deee-Lite)
Lady Miss Kier was the lead singer for the dance and electronica band Deee-Lite. Her vocals were featured on the band’s albums, beginning with their first release World Clique in 1990, which includes the band’s best known song, “Groove Is In The Heart”.
Kim Ann Foxman (of Hercules and Love Afair)
Kim Ann Foxman is a member of the NYC-based disco/ectro outfit Hercules and Love Afair.
Allison Wolfe (Partyline/Bratmobile)
Allison Wolfe is an Washington DC-based singer that has fronted the bands Bratmobile and Partyline. She was an instrumental figure in the riot grrrl movement of the 90s.
Dirty Jean ( The Crucial Getdown)
Dirty Jean is a NYC-based DJ.
Ilirjana (Apache Beat)
Ilirjana is the vocalist of the NYC-based indie rock band, Apache Beat.
Aleix M (Girlie Action)
Aleix M is a NYC-based DJ.
Justine D
I'm a DJ/Event Producer, a native New Yorker, an Ebay junkie and an all around quiet gal. BORN TO BE MILD, NOT WILD. My website: WWW.JUSTINED.COM
with more TBA