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Sonic Youth in Upcoming Movie
Hey folks, thought you all might be interested in checking out this documentary we're making on the Rock 'n' Roll Camp for Girls. "Kool Thing" is featured in the movie, and there's a history of women rockers in the '90s sequence that features a funny animation of Kim Gordon. You can see a trailer and join the community at http://www.girlsrockmovie.com . We're aiming for a release in 2007.
Funny side story, when we were trying to get the rights to a Sonic Youth song, one of the publishing companies sent us a phone number to call to check on the rights. We called and left a message on a strange answering machine, and later that day we got a call from a woman who sounded like she was doing dishes in the background. "Hello? I heard you were interested in licensing one of our songs?" It was freaking Kim Gordon! Someone I guess had accidentally given us her home phone number. She was really nice and asked us a bunch about the movie. At the time, we were asking for the rights to Sugarcane, and she pointed out the irony that we were picking a song she didn't sing on when the movie was about women rockers. D'oh! We hadn't been using the vocal part, so hadn't thought of that. Subsequently, we switched to Kool Thing and it's perfect! |
Checked the trailer! Looks interesting.
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first i though this topic is about sonic youth scene in some movie....like a movie not a documentary, but anyway sounds interesting. going to check the trailor.
nice side story there. |
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You sound like you don't know a thing about this music.
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Why would you say we know nothing about the music? So you're mad at us in this forum because we didn't choose based on thinking about whether a woman was singing or not, and in the other forum for focusing too much on supporting women. Yikes.
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where can i get the trailer?
edit nevermind. |
Will check it out.
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kim should be a guest lecturer/camp councelor/tough principal/school nurse at that place!
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This made me angry enough to create an account and post here. Please go to the girl's rock movie website (www.girlsrockmovie.com) and read the news post on the main page from December 8th titled "Disturbing and then Inspiring" . It is awful how quick people turn to lying just to support their own cause/create a good story. Somehow I no longer find much validity in the poster's original story of having a phone conversation with Kim Gordon.
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For those who can't be bothered to click the link. |
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Well done :) |
Instead of a documentary why don't you make it into a movie. A retro 80s camp movie. Rock N' Roll Camp For Girls. Have the camp divided into 2 sections that compete each year for the Battle of The Bands. One group is the outcast punk rock girls and the other is the bimbo Top 40 pop girls. And then across the lake you got a camp for boys who like paddle the lake at midnight to do panty raids and stuff. And of course you got the guy who's the boyfriend of one of the bimbos but he falls for the punk girl and etc etc etc Now I would watch that.
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Hey Uckfay, don't know if you saw my post in the "Non-Sonics" section, but that's where all the negative stuff came out. This Sonic Youth section post has been mostly civil, if you thought I was making up a conflict. I guess you could say I was "lying" by saying that someone saying "feminsm sucks my big fat cock" used offensive language, but mostly I don't think I made anything up...It's weird, I'm just this underground filmmaker guy and thought Sonic Youth fans would be interested in knowing there's a film coming out that they had something to do with. It's just me and a few other folks who made it... I guess I was wrong to bother. |
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It's Alan Parker everybody!! |
I just re-read the non-sonics version of this thread. So just because one person claimed that she graduated from a girls-rock camp changes the validity on whether it's right or wrong? It's been said and I'll say it again, people don't need to learn how to rock. They should develop their own talents and not have people teach them how to formulate their songs.
And at one point in that thread you mentioned that girls in rock should be recognized as girls first, and then rockstars. I disagree with this because whether you're a woman or a man, you would still share the same attribute that you're a rockstar. It would be better to live in a society with equality between women and men, and not having some people being sexist, and having others supporting one gender more than another. To build upon this, if you have equality in each gender, you probably wouldn't look at a female rockstar and think to yourself "Oh! A woman in rock!". It doesn't come as a surprise to me and to many. It should be at equal level as seeing just a man in rock. You shouldn't need to recognize a woman in rock because she is a woman, you should do this just as much as you recognize a man in rock (in other words, not at all). Society doesn't need more activism promoting feminist ideas anymore. In most civilized cultures women given just as many rights as men. If this was 40 years ago, I could somewhat understand the need to promote feminism, although it has been noticably nearing an equilibrum between both genders and it wasn't rock camps that influenced this progress. With the rock camp idea aside, I reccomend you focus on a specific culture to promote feminism, one where there is less of a balance such as Lebanon. To summarize this: 1. People should develop their own forms of art to create their own sound, instead of reinacting anothers 2. Preference in gender is already reaching an equality whether there's a girls rock band camp or not |
I didn't catch your post in the "Non-Sonics" Section. I apologize for jumping to conclusions.
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There doesn't really need to be two threads about this movie.
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sonic youth in movie?
ha |
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Aw swa(y), why you gotta come and hate in this forum too? Things were going so nicely here...can you point out specifically where I asked anyone to buy anything? It's funny, cause we don't even have a finished movie yet, not sure what y'all would buy, but yer welcome to try. There's a Sonic Youth Song that's featured in the movie, and Kim Gordon is featured in an animation about women in rock in the '90s. I was actually on the site to look for tour information and saw these message boards and thought I'd just drop off a note while I was here. But stay angry, my friend, it seems to suit you. |
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