Busking Really Can Lead to Stardom!

Crawley BuskerIf you’ve read my new novel, Living by Ear, you know it’s about a former street musician–also known as a busker–named Christine Daley, who made a name for herself in Boston in the 1990s. In the present-day part of the story, Chris is a forty-something wife and mother in the middle of a divorce, desperately trying to revive her music career.

And not to give away any plot spoilers, but at one point in the story, Chris is encouraged to participate in a music competition similar to American Idol

So I was delighted to learn that a well-known British busker named Tom Stephenson (a.k.a. Busker Tom) has made it to the regional finals of an English national singing competition called Open Mic UK.

Mr. Stephenson has a unique busking style. Rather than just singing and playing songs on his guitar, he brings a collection of different percussion instruments with him wherever he goes, and encourages audience members to participate in his performances. In addition to being a busker, he’s a teaching assistant at a special needs school in Kent, and the frontman in a band called The Get Back Beats. You can read more about him here.

Best of luck, Tom Stephenson! I’ll be rooting for you here in the States!

 

 

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Author Ina Zajac on Creating Characters, Spirituality, Domestic Violence & More

ina.zajacToday, I’m so happy to feature one of my favorite new authors, Ina Zajac, on the blog. Ina’s novel, Please, Pretty Lights is a gritty story about a woman’s search for love and happiness in a world that has let her down in some horrific ways.

MR: So Ina, when did you realize that you wanted to write novels? Also, do you write full time, or do you have another job?

IZ: I remember wanting to be an author back in high school, but it just seemed I should be a journalist first. Back then I wasn’t confident that I had anything worthwhile to say to the world. It seemed I didn’t have enough life experience from which to draw. Yes, I do write full time or as close to full time as I can manage as a busy mother.

MR: Yes, I understand that. As a mom of two teens, I go through periods of time when I get a lot of writing done, but other times, family stuff is more important. Anyway, I loved Please, Pretty Lights for numerous reasons. One is your protagonist, Via, who’s a complicated person, to say the least. How did you come up with the concept of Via?

IZ: Via has evolved quite a bit since she first started to visit my daydreams. Initially, she was a young church girl who was desperate to broaden her horizons. After meeting Matt and Nick she begins to wonder why these two drug dealers seem to show much more honor and kindness than members of her own church community. At the same time, I began thinking about Via as a young girl; the witness to her father’s untreated mental health issues and her mother’s inability to free herself. This knowledge fueled my desire to make her so bent on receiving attention from men. Later her corny sense of humor and sweet heart became clear.

MR: One thing I found interesting in Please, Pretty Lights is the church that Via is involved with. I think you did a great job describing the nature of that church, which seemed to be based on good principles, but attracted both wonderful people and others who were, well, less wonderful. Why did you choose to write about this church? Were you expressing personal views about religion, or is the church simply an allegory for society in general?

IZ: Okay, brutal honesty alert: I am a spiritual person with an old-school church background. I am rebellious by nature, always questioning authority. I attended a Catholic high school as a non-Catholic. I never bought into the concept of confession because I thought having a priest – a middle man – was unnecessary. Why couldn’t I just go to a park and meditate? I wondered. Can’t god meet me in a park? Or anywhere? And, if god is omnipresent, then wouldn’t god already know my faults? To each their own, but for me god is not a judgmental outside force anyway. God is who we already are. I don’t believe we are separated. You are god. I am god, and so is absolutely every person, and thing. Every particle is “part” of god. Think Carl Sagan from the original Cosmos. We are all “star stuff.” This being said, I have been fortunate to meet countless “good” religious types. The character Beth serves to exemplify them. They are the quiet ones. You won’t see them on television criticizing anyone because they are too busy loving, serving, and shining their light.

MR: That’s so interesting. I went to Catholic elementary school and also taught in a Catholic school after graduating from college. (My mom’s cousin was a nun and she helped me get the job). But for various reasons I won’t get into in the interest of saving space, neither of these schools struck me as particularly “churchy,” and at both of them, I met so many people–many who weren’t Catholic, but were certainly spiritual–who were there to help other people learn and grow. I don’t practice any organized religion now and I’m really saddened by many of the political views embraced by modern Catholicism, but I also think it’s criminal how religious radicals and extremists have given a bad name to people like Beth, who is kind, nonjudgemental, and beautiful.

