Eve Libertine
Eve Libertine | |
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File:Libertine1.jpg
Eve Libertine, 1981
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Background information | |
Birth name | Bronwyn Lloyd Jones |
Also known as | Eve Libertine, Peeve Libido |
Born | 1949 (age 74–75) |
Origin | Liverpool, England |
Genres | Anarcho punk, experimental music, jazz |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Instruments | Vocals |
Years active | 1977–present |
Labels | Crass Records, Small Wonder Records, Babel Label |
Associated acts | Crass Crass Agenda Last Amendment |
Eve Libertine (real name Bronwyn Lloyd Jones[1]) is a British singer.
She was one of the two female vocalists (along with Joy De Vivre) who worked with the influential British anarcho-punk band Crass. Her works with the band include the controversial single "Reality Asylum", as well as performing most of the vocals on the group's third album, Penis Envy (1981), the lyrics of which have a heavy anarcha-feminist content.[2]
After the dissolution of Crass in 1984, Libertine worked with her guitarist son Nemo Jones. She also trained as a classical singer, and has performed as part of Crass Agenda (renamed Last Amendment as of 2005) along with Penny Rimbaud, Matt Black (of Coldcut), Christine Tobin, Julian Siegel, Ingrid Laubrock, Nabil Shaban, Kate Shortt and others.
Libertine held her first exhibition of artwork, entitled Head On, at the 96 Gillespie gallery, Finsbury Park, London in September 2005.[3] She has designed album sleeves for releases by Christine Tobin and Partisans. Bracketpress publications has also released a limited edition set of cards featuring Libertine's artwork in order to raise funds for Butterfield Green Community Orchard in north London.[4]
June 2010 saw the world premiere in Brussels of Listen, Little Man! a new work by Libertine and electronic artist Mark Webber. Drawing on the writings and research of Dr. Wilhelm Reich, it is a semi-improvised performance for voice and signal generators with a back projected, scrolling graphic score.
She currently lives in Stoke Newington, North London.
On 19 November 2011 she made a guest appearance at fellow Crass band mate Steve Ignorant's "The Last Supper" where they were also joined on stage by Penny Rimbaud. This is the last time Crass songs were sung live.[citation needed]
Contents
Discography
(Nb, see also full Crass discography Crass#Discography)
With Crass
- "Reality Asylum" (Crass Records, 1979)
- The Feeding of the Five Thousand (Second Sitting) (Crass Records, 1980. Libertine performs vocals on "Asylum". This track is absent from the original 1978 release of this album on Small Wonder Records due to the allegedly blasphemous content of the lyrics. It is replaced with two minutes of silence entitled "The Sound of Free Speech")
- Stations of the Crass (Crass Records, 1979. Libertine performs vocals on "Darling" and "Demo(n)crats" as well as tracks on the live section of the album)
- "Nagasaki Nightmare" (Crass Records, 1981)
- "Bloody Revolutions" (Crass Records, 1980. Joint released with the Poison Girls' "Persons Unknown")
- Penis Envy (Crass Records, 1981. Libertine performs lead vocals on all tracks apart from "Health Surface" and "Our Wedding")
- Christ the Album (Crass Records, 1982. Libertine performs backing vocals as well as tracks on the live section of the album)
- "The Immortal Death" and "Don't Tell Me You Care" (Crass Records, 1982. 'B' side of the anti-Falklands War single "How Does it Feel to be the Mother of 1000 Dead?")[5]
- Yes Sir, I Will (Crass Records, 1983)
- Ten Notes on a Summers Day (Crass Records, 1986)
- "The Unelected President" (2003 remix of "Major General Despair" from Christ the Album with Libertine on vocals)[6]
Post-Crass
- Acts of Love (Crass Records, 1985, 50 short poems from 1973 by Penny Rimbaud set to classical music compositions)
- Last One Out Turns Off the Lights (Red Herring Records, 1989, performs multilayered vocals on an experimental concept album written and composed by A-Soma)
- Skating The Side of Violence (Red Herring Records, 1992, with Nemo Jones)
- The Death of Imagination - A Musical Drama (Red Herring Records, performing writing by Penny Rimbaud with music by A-Soma and Sarah Barton)
- Savage Utopia (Babel Label, 2004, with Crass Agenda)
- In the Beginning Was the WORD - DVD, Live Crass Agenda performance recorded at the Progress Bar, Tufnell Park, London, 18 November 2004 (Gallery gallery Productions @ Le Chaos Factory, 2006)
As guest vocalist
- Hex - Poison Girls (Crass Records, Libertine performs 'additional vocals' on "Bremen Song")
- Nick Nack Paddy Whack - Hit Parade (Crass Records, 1986, Libertine performs vocals on one song, "Pills and Ills")
- Merzbild Schwet - Nurse With Wound (United Dairies, 1980, Libertine contributes 'Spoken Word Fragments' to "Dadax")
- Nothing Comes To Mind - A-Soma & The Unlightened (Organon, 1999, Libertine performs additional vocals on "Vortex of Blades", "Canals of Mars" and "Draps Bruts")
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Berger, George. The Story of Crass. PM Press. 2009.
- ↑ [1] Archived May 15, 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ [2] Archived February 22, 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ [3] Archived December 24, 2005 at the Wayback Machine
External links
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- Wikipedia pages with incorrect protection templates
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from March 2013
- Anarcho-punk musicians
- British anarchists
- English anarchists
- Feminist musicians
- Crass members
- Living people
- 1949 births
- Musicians from Liverpool
- English punk rock singers
- Anarcha-feminists