Originally
published at SuicideGirls.com
A Cut
Above
Catching Up With Ari-Up
Of The Slits
>>INTERVIEW
BY Maki >>PIC
Courtesy Of SAF Records
It was pretty much inevitable
that Ari-Up of the seminal grrl group the Slits
would be living a fairly uncommon life. Her mum
Nora Forster had a kind of home for the disenfranchised,
and later married Johnny Rotten of the Sex Pistols.
Ari-Up joined the Slits at the age of 14, eventually
touring with the Clash — most notably on
the infamous “White Riot” tour —
and recorded Peel sessions and two studio albums,
Cut and Return of the Giant Slits.
While the Slits split in 1981, they have regrouped
recently, producing more of their fucked up, experimental
tribal, reggae, punky sounds. Verbicide
contributor Maki interviewed the still super-sexy
Ari-Up, who tells us of her life in a sometimes
barely decipherable German/Patois accent.
So can we start off with the Slits being
reunited?
Well, the Slits aren't being reunited —
it’s more like a “new Slits,”
but it is a continuation of the old Slits. We
are mixing old school with new school, obviously,
because me and Tessa are the old original Slits,
and then we have new girls. We were ahead of time
anyway, and we never finished what we set out
to accomplish. Basically it’s just a continuation
of where the Slits left off.
What kind of sound is the new Slits?
With the Slits, the sound was always a hybrid;
it was experimental, putting lots of flavors together.
We have no real limits. We just do anything we
feel like, and also the “female ingredients”
are very strong, so it comes out very different.
Even if the old stuff is one way, the new stuff
is the same in that whatever is around us is going
to take part in our music. In the old days, there
was only dub, reggae, and culture reggae, and
we integrated it into punk, funk, and the tribal
rhythms. We would do that now, but [also] include,
of course, electronic sounds and all the things
that are going on now.
How has being in Jamaica affected your
outlook on music?
Well, it’s never really changed because
I already had a lot of influences in England;
there was such a big connection with reggae, and
the rebellious movement going on at the time,
amongst West Indians, Jamaicans, and reggae music,
but also with punk. So I mixed it back there,
and going to Jamaica was just an extra step —
it takes it deeper. It’s just a continuation
of the natural circle of the life of the Slits.
In the beginning, how did you get into
the Jamaican sound?
There was no music that we could relate to, and
the only thing we were doing at the time was bashing
out our punk stuff, or whatever you want to call
it. If there were [punk] bands, no one was signed.
So reggae was one of the few [type of music] that
was around to listen to, so that's how we got
into it.
How about now? What aspects of reggae
are important now?
I find that the modern revolution of reggae is
very important. That very high-energy, raw, rebellious
sound — that's really something I can relate
to.
When making tracks how does that come
about?
All my tracks are based on everyday life. What
I feel, what I experience, what the other people
experience.
What's the actual process of creating
a track?
Usually, I would start with the drum machine,
put [down] my own bass lines, make the track,
and then put the lyrics on it. Or, I make the
lyrics first, with the melody, then put the rhythm
around that. So it’s not strictly one [method];
it just depends on how it comes about.
So are you concentrating more on your
own stuff (the New Age Steppers) or the Slits?
Both, both, they are both a part of me. With the
New Age Steppers, you can hear a lot of the Slits
in the songs, then you can hear something that
is totally Ari-Up. So they all integrate, the
two of them into one.
What exactly is your lifestyle? You seem
to flit around Jamaica, then New York, and also
the UK.
I'm a gypsy in a way. It’s in my blood,
growing up as a gypsy, moving around. I'm very
free-spirited; I'm really the true essence of
an untamed spirit. It's a fight, every day, every
fucking day, especially as a woman. I don't think
women have come that far, because when you are
being a free woman, it’s very hard.
With the early Slits days, how did it
all come about, when you were 14?
Well, I was with my mum going to all the shows
and she was basically keeping a home for all the
punks to go to. I met Palmolive; she really stuck
out in the crowd. She had a lot of energy, and
had a crazy pig [earring] in her ear, which was
unheard of back then — a girl wearing a
pig? It was uncalled for! Girls had to be girls
back then, and lady-like, and that really impressed
me. She said, “Let’s do a band, I
want to do a girl band, come to rehearse tomorrow.”
And I said, “Okay.”
Are you still in touch with her?
No…a little bit, but, I mean, they all have
their own lives now. So…
How about touring with the Clash?
Well, there was more than one tour, but the White
Riot tour is the only one that anyone seems to
remember! We did lots of gigs with them, too…gigging
around. So we have lots of memories with them.
We were like in a college, [and] they were more
like colleagues, so I don't see it from a fan’s
point of view, I see it from a peer’s. Listening
to them everyday, learning from each other, about
life and music on tour. I was a kid, doing what
I wanted to do, and having a good time, really
isolated from the rest of the world, because the
world just wanted to see us dead, basically. The
driver was a problem, because the driver wouldn't
take the Slits on the bus, so the manager of the
Clash had to bribe him. We had to give him money
just to be let on the bus! We weren't the rude
ones, like the Clash — they were much ruder,
but just because we were girls, it was too much
for their driver — he was a really straight,
typical guy, Chauvinist pig-type of person.
I'm sorry, you probably get asked this
to death…but can you comment on that album
cover for Cut?
We were never trying to be controversial. We were
in the country, doing the album, we were eating
a lot, which is why our bellies are big. We were
actually quite slim, all of us! We were in the
country that month being fed lots of good food.
We ate ourselves to death. Then we heard that
someone is going to come and take pictures, maybe,
possibly for an album cover, so we thought, “Okay,
let’s just roll around in the mud.”
We wanted something tribal, and something to represent
how we were feeling at the time, so we thought
that was great, certainly not to be controversial.
All real controversial bands are never trying
to be controversial, because then it becomes pretentious.
They all be who they want to be, and express themselves,
and then for some reason people say it’s
too much for them to handle.
What kind of person are you? Who is Ari?
I’m too many things as one. I like music
and art and clothes; I like animals and children,
being young and being old, and being natural and
traditional, but being modern. All of that is
in me. The most important thing in my life is
my children, the Slits, and the music. Someday
I want to be a producer, discovering artists and
helping them get out, and I would like to be a
film director one day. I would like to make the
movie of the Slits.
For more information, visit
www.theslits.co.uk.
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