#artist: the official bard of baldwin county
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Tracklist:
DPH HCl (the sleep song) • hopin' n' wishin' (a love song fer your enemies) • heavens to murgatroyd! (exit stage left, even!) • cicada waltz • BASTARD! • beatific vision and self-derision in evil b-flat
Spotify ♪ Bandcamp ♪ YouTube
#hyltta-polls#polls#artist: the official bard of baldwin county#language: english#decade: 2020s#Folk Punk
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The Official Bard of Baldwin County (she/they)
Another favourite from the submitter:
Spotify | Apple | Insta
The Bard is a folk artist from Alabama, USA. Her songs explore gender identity, growing up in the southern United States, and bugs.
FFO: The Moutain Goats, The Moldy Peaches, Laura Jane Grace, John Prine, Field Medic, Pat the Bunny
"I started listening to her after going to a small show where she was one of the openers. She was so amazing and powerful that the main act couldn’t even compare (in my opinion)." - @mountain-dewitt
#this artist is currently touring with tickets available :))#the official bard of baldwin county#folk#folk punk#alabama#usa#2020s#trans music#transgender#mountain-dewitt#submission
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100 more trans/genderqueer musicians
a pt.2 to my last post
Bands
Problem Patterns (riot grrl) (x)
Et On Tuera Tous Les Affreux (hardcore punk) (x)
Speedy Ortiz (indie rock) (x)
Foxtails (punk rock) (x)
Come To Ruin (deathrock) (x)
Arabella (hardcore punk) (x)
Flummox (metal) (x)
Dream Sequence (emo, post-hardcore) (x)
Escuela Grind (grindcore, metal) (x)
Buggin (hardcore punk) (x)
The Aquadolls (indie rock) (x)
Vile Creature (black metal) (x)
Caustic Soda (punk) (x)
Go! Child (indie pop) (x)
Tribe 8 (punk rock) (x)
SeeYouSpaceCowboy (hardcore punk) (x)
NARC (hardcore punk, sludge violence) (x)
BRAT (hardcore punk) (x)
[ctrl] (power violence) (x)
Strawberry Milk Cult (punk rock) (x)
.gif from god (metal) (x)
CyberGirlfriend (indie rock) (x)
Vermin Vendetta (metal) (x)
Pretty Frankenstein (glam goth) (x)
Doll Chaser (punk) (x)
RENT STRIKE (folk punk) (x)
Tears for the Dying (goth rock) (x)
Himbo (math rock) (x)
Out of Sight (hardcore punk) (x)
Morta (metal) (x)
Girlpool (indie rock) (x)
Life of Agony (metal) (x)
Mashrou' Leila (indie rock) (x)
Basketball Divorce Court (post punk) (x)
Bad Waitress (art punk) (x)
Rural Internet (hip hop, electronic) (x)
The Crystal Furs (indie pop) (x)
Blind Tiger (hardcore metal) (x)
Atomic Broad (punk) (x)
tote bag (tender punk) (x)
Pansy Prep (indie rock, emo) (x)
UT/EX (metalcore, screamo) (x)
Your Heart Breaks (indie pop) (x)
Yam (punk rock) (x)
K's Choice (rock, alt pop) (x)
Elderberry Industries (noise, synth) (x)
Qi.x (kpop) (x)
The Mermerings (folk punk) (x)
Refractory Period (synthpop) (x)
fenix (rock) (x)
Solo Artists
Tape Girl (hyperpop, ska) (x)
Titica (kuduro, pop) (x)
Lauren Bousfield (synth punk) (x)
Liniker (r&b) (x)
TRVDWIFE (grindcore, cybergrind) (x)
Stomach Book (electronic, indie rock) (x)
Coyote Grace (bluegrass) (x)
Jake Zyrus (r&b, soul) (x)
D'Nayzja (hyperpop, electronic) (x)
Adeem the Artist (country) (x)
Renee Goust (pop, cumbia) (x)
Linn Da Quebrada (club, Brazilian funk) (x)
The Reverent Marigold (folk) (x)
Çağla Akalın (arabesque) (x)
Jessie Chung (Malaysian pop) (x)
Spike Fuck (post-punk, smackwave) (x)
Shea Diamond (soul, r&b) (x)
Vivek Shraya (pop, dance) (x)
Mocchi (folk, alt rock) (x)
SuperKnova (indie pop) (x)
Creep-P (hyperpop) (x)
Aljas (rap) (x)
Sylvia Baudelaire (rap) (x)
London Jade (hip-hop, rap) (x)
Susy Shock (tango) (x)
Slugwife (hyperpop) (x)
Jupiter Fiction (singer-songwriter) (x)
Mrs. Yéyé (punk) (x)
Lady Charles (glam rock) (x)
Mily Taormina (indie) (x)
Dope Saint Jude (rap, hip-hop) (x)
Imbi the Girl (hip-hop, rap) (x)
187 (drum'n'bass) (x)
zombAe (experimental hip hop, electronic) (x)
The Official Bard of Baldwin County (folk) (x)
Skylar Rose Stravinsky (singer-songwriter) (x)
hard Tiddies (country, singer-songwriter) (x)
Bunny Danger (punk) (x)
Ataru Nakamura (pop) (x)
Anjimile (folk) (x)
Villano Antillano (rap, urbano) (x)
Lauren Auder (indie pop) (x)
Justin Vivian Bond (cabaret) (x)
Namoli Brennet (folk, indie rock) (x)
Mya Byrne (Americana, folk) (x)
Quinn Christospherson (indie rock) (x)
Jayne County (proto-punk, glam rock) (x)
Katie Dey (experimental pop) (x)
Electra Elite (electropop, dance) (x)
Quay Dash (hip-hop, rap) (x)
#punk#trans music#music#folk music#if you couldnt tell i purposefully left off artists well known in western countries and artists i saw 5+ on the last list#so do not ask me where is cavetown/sophie/ethel cain/etc you all know them#i dont listen to all of these bands so if theyre secretly shitty or smth lmk#anyways have fun
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Introduction!!