So let’s move on to another topic. Via is also the victim of some terrible violence. I found some parts of the book upsetting, as I find all violence–especially violence against women–sickening. What compelled you to add this to the story?

IZ: Violence against women and children happens. It’s difficult to talk about, but I wanted to try. Via models her own mother’s journey. The cycle of abuse is persistent. Via spent her early years hearing her mother say things like, “Please be a good girl today. Let’s not make Daddy mad.” The message there is one of misplaced responsibility. It’s a sick, but prevalent belief. “Daddy is mad because I did something to make him mad.” I believe we can never make anyone else do or feel anything. Making someone else happy or sad is a myth. It’s an easy excuse, but false. If a man is going to beat his wife, it has little to do with her at all, but with his own issues: fear, addiction, anger, lack of control, abusive childhood. Personally, my father was very kind. Rarely even raised his voice. Still, as an adult I was involved in an emotionally and physically abusive relationship. I recently wrote a blog about it. I have been overwhelmed with the positive comments I’ve received since.

MR: Yes, that was an incredible blog post, and I’m sure it took a lot of courage to write. On a lighter note, the characters of Matt and Nick are delightful, well-rounded people. I fell in love with both of them, not only because they’re kind to Via, but also because of their flaws. They seem extremely real. Are either or both of these characters based on real people?

IZ: I love Matt. I love Nick. They represent the flip side of Via’s father and Carlos. I love men and believe most men out there are Nicks and Matts. I feel most men are well intentioned, but confused about what women really want and need. Men get their hearts broken all the time. They make tough choices. They make mistakes. Though it all, they are less likely to ever receive emotional support or forgiveness. Nick, for example, has serious childhood abandonment issues. Yet, he feels he is supposed to buck up and focus on the needs of his friends. Nick is a protector (not a complainer) because he figures that’s what it means to be a man.

MR: Yes, all people are complicated, and life is a confusing thing. I consider myself a feminist and am so glad society is really starting to focus on women and women’s issues, because there’s so much there, and so many abuses have happened both recently and historically. And yet, men can’t be neglected either, because, as you point out, it’s not easy for them either, and most men mean well. So here’s one final question: what’s next on your writing agenda, Ina?

IZ: I am currently working on the sequel: Play, Pretty Lights, which picks up the story six months after Please, Pretty Lights. Matt and Via are still featured, but in this book Nick has a bigger role, as does Whitney. It’s a stand-alone novel, but those who’ve read the first book will enjoy an extra layer.

MR: Thank you so much for being a guest today, Ina! I can’t wait until Play, Pretty Lights is available. And in the meantime, if people want to check out Please, Pretty Lights, it’s available here on Amazon.

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Leaving the Beach $.99 Sale–October 2, 3 & 4

high res coverHi All,

If you haven’t had a chance to read Leaving the Beach, this is a good time to check it out. It’s on a three-day sale starting today (October 2, 3 & 4). Just $.99 for Kindle and Nook.

Get it here on Amazon or here at Barnes and Noble

Here’s a quick plot synopsis:

Erin Reardon gets her first kiss from Jim Morrison. She loses her virginity to David Bowie. When she flunks out of college, Bruce Springsteen is there to comfort her, and Elvis Costello breaks her heart in Europe. So what happens when she actually meets a rock star? Leaving the Beach is a gritty story about illusion, reality, and the odd ways that music can blur the lines between the two.

Written with heart and keen observation about the day-to-day struggles of a “functioning bulimic,” Leaving the Beach explores the power of fantasy, then shoves it up against harsh reality until something has to give in this women’s novel set on the sandy beaches of Winthrop, Massachusetts.

I hope you try it! I’d also love to hear your honest feedback, and feel free to leave a review on Amazon, Goodreads, or Barnes & Noble.com if you’re up for that sort of thing. Thank you!!

Mary

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Goodreads Giveaway: Win a Paperback Copy of Living by Ear

Hi Readers,

Just a quick post today to let you know that there’s a giveaway on Goodreads for a paperback copy of Living by Ear. The giveaway runs until  November 3rd, but if you’re interested, you might want to sign up now so you don’t forget. Click below for more details, and best of luck!

