in Novorosibirsk, since the pussy rioters, um, I mean the band
with that name, had to reveal their faces to be inducted into
their square living quarters, to get their 3 square Borshts a day,
after a cavity check...
from the dentist.
pppffTTt.HahaYou knew it was them.
there were hints, you know?
They can't play instruments
They were chosen because they don't mind wagging their asses
They understand promotion (see above)
A bit of music to calm their rioting souls from another musician
who had been to prison simply for playing music.
Markos Vamvakaris was a rebetiko player when their lyrics
about hash smoking were from first-hand experience. The
mere playing of their music meant that they were guilty. So
he wrote this song when he was in the slammer, about
the echo, in there.
"The prisons are echoing"
Also see my story below called "Punk's not dead, punks dead" about
the crazy dangerous world of punk.
UPDATE: Awesome story on the Pussies by Mark Ames
read 'em: Nfswcorp.com
mark ames
Crime and Pussy Riot >> Why Our Entirely
Reasonable Support For Jailed Russian Punkettes Could Trigger World War III //
Back in early July, I got an agitated email from
a friend of mine from the group Faith No More right after they played a concert in Moscow with Pussy
Riot. Bill, the band’s bass player, was trying to make sense of the
weird experience he’d just had in Moscow:
“I
don't know if you heard, but we played in Moscow the day before yesterday, and
we had Pussy Riot do a little bit for the encore. It was pretty insane...”
Bill’s been going back and forth to Moscow for a
couple of decades now, so he knows what to expect from the place better than
most: he produced some early Moscow punk records, and he brought Faith No More to play Moscow at
the height of the Yeltsin debauchery.
Hell, Bill even hosted the legendary
punk-radical Yegor Letov in San Francisco shortly before Letov died.
So Bill understands the weirdness and menace of
Russia better than most. Yet even he wasn’t prepared for Moscow’s violent reaction to
Pussy Riot, much of that hostility coming from the very same scene Bill
had spent years cultivating and working with.
And this is the part of the Pussy Riot story
completely overlooked or dismissed by the Western
media, which loves the Pussy Riot story for a host of reasons: It makes us look good and Putin look bad,
which hasn’t been easy since Dubya fucked things up; it involves three
true-to-life Lara Croft brave-babes fighting KGB power; and, of course, it lets prudish middlebrows say
“Pussy” and still sound morally respectable.
Which makes me wonder: If Beavis & Butt-head
were around to fight for Pussy Riot's cause — and they most certainly would, in
the hopes of finally getting laid — how would Russians, who worshiped Beavis
& Butt-head as any right-thinking human being should, react to that?
Somehow I doubt they’d be as weird and menacing to the cartoon characters as
they were to Faith No More ...
FNM’s problems started before the show, when the
concert venue operators at Moscow’s “Stadium Live” — one of the biggest arenas in Moscow, seating around
7,000 people — somehow got word that Faith No More planned to let Pussy
Riot make a surprise appearance, and threatened
and intimidated the band members to the point where the show was nearly
canceled. Bill still doesn’t know
how they figured it out [KGB]— literally the only people who knew were a
handful of Pussy Riot’s art collective, and Faith No More.
But the real shocker turned out to be the
audience’s hostile reaction when Pussy Riot took the stage during the encore:
Five girls wearing Pussy Riot’s trademark slasher/wrestler masks, holding up
flares, mocking Putin for “pissing in
his pants” in fear, unfurling a flag calling for the audience to support
their Pussy Riot comrades being held in detention back in early July, when the
trial was still just getting going.
(There are countless videos on YouTube showing
Pussy Riot’s disastrous appearance.)
Bill wrote me:
“It
was a little scary, but what I didn't expect were some of the negative
reactions. I got a lot of comments (mostly from males) like: why does FNM stoop to this petty disgusting
level of politics?”
That made no sense: If you’re for punk, you
naturally support your punk comrades when they get stomped for pissing off
power. It doesn’t happen very often anymore that punks piss off power enough to
get stomped by the power of the State — not in the West since the late '70s,
not in Russia since the Gorbachev years.
Bill continued:
“The
irony is that the girls in the band are about 20-24 years old, very small and sweet. Considering the
circumstances, they had a lot of balls ... much more than any of us. And it
seems like everyone is more focused on how the girls disrespected the church than the 7 years of prison they are facing
...
