Red Aunts

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Poison Steak 00:00 Tools
My Impala '65 00:00 Tools
Terri Man 00:00 Tools
Freakathon 00:00 Tools
Rollerderby Queen 00:00 Tools
Detroit Valentine 00:00 Tools
Lethal Lolita 00:00 Tools
Hate 00:00 Tools
Tin Foil Fish Bowl 00:00 Tools
Krush 00:00 Tools
I Can't Do Anything Right 00:00 Tools
Satan 00:00 Tools
Willabell 00:00 Tools
Peppermint Patty 00:00 Tools
When Sugar Turns To Shit 00:00 Tools
Number One Chicken 00:00 Tools
Mota 00:00 Tools
Poker Party 00:00 Tools
Whatever 00:00 Tools
Kung Fu Kitten 00:00 Tools
Little Drummer Bitch 00:00 Tools
Netty 00:00 Tools
Sleeping Pill 00:00 Tools
All Red Inside 00:00 Tools
Paco 00:00 Tools
Handsome Devil 00:00 Tools
Sleeping in the Wet Spot 00:00 Tools
Suerte 00:00 Tools
Fake Modern 00:00 Tools
Eldritch Sauce 00:00 Tools
I'm Crying 00:00 Tools
$5 00:00 Tools
Hot Rod 00:00 Tools
Palm Tree Swing 00:00 Tools
The Snake 00:00 Tools
Teach Me to Kill 00:00 Tools
Bullet Train 00:00 Tools
Lonely Beer Drops 00:00 Tools
Midnight In The Jungle 00:00 Tools
My Cat Scratch 00:00 Tools
Goin' Downtown 00:00 Tools
Skeleton Hand 00:00 Tools
Ruby (What I Won't) 00:00 Tools
The Things You See, The Things You Don't 00:00 Tools
Route 66 Fucken 6 00:00 Tools
Sex Zombie 00:00 Tools
Alright! 00:00 Tools
Built for a Barstool 00:00 Tools
Exene 00:00 Tools
Die Baby 00:00 Tools
Sweet Enough 00:00 Tools
I'm Bored With You 00:00 Tools
Wrecked 00:00 Tools
Luz 00:00 Tools
Fly Ford Comet/Ho Choice 00:00 Tools
Fade In/Fade Out 00:00 Tools
Who? 00:00 Tools
Cookin', Cleanin' and Cryin' 00:00 Tools
Silver Moon Motel 00:00 Tools
Wasted 00:00 Tools
Hard-Hearted Hannah 00:00 Tools
Brian Has a Car 00:00 Tools
Baby Tough Luck 00:00 Tools
Ice Tea 00:00 Tools
Roller Derby Queen 00:00 Tools
Monsterfucker-Mothertrucker 00:00 Tools
The Alien Song 00:00 Tools
Batman A-Go-Go 00:00 Tools
Batman a Go-Go 00:00 Tools
The Vibrator Song 00:00 Tools
02 batman a go go/ terriman 00:00 Tools
Ruby 00:00 Tools
Alright 00:00 Tools
Big Cans 00:00 Tools
Whatever Jonny Wants 00:00 Tools
Retard Jenny Jones 00:00 Tools
05 my impala 00:00 Tools
Monsterfucker Mothertrucker 00:00 Tools
10 monstertrucker motherfucke 00:00 Tools
My Old Boss 00:00 Tools
Eldrich Sauce 00:00 Tools
Going downtown 00:00 Tools
My Old My Boss 00:00 Tools
Terri, Man 00:00 Tools
Who 00:00 Tools
Sleeping in the Wet Spot (1993) 00:00 Tools
Pokerparty 00:00 Tools
Monstertrucker Motherfucker 00:00 Tools
Ruby (What I Won't) (feat. Andy Kaulkin) 00:00 Tools
12-mota 00:00 Tools
Smoke 00:00 Tools
Foxhole 00:00 Tools
Bullet Train (feat. Jon Wahl) 00:00 Tools
Cupcakes 00:00 Tools
Fake Modern (1996) 00:00 Tools
Monstertrucker Motherfucke 00:00 Tools
When Sugar Turns to S**t 00:00 Tools
Mean Streak 00:00 Tools
Teach Me to Kill (1993) 00:00 Tools
Tinfoil Fishbowl 00:00 Tools
Can't Do Anything Right 00:00 Tools
The Things You See, The Thing 00:00 Tools
red aunts-the vibrator song 00:00 Tools
Retarded Jenny Jones 00:00 Tools
Ruby (What I Won't) (Featuring Andy Kaulkin) 00:00 Tools
Batman A Go Go/Terriman 00:00 Tools
Red Aunts - Little Drummer Bitch 00:00 Tools
I'm Cryin 00:00 Tools
Bullet Train (Featuring Jon Wahl) 00:00 Tools
Fade In - Fade Out 00:00 Tools
  • 116,876
    plays
  • 14,082
    listners
  • 116876
    top track count

