Los Angeles Times

No kidding around

Teens in the Regrettes and Cherry Glazerr mean business

- By Todd Martens

There’s a bold new youth movement in the Los Angeles music scene. Led by the Regrettes and Cherry Glazerr, each band, with songwriter­s still in their teens, takes a warts-and-all, open-book approach to music-making, all while being unafraid to take a stance. Or to mess with a reporter. “What’s your agenda?” Clementine Creevy asks moments after arriving at a Chinatown diner for an interview. At 19, she’s been around long enough to be suspicious of the press. Her Cherry Glazerr project has existed in various incarnatio­ns since she was about 15.

Creevy proceeds to say she’s not a fan of the job-required questionan­d-answer sessions, and she lists, as affably as possible, topics she wants to avoid: her work in the fashion industry, the band’s associatio­n early on with Orange County’s acclaimed indie Burger Records and her youth.

She laughs, and then comically stages a mock interview with herself.

“‘Tell me about Burger Records. Tell me about Saint Laurent. Tell me about being young and being in a band. Tell me about being in high school and being in a band. Tell me about being a girl and being in a band,’ ” she says. “That’s usually the interview. That’s not a question. Yes, I’m young and in a band. That’s a fact, sir or ma’am.”

Later, she’ll joke, “I’m not good at parties.”

Yet answering endless questions about youth is a reality both bands have had to face. “When you’re a teenager and you’re in a band, people always feel the need to just jabjab-jab-jab,” says Lydia Night, the Regrettes’ 16-year-old lead songwriter.

But there’s vital work being done

here.

The Regrettes’ Genessa Gariano, for instance, discovered what had been missing from her middle- and high-school life when she met Night.

Night had a song, “A Living Human Girl.”

Or, rather, she had a 21⁄2-minute manifesto that points a middle finger at our culture’s unrealisti­c view of femininity. Stretch marks, acne, greasy hair, a disinteres­t in exercising — Night turns them all into causes for celebratio­n, with a 1960s-inspired girl group stomp and a punk-rock snarl.

“I’m not a bitch for saying what is real,” Night snaps, delivering the lyric moments after mocking her breast size and just before she broadcasts news of her period.

“A Living Human Girl” is the centerpiec­e of the Regrettes’ debut album, “Feel Your Feelings Fool!” As a whole, the 15-song work turns the confusion and frustratio­n of modern times into high-energy blasts rooted in freedom of expression and individual­ity.

It also sends a message, arguing that Hollywood’s pop music machinery has long failed to capture the mixed-up, muddled and angry feelings of adolescenc­e. Cherry Glazerr is apt to decorate its stage with images of female anatomy, while the Regrettes, on song after song, bluntly and sarcastica­lly tackle ignorance and stereotype­s.

“I heard that she’s a feminist, so she must not shave her pits,” Night hollers late on “Feel Your Feelings Fool!” and, at a record release party Friday night at the Echo, she took a moment to dedicate the band’s most aggressive­ly explicit song to incoming President Donald Trump.

It isn’t lost on either act that they each have albums hitting at a time when women’s rights are a matter of debate on Capitol Hill and our president-elect has been heard on tape demeaning women.

In turn, there’s another, perhaps unintentio­nal, underlying message to “Feel Your Feelings Fool!” and Cherry Glazerr’s “Apocalipst­ick,” each out this month. Maybe the grown-ups don’t have it figured out after all.

“Gender set aside, just by being a kid, people automatica­lly assume you’re dumb,” Night says. “When you think of someone younger, you think, ‘Oh, I’m smarter than you.’ It feels horrible. No, take me seriously. Please, take me seriously.”

“A Living Human Girl” seems to have accomplish­ed that plea. The song helped secure management and a record deal with Warner Bros. for Night and the band.

“That was the song that made me want to do this,” Regrettes guitarist Gariano, 19, says of forming the band.

“When I was in middle school and high school, I didn’t have that song,” Gariano says, seated with her bandmates at a West L.A. rehearsal spot. “I felt all those feelings. I felt alone in those feelings. I felt really alone. I was shy. I didn’t have a Lydia singing that song to me. I’m so glad girls have that song now. I wanted to make sure everyone heard this song. It’s important.”

Wizened veteran

If the Regrettes, appearing at Hollywood’s Amoeba Music for a free show on Jan. 26, are relative newcomers on the local scene, having played their first show only last February, Creevy is a wizened veteran.

Her personalit­y — halfseriou­s but a little wry and cynical — is all over Cherry Glazerr’s “Apocalipst­ick,” which the Secretly Canadian label will release on Friday. Ask Creevy to explain the songs, and she’ll give one-word answers (“death,” “drugs”) or seemingly completely made-up ones, such as the moment she describes “Told You I’d Be With the Guys” as a document of fish pedicures. Maybe, maybe not. The song opens “Apocalipst­ick” with sharply pointed guitars that wind up and down while Creevy, with a cutting upperregis­ter, slices through the stutterste­p melody.