“So I
wanted to ask you about this, since you have a much deeper insight into the
Russian mentality than me: did we just
inadvertently step into a big pile of shit or did we do the right thing?”
The answer is “yes" and "yes."
But that's with 20/20 hindsight. To be honest, I never would’ve predicted that
reaction from FNM's fans, the same demographic that was protesting Putin on the
streets of Moscow a few months earlier.
It reminded me of something that hit me when I
first fled to America in 2008 and saw this country full of soi-disant Russian experts talking out of their asses about the place
and about Putin.
One thing I learned from 14 years in and out of
Russia is that there is a whole lot I will
never understand about that country and their mentality — I’m a
Californian, not a Scythian.
That said, I sure as Hell understand it far better than the “experts” who have
a remarkable talent for constantly getting wrong every single thing involving
Russia, sometimes with disastrous consequences — neocon dopes like Anne Applebaum or Thomas Friedman, mondo-hacks
like the Washington Post's Fred Hiatt, or our dear Ambassador Michael McFaul
...
Which brings me to the part of the Pussy Riot
story that the Westerners won’t touch: A huge number of Russians, many of them
decent Russians, many of them the type we consider “our” Russians — want to get
medieval on the Pussy Riot girls, string them up in Red Square, and make it
hurt. Like I said, this anger comes not just from the reactionary peasant
caricatures or KGB Putin goons or crusty Commies — but from “our” Russians too,
educated yuppie-Russians, indie-rock/hipster Russians, student Russians,
anti-Putin Russians ...
Hell, even a sizable portion of the hundreds of
thousands who protested Putin earlier this year would be found in a lynch mob
against the Pussy Riot girls. You thought what those Russians were protesting
was the chance to become just like freedom-loving Nebraskans? (Wait, are there
freedom-loving Nebraskans?) If you got that impression from the anti-Putin
protests, you don’t know Russians very well.
The mysterious Russian soul is rarely mysterious
in the romantic sense— “spiritual,” “unfathomably paradoxical,” “poetic” —
there is that in their literature, but for the most part, Russians are
mysterious to Californians like me because no
one in their right fucking mind would react the way Russians tend to react to a
lot of things.
So often Russians can surprise you with a raw savagery that’s by
turns infuriating and impressive, depending on the issue and how close you are
to the fangs. If you’re a bored middle-class Westerner looking for “authenticity” then Russia has more
authenticity reserves in its 11 time zones than it does oil, gas, gold,
snow and mud combined — too much “authentic” for most middle-class Westerners.
I include myself in that group—the finale send-off Russia gave me was more
authenticity than I’ll ever hope to experience again.
Part of
the hostility to Pussy Riot is that they’ve become a cause-célèbre in the West.
Russians have not had a very good historical experience with things the West think Russia should do,
going back a few centuries — the memory of America’s
support for that drunken buffoon Yeltsin while he let the country and its
people sink into misery is still raw — "a painful memory" like John
Turturro's character says in "Miller's Crossing," a memory woven
tightly into the Russian RNA’s spool of historical grievances. And nothing
triggers that reactionary Russian live-wire
gene like an earful of Westerners moralizing about any topic, even the most
obvious topic, even the topic where it’s 100% clear we’re on the right side for
once.
So when they hear us finally paying attention
again to Russia because a punk band with an English name using Latin script
falls under the Kremlin’s gun, they don’t necessarily see “injustice” the way
we do from our far-away vantage point — they
see another dastardly plot by the West to humiliate Mother Russia and bring her
to her knees.
Bill and his band are still the only Westerners
who put something on the line for Pussy Riot — and the only ones who nearly
paid for it. And yet in spite of the hostile reaction, and in spite of his
support for Pussy Riot, and in spite of being weirded out by the whole thing,
when Bill and I talked about the infuriating “Russian soul” over the phone, his
reaction was the same as mine: “This is why I fucking love Russians.” You can't
take the maximalism and the authenticity only when it's safe for you and not
for others.
The Pussy
Riot story was still fairly marginal when Faith No More brought them on
stage for the encore in early July. Now everyone from Madonna, Bryan fucking Adams and Paul
fucking-fucking McCartney is jumping aboard the “Free Pussy Riot”
bandwagon. All of which is sure to trigger that ol’ Dostoevskian reactionary
gene in Russians. And just yesterday, it was announced that Russian police are targeting another five Pussy Riot
members for the same fate as their three jailed comrades.