Mary

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Living by Ear by Mary Rowen

Living by Ear

by Mary Rowen

Giveaway ends November 03, 2014.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win

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Interview with Author February Grace

Kitty and me 2013

February & Kitty, 2013

MR: Today, I’m very excited to have the lovely and talented February Grace as a guest on my blog. February, would you tell my readers a bit about yourself?

FG: Hi! I’m February Grace, a writer, artist, poet, stargazer, and certified eccentric who lives in Southeast Michigan, where it is much too cold for my liking most of the year. I’ve been lucky enough to publish three novels with Booktrope to date: GODSPEED (Steampunk/Romance) OF STARDUST (Fantasy/Romance) and IN STARLIGHT (the sequel to OF STARDUST.) Both books are now available together as an eBook set called ONE WISH: The OF STARDUST COLLECTION. I feel very blessed.one wish of stardust collection cover for promo

MR: So Would you say that IN STARLIGHT and OF STARDUST are a series?

FG: No, they were never intended to be a series, and won’t be. I wouldn’t have likely gone through with publishing a sequel if so many readers (especially on Wattpad!) hadn’t asked me for one. I had written and wanted to tell the story, they wanted to read it, and the rest is history! So the two books tell the entire story of Gus and Till: Fairy Godparents for the 21st Century.

MR: Wow, that’s very cool about readers on Wattpad asking you to write a sequel. And even cooler of you to comply! So what genres do you most enjoy writing in? And although I know you write novels and prose, do you ever write poetry?

FG: I prefer writing romance: love is the central theme running through everything I write. The setting of those romances can vary wildly, though. From simple modern love stories to literary romance with Steampunk embellishments to magical modern fairy tales. I love to genre-hop.

I actually wrote poetry before I wrote almost anything else (even as a child) and it is still my great love. I’d love to do a book of short stories and poetry one day.

I have been lucky enough to have several poems published in literary magazines; in fact the first time I was ever published, The Rusty Nail literary magazine picked up two of my prose pieces and three poems. So I will always have a very soft spot in my heart for them! Anyone who is interested can read some of my poetry over on my blog: just click on the Poetry tab at the top.

MR: Well, congratulations on the publications! And this is probably a good time to give readers the link to your blog, which is at www.februarywriter.blogspot.com.

You’ve obviously been writing for quite a while. When did you first realize that this is what you wanted to do?

FG: I was telling stories before I could write and was a very early reader (age 2– thanks, Grandma!) In fourth grade, I was given an extra-credit assignment to watch film clips of fairy tales and rewrite the endings. (Thank you, Miss Eiselman, wherever you are!) From then on, I was always writing something, somewhere, in some shape or form and I’ve rarely stopped since.

MR: Sounds like you were born writing!

Here’s another question. Many authors I know (including myself) fantasize about our books being made into movies. Which of your books (if any) would you most like to see on the big screen? Any thoughts on actors you’d like to play the main roles?

FG: Oh yes, I’ve dreamed that dream LOL. I would love to see GODSPEED as a film, and always imagined Ewan McGregor as the doctor himself (if only, right?!) Seriously, though, he was the face I pictured on Quinn while writing the book, so that would be the absolute ultimate. I imagine a fresh unknown as Abigail, yet to be discovered… and I think that Dan Stevens would make an amazing Schuyler Algernon.

I can also see OF STARDUST and IN STARLIGHT being combined into one screenplay for a movie, and I have an idea who I’d love to cast as Gus but I don’t want to spoil my readers’ idea of him by saying who that is!

MR: I understand that sentiment. Several times, I’ve seen movies based on books and have been shocked at the filmmaker’s interpretation of a character’s appearance. Although in the end, I usually reach the conclusion that the filmmaker made a good choice.

So let’s switch this up again. Do you have any pets? Or have a favorite type of animal?

FG: I love cats and dogs, if I were healthier I’d have a little dog of one kind or another (a rescue, definitely).

I have a ten year old kitty who was a rescue, we’ve had him since he was eight months old and he is my constant companion. Through all the surgeries I’ve had he’s never left my side during recovery; including during a time when I had to sleep in a chair sitting up for months on end. He slept in my lap every night. He is my baby.