Female punk rockers the Red Aunts were a rough, raw, raunchy combo that arose during the California punk revival of the '90s. Both praised and dismissed for their garage-band amateurishness early on, the band crafted a grimy, scuzzy sound inflected with subtle strains of blues, country, and pre-Beatles rock & roll. That sound matched well with their lyrics -- the Red Aunts weren't really political or explicitly feminist; they just wanted to rock out, and many of their songs had a trashy sense of humor descended from avowed influences the Lunachicks. At least musically, they also earned numerous comparisons to the abrasive, grungy skronk of Babes in Toyland, though they didn't have quite the same sense of cathartic urgency. The more the Red Aunts recorded and toured, the better their musicianship got, and they were able to move from the short, enthusiastic blasts of their early records to more intricate and demanding songwriting. The Red Aunts were formed in Long Beach, CA, in 1991 by guitarist/vocalist Terri Wahl (aka Angel, aka Louise Lee Outlaw), the wife of Claw Hammer leader Jon Wahl. She recruited two of her friends, lead vocalist/guitarist Kerry Davis (aka Sapphire, aka Taffy Davis) and bassist Debi Martini (aka E.Z. Wider, aka Connie Champagne, aka Debbi Dip) -- who, like her, had never before been in a band or received formal musical training. Learning to play was a collective process, but it didn't take too long for the band to become comfortable enough to issue two 7" indie singles, with Jon Wahl in tow as a drummer of convenience (under the alias Joan Whale). He was subsequently replaced full-time by Lesley Noelle (aka Leslie Ishino, aka Ishino Destroyer, aka Cougar). Armed with a plethora of ever-shifting noms de punk, the Red Aunts landed a deal with the garage punk indie Sympathy for the Record Industry, and issued their debut album, Drag, in 1993. Running through 15 songs in around half an hour -- including representative numbers like "Sleeping on the Wet Spot," "Built for a Barstool," and "Lethal Lolita" -- the album's brevity and ear-shredding explosiveness mapped out the blueprint for the Aunts' early sound. The 1994 follow-up, Bad Motherfucken 40 O-Z, followed that blueprint to a tee, and was produced by Bad Religion's Brett Gurewitz, who subsequently signed the band to his Epitaph imprint. The Red Aunts debuted for Epitaph with 1995's #1 Chicken, whose back cover bragged "14 songs in 23 minutes." It broke them to a wider audience in the punk underground, and contained one of their signature tunes in "Freakathon." The 1996 follow-up, Saltbox, found the band beginning to stretch their compositions out by adding more sections and a stronger roots-punk flavor, in the process toning down some of their raw energy. 1998's Ghetto Blaster was produced by the Dirtbombs' Mick Collins, and the band decided that it would be their swan song. Following a farewell supporting tour that summer, they moved on to other things. Martini moved to New York; Wahl devoted more time to her successful catering business, and also teamed up with Mick Collins in a new band called the Screws, which released a debut album in 1999; Davis and Noelle also played together afterward, and Davis played drums on the second Screws album in 2001. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.