To get a look at that recessive reactionary
Russian gene in action, you need to watch some more YouTube clips. The first
shows a couple of Pussy Riot supporters in the southern Russian city of Rostov (once named “the
serial-murderer capital of the world”) getting stomped last week by a mob of
low-forehead goons, as the cops pretend to protect the Pussy Riot
supporters.
The second is from last Wednesday showing a
handful of Pussy Riot supporters unfurling a banner at the same holy church
that the girls are accused of “desecrating” — then getting jumped by cops, their masks
torn off their heads, reporters getting thrashed as the Pussy Riot artists
scamper away.
One more thing about Pussy Riot, and this is personal:
I just realized that just before The eXile was
shut down in mid-2008, I wrote about one of the Pussy Riot girls who was just
sentenced to two years in prison: The hot brunette Nadezhda Tolokonnikova. She and the others are part of a radical Moscow art collective called
“Voina” or “War” — their radical, confrontational
absurdist political aesthetic is part of an old avant-garde tradition in Russia going back to figures like
Daniel Kharms or Mayakovsky up through our own eXile columnist Eduard Limonov,
who's still getting thrown in jail every month or two.
Here’s what happened: In March 2008, just when
Putin was handing the presidency to his hand-picked monkey Dmitri Medvedev, the
Voina collective, including Pussy Riot’s
Tolokonnikova, pulled off a political “art” stunt that was so insane and
over-the-top, I decided to turn it into a big photo essay in The eXile. The
“artists” gathered in a Moscow museum,
brought a few photographers with them, stripped completely naked, and started having a real no-bullshit XXX orgy underneath a banner that
read: “Fuck For The Successor Medvedev”.
Among those who stripped off all their clothes
and got “fucked” doggy-style for Medvedev: a very pregnant, younger Nadezhda
Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot, who's now sitting in prison.
When we sent our galleys to our printers to
churn out our usual run of 25,000 newspaper copies, the strangest thing
happened: Our printers refused to print
The eXile. They were scared; they made a big dramatic show of denouncing us. Quietly they told us that they
didn’t want to get on the new President Medvedev Administration’s bad side so
early. We tried a couple more printing presses, but no one would take it. So we
had no choice but to censor the entire spread in the print version in order to
get it printed and distributed: We blacked out the entire page, then put a
small white box in the middle that read simply: "In Loving Memory of the
Vladimir Putin Era 2000-2008". I wrote about the bizarre censorship
episode for the defunct Radar magazine, a cached version can be found at the
waybackmachine.
The problem was this: Every Russian knows that
when power changes hands, the chinovniki,
the bureaucrats, suddenly stir to action like a hornet’s nest with frightening
zeal. They want to justify their jobs to their new bosses — and that usually
involves finding and catching some “enemies.” So the smart Russians lay low during those months of power transition.
For her role in the "Fucking For
Medvedev" stunt, the Pussy Riot girl was thrown out of MGU university, as were several other
members of the Voina collective......
And a couple of months after our newspaper was
censored, The eXile received an official notification from the Kremlin agency
on mass media and culture, informing us that we were being “audited” for extremism, spreading sexual
and pro-drug propaganda, inciting ethnic hatred, and god knows what else.
That had never happened to a Moscow newspaper before — not English-language,
nor Russian language. It was the sort of thing that happened only in the
corrupt regions.
We never figured out what it was exactly that
motivated the Kremlin to shut down The eXile when they did. It wasn't supposed to be a surprise, given the shit we published all
those years — and yet it was a surprise, or rather, a mystery.
Now I have to wonder if they shut us down when
they did as part of the fallout from publishing
and promoting the pre-Pussy Riot “Fucking for Medvedev” happening. Clearly
whatever these radical artists are doing is something that sticks in the
Kremlin's craw.
This recent crackdown on Pussy Riot also
happened to coincide with this year's change of power. The three Pussy Riot
girls were first arrested in March, the same month that Putin retook his
President’s office in the Kremlin, the seat kept warm by Medvedev. Just like
last time, the change of power meant chinovniki got busy working. And when
chinovniki get busy, people get destroyed.
.....