MR: He sounds pretty special and is adorable too. I know some people think cats can be aloof, but I’ve never had an aloof cat. On the contrary, I think many of them have a way of knowing when we’re down or not feeling well and do their best to comfort us.

OK, here’s my final question. Do you collect anything? And if so, why?

FG: I collect too many things to name, really, but mostly lately what I like to collect the most are memories. Because stuff is just… stuff and the more you get the more weighed down you get. Memories can be safely stored away without taking up any physical space, and called upon again and again when you’re having a rough time. Yes, memories are definitely my favorite collectable these days :~)

Thank you so much for having me!

MR: Thank you, February, for being my guest today. It’s been great chatting and getting to know you better. Readers, if you’d like to check out February’s books, they’re all available on Amazon and at select bookstores. Here’a a link to her Amazon page, where you can learn more about her various works.

 

 

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Living by Ear Giveaway & Party: Day 4–Don’t Make Me Sing!

mike_lbeWell, we’re nearing the end of a fun launch week, and the party is starting to spool down a bit. In fact, I think we might be reaching that point where some of the guests start breaking out the guitars and jamming a bit.

So if you feel like doing that, go for it. If you’d like to enter the raffle to win either a Kindle or Paperback copy of Living by Ear, you can post a YouTube video–or just the name–of a song you like in the comments below. Or, if you prefer, post a video of yourself, or you and some friends, playing or singing something. It’d be fun to hear some real indie music. Then, on Saturday morning, I’ll put all the names in a hat and pick one Kindle winner and one paperback winner. And no worries if you don’t have a Kindle–I can send a pdf if that’s better for you.

If you don’t win, Living by Ear is available on Amazon, and I’d be thrilled if you’d go over there to check it out. In a nutshell, it’s the story of a female musician named Chris Daley who “temporarily” gave up her career to marry and start a family, only to realize, sixteen years later, that she doesn’t love her husband any more and desperately wants to start performing again.

So let’s get back to the party. As you might know by now, Chris Daley in Living by Ear plays both cover tunes and originals. I’ve been sharing videos of some of Chris’s favorite cover songs this week, but haven’t been able to share videos of the original songs in the book, because, you know, they weren’t on YouTube.

So here’s my attempt to play a couple of her original songs, or at least parts of them.

Yeah, that was definitely out of my comfort zone. So to help clear that from your memory, let’s listen to Dusty Springfield sing “Son of a Preacher Man.” Some people in the book who hear Chris sing say she sounds a bit like Dusty, and I’d give my left arm–or at least a couple of fingers–to be able to sing like this.

Wow. I could listen to that a hundred times and still want to hear it again.

Anyway, please keep on posting those videos and songs. I’ve enjoyed everything you’ve shared–the ones I know well and the ones I hadn’t heard before this party. Just remember to get them up by 6:00 PM EST on Friday September 19.

I’d like to thank everyone who’s listened to some music, posted a video, or just peeked in the window to see what’s going on.

xo,

Mary

PS: at around noon today, September 19, 2014, I’ll be doing an AMA on Reddit.

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Living by Ear Giveaway & Listening Party, Day 3 with #FranzFerdinand

mike_lbeOK, we’re now more than halfway through the party, and it’s time for all you people who’ve been standing around or sitting down doing the head-bob to get on the dance floor. For those of you showing up very fashionably late, we’re celebrating the re-launch of my novel, Living by Ear, which is about a forty-something woman trying to reclaim both her music career and love life. There’s more information about the book in the posts from yesterday and Tuesday, and also on Amazon.

So I’m going to request that the DJ put on Franz Ferdinand’s “Take Me Out.”

This is the first song I ever heard by the Scottish band Franz Ferdinand, and I was instantly smitten. It came out in 2004, and every time I’d get in my car–my kids were in preschool back then and didn’t care what music I played–I’d turn on the radio and hope to hear it. I loved the way FF combined a disco beat with a hard rock sound. They were cute, artsy lads from Glascow who could rock it out like Zeppelin when they wanted.

There’s a scene in Living by Ear in which Chris is getting ready for a big audition, and she thinks about how in a movie of her life, the song “Take Me Out” would play as she gets dressed and puts on her makeup. I won’t give away any plot spoilers, but please have a listen, dance if you’d like, and share your opinions on the song. I think it’s particularly significant today, as Scotland votes on whether or not it will become an independent country, and the band Franz Ferdinand is a strong supporter of the “yes” vote.

