BIKINI KILL: REJECT ALL AMERICAN (1996)
1) Statement Of Vindication;
2) Capri Pants; 3) Jet Ski; 4) Distinct Complicity; 5) False Start; 6) R.I.P.;
7) No Backrub; 8) Bloody Ice Cream; 9) For Only; 10) Tony Randall; 11) Reject
All American; 12) Finale.
This is the first Bikini Kill album for which
the band finally decided to try writing and performing some music, as opposed to
«distortion-enhanced social activity» — and, incidentally, the last one as
well, because the effort proved to be too much for the band, and it imploded
from internal conflict. Also, most people hated the album, because nobody
wanted Bikini Kill to try to grow and mature — Pussy Whipped had listeners falling on their knees and surrendering
to the sheer wrath of the «songs», but Reject
All American had ballads.
BALLADS! How are you supposed to make a bikini kill with a frickin' ballad?
Logically, I suppose that we should be going
along with critical opinion. Bikini Kill are not musicians, but activists. They
cannot write songs, they cannot (or will not) play, they don't know how to
sing, and all they got going for them is their animal passion and feminist
ideals. So if they start cutting down on the animal passion without
significantly compensating on other levels, who needs them? Better a doggone
awful band that can't play at all than a boring mediocre band that pretends to
be playing well.
But wait, not so fast. First of all, it is not
really true that Hannah and her gang got «softened up» on this record. The very
fact that their guitarist is playing a few more notes than usual, and that the
barking and nagging is occasionally shaping up in the form of a vocal melody
does not necessarily mean that they
lost anything in terms of energy. What may have been really disappointing to some of the fans is that lyrically, Reject All American transcends the
level of primitive, gut-level «riot grrrrl» slogans — in fact, there is not one
single direct reference here to the evils of sexual objectification, although many of the songs deal with the
evils of objectification as such, period, and sometimes in almost surprisingly
smart ways.
The title track, even if it is superficially
poppier and even «girlier» than ʽRebel Girlʼ, is arguably Bikini Kill's finest
two and a half minutes — Hannah concocts a well-modulated mantra of «social
activity clichés» ("regimented, designated, mass acceptance, overrated,
lip synch, teen anthem, lip synch, obligation...") that her co-workers are
happy to throw on the bonfire ("reject! all american! reject! all
american!") with catchy glee and generic, but tasteful pop-punk riffage.
Primal chaos, it is true, has been replaced by a tighter, better controlled,
more disciplined (and clearer articulated, might I add) way of presenting the
message — but why not, if Billy Karren is
capable of playing in the style of, say, Lenny Kaye?
None of the other songs try so hard to imprint
themselves in the listener's mind, but the overall sound — provided you have
finally gotten used to Hannah's nasal wail — is still an improvement over Pussy Whipped. There is a certain
immediacy and minimalism to the songs that was previously lacking: most of the
rockers start and finish abruptly, without any «moody» introductions (on Pussy Whipped, about half of the songs
had some sort of amateurish bass intro to them), and, surprisingly, at least
three or four finish abruptly twice —
for some reason, the band had developed a consistent taste for false endings,
which creates the illusion that there are far more songs here than there really
are (a nod to Wire's Pink Flag?).
The two «ballads», sung by Kathi and Tobi
rather than Hannah, are forgettable but not particularly corny — they may have
been written with somebody like Blondie in mind, with a mix of tenderness and
inner strength that is certainly incompatible with the idea of a «girlie
sellout», and, after all, there is nothing wrong about showing a little
tenderness, is there? I even think that the ironically titled ʽFalse Startʼ has
all the makings of a good song — pretty vocal melody and cute combination of
gruff electric riffage with tinkling chimes. Just lacks that special something
to put it over the top, but on the whole, it is their ʽSunday Morningʼ and
ʽDreamingʼ all rolled in one, even if the result is ultimately quite
amateurish.
In any case, my logic is simple: Reject All American is the most «musical»
album these girls ever made, and ideologically, it does not betray their
agenda, but extends and deepens it. With a few years more work, they might very
well have matured into decent songwriters and competent players — sadly, the male
chauvinist Olympic gods were all against this, and the band split up less than
two years after they decided to reject all American (then again, logically,
Bikini Kill is also very much American, so they had no choice but to reject
themselves). Which leaves me with no choice but to award this album a very low thumbs up
— for (a) not being irritating, and (b) honoring the «growth curve» and showing
promise for the future. So it never came to pass, but really, what matters is
the dynamics of the action, not the result.
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