Rasputina

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Biography

The New York City-based trio Rasputina was led by singer/songwriter Melora Creager, a classically-trained cellist who backed Nirvana on the group's final tour. In 1992, Creager placed a want ad seeking other cellists to form a rock band; among those responding was Canadian musician Julie Kent, and with the later addition of Polish native Agnieszka Rybska, Rasputina was born. The three cellists' image further developed by the addition of tightly-laced vintage Victorian costumes, their gothic chamber-pop soon caught the attention of Sony, who issued the group's debut Thanks for the Ether in 1996; Transylvanian Regurgitations, an EP featuring remixes by fan Marilyn Manson, appeared a year later, and in 1998 Rasputina resurfaced with How We Quit the Forest. By the new millennium, Rybska and Kent had been replaced with Nana Bornant and K. Cowperthwaite. A deal with Instinct surfaced in 2001 and the magical mystery of Cabin Fever appeared the following spring. Bornant's stay was brief; she left in June 2002 and Cowperthwaite followed four months later. Zoe Keating (cello) and first ever male bandmate Jonathon TeBeest were quickly added to the beautiful chaos of Rasputina just in time for the 2003 release of the Lost & Found EP. Frustration Plantation, their most cohesive work to date, appeared in spring 2004. In 2007 the group released Oh Perilous World, a loosely-connected song suite culled from newspaper clippings that lead singer Melora Creager gathered over a two year period, then juxtaposed with the band's signature 18th century steampunk imagery. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
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Rasputina (band)

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Rasputina

From left to right: Sarah Bowman, Melora Creager, Jonathon Tebeest
Background information
Origin Brooklyn, New York, United States
Genres Cello Rock
Gothic Rock
Dark Cabaret
Indie
Folk Rock
Years active 1992–present
Labels Filthy Bonnet Records
Columbia Records
Instinct Records
Website http://www.rasputina.com/
Members
Melora Creager
Daniel DeJesus
Dawn Miceli
Past members
Jonathon TeBeest
Sarah Bowman
Zoë Keating
Julia Kent
Kris Cowperthwaite
Agnieszka Rybska
Nana Bornant
Serena Jost
Lisa Haney
Perry James
Tom Martin
Mark Hutchins
Catie D'amica
Melissa Bell
Julie Griner
Stephanie McVey (touring)

Rasputina is a cello-driven band based in New York that is renowned for their unconventional and quirky music style as well as their fascination with historical allegories and fashion, especially those pertaining to the Victorian era.

The group is fronted by cellist/vocalist Melora Creager, who also writes all of the lyrics and creates art for the band's albums, singles, and website.

Contents

History

In 1989, Creager, wanting to form an all-cello band, placed an ad to find members. Julia Kent responded and the two formed the Traveling Ladies' Cello Society as a duo. Creager also toured with Nirvana after they released In Utero. In 1991 (their official website claims "1891"), Creager and Kent expanded the group with members who attended the same nanny school in Manhattan (which wasn't known until post-formation). They were then renamed "Rasputina" after one of Creager's songs. The group played shows and became a local favorite in New York City. Columbia Records' A&R representative Jimmy Boyle saw the group perform at a festival, and they were then signed to the label.

In 1996, they released Thanks for the Ether. Rasputina toured with such bands as Bob Mould, Porno for Pyros, Marilyn Manson and Les Claypool. In 1997 the band released Transylvanian Regurgitations, a follow up EP remixed by Manson and Twiggy Ramirez.

On their second full-length album, How We Quit the Forest, Rasputina signed on Chris Vrenna (from Nine Inch Nails) as their drummer and producer. He encouraged the group to go ahead with the distortion they had been experimenting with. He provided electronic drums and sound effects.

Rasputina went through several line-up changes. Lisa Haney performed as third chair cellist before the group signed to Columbia. "Carpella Parvo" was credited as the third cellist on Thanks for the Ether, but Creager has since admitted that Carpella never existed, and her name was a play-on-words joke representing the carpal tunnel syndrome that Kent and Creager developed after playing all the second chair parts. Agnieszka Rybska performed on How We Quit the Forest. She temporarily left the band in 1998 due to pregnancy.[1]

Drummer Perry L. James toured with the Rasputina in 1998-1999. Julia Kent left during the four-year hiatus between How We Quit the Forest and 2002's Cabin Fever, which was released on Moby's label Instinct Records. In 2004, they released a follow-up album, Frustration Plantation, which featured Zoë Keating, who left the band in 2006.[2] Upon her departure, Creager's ensemble consisted of her and Jonathon TeBeest. Ex-Graces cellist Stephanie McVey occupied second chair from September 2006 to January 2007. Sarah Bowman rejoined Rasputina on their spring 2007 tour of the U.S.

In 2008, Bowman and TeBeest left the band and were replaced by second chair cellist Daniel DeJesus and drummer Catie D'Amica.

In summer 2010, a documentary was made about Rasputina called Under the Corset by Dawn Miceli.[3] In January 2011 Melora Creager announced in The Dawn and Drew Show that Dawn Miceli will be playing the drums on the February 2011 tour.[4]

Discography

Albums

Live albums

Compilations

Singles and EPs

Promotional

  • Transylvanian Concubine/The Vaulted Eel, Lesson#6 - Oculus Records 1993
  • Three (3) - (promo), 1996
  • Three Lil' Nothin's - (promo), 1996
  • Transylvanian Regurgitations - Columbia Records, 1997

Videos

  • Under the Corset - Documentary, 2010
  • Great American Gingerbread - Combination of CD rarities, including a DVD of live performances at The Knitting Factory, 2011

Misc

Song inspirations

Creager is a self-proclaimed history buff and often bases Rasputina's lyrics on said history.

Some of these include:

  • Thanks for the Ether
    • "My Little Shirtwaist Fire" is based on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911.
    • "The Donner Party" discusses the Donner Party, a group of American pioneers traveling to California who encountered a series of mishaps and resorted to cannibalism. The track compares them to the colonial pilgrims.
    • "Howard Hughes" is about legendary aviator.
  • How We Quit the Forest
    • "Rose K." is about the matriarch of the Kennedy family, who had a stroke at age 94 and was cared for at the Kennedy Compound by private nurses and staff. Although Melora jokingly refers to this as her "Alzheimer's Song" on A Radical Recital, Rose was not known to have suffered from Alzheimer's disease. In concert, Melora also frequently introduces the song by referring to Rose's decision to have her daughter Rosemary Kennedy lobotomized at the age of 23, to calm her alleged mood swings.
    • "Herb Girls of Birkenau" describes the victims of human experiments in the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau, from the point of view of a powerless witness.
    • "Diamond Mind" is a satire inspired by the music of a De Beere diamond commercial that uses music composed by Karl Jenkins, which he later used as a theme of the orchestral piece Palladio (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Palladio.ogg ).
  • Cabin Fever
    • "Rats" is about the 16th century decision by the then Pope to declare the semi-aquatic capybara as fish for Catholics to eat during lent.
  • Poor Relations in the Shed Out Back (Frustration Plantation bonus disc)
    • "Yellow Fever" is about an outbreak of yellow fever in New Orleans in the summer of 1853.
  • Oh Perilous World

In popular culture

  • The Dead Milkmen have released a song titled "Melora Says" which is about some of the themes covered in Rasputina's music.

See also

References

External links



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Mentioned in

Michael Bryant (Rock Artist, '90s, 2000s)
The Lost & Found (2003 Album by Rasputina)
Thanks for the Ether (1996 Album by Rasputina)
Cabin Fever (2002 Album by Rasputina)
Rasputina (Rock Band, '90s, 2000s)