Also, I’d be thrilled if you’d post a YouTube video of one of your favorite songs in the comments section below, so I can enter you in a raffle to win either a Kindle or paperback copy of Living by Ear. And if you’re not sure how to post a video, just name of the artist and song you’re thinking of.

Thanks, and happy Thursday!

xo,

Mary

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Living by Ear Giveaway & Listening Party, Day 2

mike_lbeIf you’re just joining the party now, let me update you briefly. We’re celebrating the re-launch of Living by Ear, a novel about music, Boston, family, divorce, and love. Yesterday’s post gives more information about the story, so I’ll cut to the chase today.

If you’d like to be entered in a drawing to win either a Kindle or paperback copy of Living by Ear, post a YouTube video of a song you like in the comments section below. And if that isn’t working for you, it’s fine just to post the name of the song and the artist. The party will run until Friday, September 19, at 6:00 PM, so you can post any time before then. I’ll also be posting videos referenced in the book on Twitter all week long. If you’d like to listen in, my Twitter handle is @maryjrowen

Yesterday was mellow and bluesy, so today let’s get it rocking just a little more with the Rolling Stones classic “Sweet Virginia.” This is one of my favorite songs from my favorite Stones Album, Exile on Main Street.  In Living by Ear, it’s one of the songs Chris and her ex-boyfriend Curt used to play on the streets of Boston. I won’t say any more about that, so as not to give away any plot spoilers. But here’s the video. I hope you enjoy it. I don’t know how anyone could say that Mick’s not at the top of his game here, but I welcome all comments and opinions.

OK! Please post your favorite videos below. And remember, if posting a video doesn’t work, just post the name of the artist and their song. That’ll enroll you in the drawing!

Thanks so much! Again, I’m really looking forward to hearing some good music today!

xo,

Mary

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Giveaway! Listening Party! Living by Ear has been Reborn!

mike_lbeDear Readers,

Today, I’m thrilled to announce that Living by Ear is experiencing a rebirth. Thanks to my wonderful and innovative publisher, Booktrope, the book has been totally revamped with an edit and a gorgeous new cover.

Living by Ear is about a forty-six year old mom named Christine Daley who’s desperately trying to reclaim her former life as a popular Boston musician after a hiatus of sixteen years. But she’s up against plenty of challenges, among them her teenage children–who are mortified at the thought of their mother performing in public–and the numerous significant developments in the music industry since the 1990s. Then there’s her soon-to-be-ex-husband, who’s doing everything he can to keep Chris from divorcing him, despite the fact that she’s certain the marriage is over. Is it possible for a middle-aged woman to get a second chance at love and career fulfillment?

Living by Ear–which was originally self-published in 2013–has been well received by professional reviewers and readers on Amazon. Please take a moment to check it out, and feel free to share this post with anyone who may be interested.

Thank you! And to celebrate the relaunch, this blog will be running a giveaway and listening party all week long. Here’s how the giveaway works. In the comments section below, post a link to a YouTube video for a song you love. Feel free to say anything you’d like about the song, or just post the link–whatever you prefer. The giveaway will continue until Friday, so if you don’t get around to posting today, you can post Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday, September 19th, 2014 up until 6:00 PM EST. Then, on Saturday morning, I’ll put the names of everyone who posted into a hat and draw one winner for a new Kindle copy of Living by Ear and one winner for a new paperback copy.

I look forward to seeing/hearing the videos you post! And to get the music started and keep it going, I’ll be posting songs and videos featured in Living by Ear all week, along with little stories about why I chose them. On Friday, I might even do a little singing for you (yes, you heard that right) but more on that later.

Here’s one of my favorite videos by Conor Oberst/Bright Eyes, performing “Method Acting” It’s a fan video and it starts off a little shaky, but I think it’s an excellent performance. Feel free to share your thoughts and opinions. “Method Acting” is significant to Living by Ear because when I self-published the book last spring, I realized that some of the song’s lyrics perfectly capture the way Chris Daley feels about performing. So I got in touch with Sony/ATV music and purchased the rights to print those lyrics as an epigraph in a limited number of copies of the book.