just some stuff about me and this blog ^^
-you can call me milo, mylo, mikah, or literally any nickname you want. i mainly use they/it pronouns, but everything other than she is fine. gender is weird, but i usually call myself nonbinary/genderqueer/agender, i'm also aroace-spec (probably demiromantic and ace but honestly idk).
-i want to start posting more of my art, and sometimes random rambles, but we'll see. i mostly draw my OCs, things related to my special interests or just random things.
-i'm autistic and reblog a lot about my special interests (listed below)
things i'm into: anime/manga (mostly hetalia and bungou stray dogs), good omens, doctor who, over the garden wall, toh, tma & tmagp, sherlock&co, minecraft, pokemon, animal crossing, 2000s technology (mostly consoles and digicams) (nintendo ds/3ds <33), anarchism and activism, disability justice, queer issues and witchcraft, also just art and animation in generall
my fav music artists/bands: will wood (& the tapeworms), cavetown, los campesinos!, mother mother, lemon demon, mcr, american poetry club, pigeon pit, murder person for hire, she/her/hers, the official bard of baldwin county, dog park dissidents, cela nr 3, the analogs, car seat headrest, crywank, mitski, jack stauber, bears in trees,
-i probably forgot about a lot of stuff but yea thats it for now
- also english isn't my first language (i'm polish) so sorry for any mistakes
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LONG POST - Cancel Shakespeare? No way!
(NYTimes) Make Shakespeare Dirty Again
Aug. 13, 2023, By Drew Lichtenberg
It seemed, for a moment, that Shakespeare was being canceled. Last week, school district officials in Hillsborough County, Fla., said that they were preparing high school lessons for the new academic year with some of William Shakespeare’s works taught only with excerpts, partly in keeping with Gov. Ron DeSantis’s legislation about what students can or can’t be exposed to.
I’m here to say: Good. Cancel Shakespeare. It’s about time.
Anyone who spends a lot of time reading Shakespeare (or working on his plays, as I have for most of my professional career) understands that he couldn’t have been less interested in puritanical notions of respectability. Given how he’s become an exalted landmark on the high road of culture, it’s easy to forget that there’s always been a secret smugglers’ path to a more salacious and subversive Shakespeare, one well known and beloved by artists and theater people. The Bard has long been a patron saint to rebel poets and social outcasts, queer nonconformists and punk provocateurs.
Yes, Shakespeare is ribald, salacious, even shocking. But to understand his genius — and his indelible legacy on literature — students need to be exposed to the whole of his work, even, perhaps especially, the naughty bits.
The closing lines of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 20, addressed to the poem’s male subject, are among the dirtiest — and hottest — of the 16th century. “But since she pricked thee out for women’s pleasure, / Mine be thy love and thy love’s use their treasure.” A favorite trick of Shakespeare’s was to play with word order, especially when he wanted to disclose something too daring to be said in a more straightforward way, such as the love that dared not speak its name. The untangled meaning here: Your love ultimately belongs to me, sir, even if women (sometimes) enjoy your prick. Or, from the neck up you are as beautiful as a woman, and from the waist down you are all man.
Sex is one thing. The plays are also astoundingly gory. The bloody climax of “King Lear” so horrified the playwright Nahum Tate that he felt compelled to rewrite its ending. Tate’s sanitized version of “King Lear,” premiering in 1681, held the stage until 1838. In the 18th century, Voltaire called “Hamlet” the apparent product of a “drunken savage” who wrote without “the slightest spark of good taste”— which didn’t stop Voltaire, who also recognized Shakespeare’s “genius,” from openly borrowing from the Bard for one of his own plays.
In 1872 in “The Birth of Tragedy,” Friedrich Nietzsche praised this savagery. To him, Shakespeare contained the ne plus ultra of grisly truths. Hamlet, he wrote, “sees everywhere only the horror or absurdity of existence.” Nietzsche being Nietzsche, he considered this a good thing. Art, wrote Nietzsche, transforms “these nauseous thoughts about the horror or absurdity of existence into notions with which one can live.”