Here are the lyrics:

Because I don’t know what tomorrow brings. It is alive with such possibilities. All I know is I feel better when I sing. Burdens are lifted from me, that is my voice rising! 

OK, enough for now. Please don’t forget to post your favorite video links below for a chance to win either a Kindle or paperback copy of the new Living by Ear!

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Rock On, Women!!

vivsSometimes things happen that throw us off course in life. If you’ve read my blog, you may know about my struggle with bulimia and how that illness kept me in sort of a professional limbo for a number of years. Other times, though, we choose our detours. And in the case of American women, the most common detour off the career highway is taking a break to raise kids. (Some men take that route too, of course, but less frequently.) There are hundreds—maybe thousands—of articles written about the challenges women face after being out of the workforce for a while.

But when we think about the workforce, we tend to think of people who spend at least some time in office buildings; people who are paid a salary or hourly wage; people who seek out promotions, bonuses, maybe stock options. We don’t often think of women attempting to re-enter the art, literary, or music worlds after a hiatus, although their challenges can be just as great, if not greater.

My novel, Living by Ear—which is being re-launched on September 16th by Seattle publisher Booktrope—is about a Boston musician named Christine Daley who takes a sixteen-year career break to marry and raise kids, only to discover that getting back on the music scene as a forty-six-year-old is much more difficult than she’d anticipated. (Chris is also in the process of divorcing her husband and starting to date again, so she’s dealing with other issues as well.)

Therefore, when I went out this past Friday night to see the Boston band The Vivs, I was almost overcome with emotion, partially because I realized how much my character, Chris Daley, could learn from them. The Vivs, you see, have a few things in common with Chris. But while Chris struggles and flounders, The Vivs don’t seem to be doing very much of that at all.

This is probably a good time to take a tiny step back into Boston music history. Because if you lived in Boston during the late 80s/early 90s and paid even the slightest bit of attention to the local music scene, you remember Tribe. Tribe was a powerhouse alternative rock band with a huge following and a major label record deal. Known for their dark sound, haunting vocals, and hooky songs, Tribe got tons of radio play and were darlings on the local club scene. And central to Tribe’s success was uber talented and all-around beautiful woman, Terri (Barous) Brosius, who played keyboards, sang backup vocals, and wrote and co-wrote many of the band’s best songs.

Similarly, if you followed indie music in Boston during the early 2000s, you were probably a fan of the band Edith, which was often dubbed “the best undiscovered act in town.” Led by the stunningly gifted Karen Harris—who’s a rock star in every aspect of her life—Edith packed nightclubs largely because of Karen’s distinctive low voice, literary songwriting skills, and magnetic stage presence.

So when the universe did its thing and brought Terri and Karen together as friends, the two women often discussed writing songs and performing together. But by that time, both were also thinking about starting families, and, in fact, both gave birth to daughters in 2001. Two years later, Karen had a son as well. And, like all parents, their lives were complicated. After all, they were busy with husbands, homes, jobs (Karen is a high school teacher, while Terri runs an independent music school), laundry, parents of their own, medical issues, pets, school, playdates, and dinner. Music got back-burnered for a while.

But for Karen and Terri, back-burnered didn’t mean forgotten, and in 2009, they decided to form a band. And not a “mommy band” either, but a real band, with other serious musicians and original songs. A band that would play out in clubs frequented by Boston’s rabid music fans—young and old—and make albums at top-notch recording studios. In other words, they were jumping back in, all the way.

And I’m ecstatic to say that they’ve done just that, on their own terms. Their lives are extremely busy and family always comes first for them, but The Vivs have written a plethora of new songs, keep up a moderate playing schedule, and pack the room every time they play. They sound a little like Patti Smith, a little like Throwing Muses, a little like the Kinks, but they’ve got their own distinct sound as well. And they’ve recorded several albums produced by Dave Minehan (The Neighborhoods, The Replacements) and Eric Brosius (Tribe, Eddie Japan, etc.)

Therefore, as I watched The Vivs rock the house at Store 54 the other night—one of Boston’s newest and funkiest music venues—I couldn’t help feeling hope for all women attempting to reclaim their creativity. Terri and Karen, you’re an inspiration to us all.

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