In light of Nietzsche’s counterintuitive epiphany, the notion of Shakespeare-the-hipster caught fire. Hamlet, uniquely among male roles in the classical canon, became an aspirational part for female theatrical stars looking to prove their bona fides and upend gender preconceptions: Sarah Bernhardt most famously, but also the great Danish actor Asta Nielsen. Shakespeare’s sonnets were a source of succor to decadent aesthetes such as Oscar Wilde, just as they had been to Charles Baudelaire. The writings and teachings of queer poets such as W.H. Auden and Allen Ginsberg suggests they saw themselves in Shakespeare’s works, as did anti-racist writers from James Baldwin to Lorraine Hansberry and Ann Petry.
Where the avant-garde led, pop culture followed. Shakespeare’s plays have always lent themselves to all manner of interpretations and they found new life in the postwar era, with landmark works like Basil Dearden’s “All Night Long,” a neo-noir film from 1962, which set “Othello” in a British jazz soiree. Franco Zeffirelli’s “Romeo and Juliet” in 1968 plugged into a different cultural zeitgeist, capturing onscreen the summer of love, while Roman Polanski’s film version of “Macbeth” in 1971 feels like an encomium for the dying utopian dreams of the ’60s.
In the transgressive ’90s, Shakespeare was everywhere: taboo, art house, alternative and cool. Gus Van Sant’s “My Own Private Idaho” reimagined Prince Hal and Hotspur as gay grunge gods and Baz Luhrmann’s “Romeo + Juliet” featured Leonardo DiCaprio at the peak of his androgyne allure. Even “Shakespeare in Love,” a relatively middlebrow Oscar winner, presented a vision of the brooding, bearded, sexy Shakespeare, as embodied by Joseph Fiennes.
In many other cultures, the bawdy lowbrow and the poetic highbrow are often personified by separate champions: In France, it’s Rabelais and Racine; in Spain, Cervantes and Calderón. In English literature Shakespeare has always combined both brows into something rich, special and strange. In “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” one of Shakespeare’s most magical and sensual plays, Bottom — a man with the head of a donkey — spends the night in bed next to the fairy queen. He wakes up having had something close to a religious experience. Every play in the canon features something similarly subversive and transcendent — and all of them are essential.
One can no more take out the dirty parts of Shakespeare than one can take out the poetry. It’s all intertwined, so that Shakespeare seems almost purposefully designed to confound those who want to segregate the smutty from the sublime. His work is proof that profundity can live next to, and even be found in, the pornographic, the viscerally violent and the existentially horrifying. So if you’re looking for sex, gore and the unspeakable absurdity of existence in Shakespeare, you will definitely find it. That’s the genius of Shakespeare. And it’s precisely what makes his work worth studying.
Drew Lichtenberg is a lecturer at Yale University and the resident dramaturg at the Shakespeare Theater Company in Washington, D.C.
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Thank you for reblogging that post and adding your music because I have been looking for more acoustic trans music for ages!! You have a lovely voice and I think I'm gonna be playing the two songs in my head on loop for a while. Do you have a bandcamp? Or another place with lyrics?
Omggg 😭🥹 thank you!! I have a few projects but greedy peaches is where all my acoustic stuff lives, although the first EP I put out under that name is not acoustic. I’m working on getting lyrics on Spotify, but it’s not working for some reason?? And I have more that I’m working on currently :3 it’s on all streaming services but I should really get around to setting up a Bandcamp for the label (the account is @glitterdxckrecords but it’s a lil sparse atm 😖 but it does have a link to a YouTube playlist where I look rly cute and play other songs that aren’t released yet
If you want more! That isn’t me! If you haven’t already check these folks out, some are full bands sometimes but I digress:
Pigeon Pit (first two albums are just lomes and her guitar and are excellent, their most recent is a full country band but it’s by far my fav)
Adeem the Artist (Cast Iron Pansexual is just them and a guitar, absolutely incredible album, single-handedly got me back into country music, white trash revelry is a full band for the most part and a great album, but idk if anything will ever top the other album. They’ve been releasing new singles too I’ve yet to dive into)
June Henry (angsty sad boygirl girlboy shit and something that has been a recent find for me, been listening to a ton lately)
small void (only heard about them just this week through an insta rec, have yet to deep dive but there’s a ton of different stuff, some bluegrass, acoustic emo, and also goth synthpop?? Excited to listen more
The Official Bard of Baldwin County (love almost literally every song they’ve put out. I even a few months ago got so excited about a their version of I don’t want to set the world on fire I made a long post about it)
Ughhhh I know there’s more but I can’t remember atm. If I do I’ll add more :3 I get really excited about trans music
#yo if anyone makes music lmk???#my friend and I both love sharing each new trans artist we find#I love listening to it#anon
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