She details being a loner, then hanging with the boys, and then a rush of noise arrives in the song’s final moments to release the tension as she appears to find solace in female solidarity. “It’s necessary, to give a lady love,” she sings.

“Women are so highly competitiv­e with each other,” Creevy says. “Men are competitiv­e in a different way. They’re competitiv­e for the whole world. The whole world is available to them. But women are competitiv­e to each other on such a small scale. They’re vicious little animals competing for the attention of a man.

“It’s such a small-scale thing, and it’s self-defeating. The end is close when you’re a woman. You can see it. With men, you have the whole world. You may be competitiv­e with your fellow man, but it’s competitio­n for all the opportunit­ies that the world offers you. Women don’t have that.”

Cherry Glazerr and the Regrettes, who have shared bills together, including a recent benefit for Planned Parenthood, live on different ends of the punk-inspired spectrum.

“I’m constantly contradict­ing myself every day with my quote-unquote philosophi­es,” Creevy says, “but the only things I take seriously — and the only things that energize me — are music and feminism.”

Still, there’s silliness to both — check the Regrettes’ fuzzy and propulsive “Picture Perfect,” which quotes Salt-N-Pepa’s “Push It” or Cherry Glazerr’s light-stepping “Trash People,” in which Creevy brags about wearing underpants three days in a row.

The Regrettes deliver it all with a retro-infused enthusiasm. Maxx Morando’s drums are already arenasize, and the bass of Sage Nicole Chavis feels lifted from Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound. Nary a putdown or a kiss-off is delivered without a winning melody or soaring harmonies.

In turn, Night’s lyrics envision a world where impulsiven­ess and insecuriti­es always get an invite to the dance. When she deals with, say, casual everyday sexism, as she does on the snappy “Seashore,” it’s with a sense of glee (“And no, I won’t give you a little twirl,” she sings with a raspy bite). And she also has no patience for generation­al fears of commitment, hollering, “I don’t need your maybes” on the explosive, roller-rink-ready “Lacy Loo.”

“I’ve noticed in high school, people are so scared of being vulnerable and not looking cool,” Night says. “It’s so sad. Being in denial about your feelings is only going to make you unhealthy. That’s the No. 1 thing my parents have drilled into my brain since I was 5 — never hold things in. Get it out.

‘That’s why therapy rocks,” she adds.

By contrast, there’s a darker, doomier side lurking in Cherry Glazerr, which will headline the Teragram Ballroom on Feb. 16. Both bands are ready to call out immaturity — “Time to be a lady’s man / Time to knock out Peter Pan,” Creevy sings casually on “Lucid Dreams.” Sasami Ashworth’s synths counter Creevy’s blown-out guitar with panicked, carnivales­que notes, while Tabor Allen’s rhythms jolt indirectly between both.

Even more intense is “Instagrati­fication,” which tackles the emotional roller coaster of a life plugged in to social media, complete with a freaked-out, psychedeli­c breakdown. And then there are the subterrane­an and dancy grooves of “Trash People,” in which Creevy invites listeners into her headspace and swears she’s not kidding.

“I’m just a trashy person,” Creevy says. “I’ve always been that way. I shower once a week. It’s not my priority. Cleanlines­s in its most basic term is just not something I prioritize. I want to have a clean room. I want that. But I cannot achieve it. Even when I clean my room, the next day it looks like something exploded in there. “I’m just dirty. I’m nasty.”

‘We speak our mind’

A shared love of forthright­ness permeates both bands.

“I think that our parents like the fact that we speak our mind,” says the homeschool­ed Night, whose father runs the Hicksville Trailer Palace in Joshua Tree and whose mother manages a sober-living facility. She met her bandmates at the instructio­nal School of Rock in Burbank.

For Mike Elizondo, the veteran producer and Warner Bros. executive who’s worked with Eminem, Fiona Apple and more, the Regrettes passed an important listening test: They won the approval of his daughters.

“They would tell me that Lydia’s songs are stuff teenage girls talk about at school or at lunch but that no one ever writes songs about,” he says. “That was telling. She was an open diary to not only teenage girls but youth in general and what this generation of teenagers are going through. I felt like even if you aren’t a teenager, you were once a teenager who felt like that.

“I wasn’t going to try and change her or make her write with A-list songwriter­s in town. What she was doing on her own was special.”

She’s also wanted to be a musician since she was 5, the age at which her parents took her to see the Donnas, the all-female pop-punk band.

Creevy, meanwhile, says she broke her parents’ hearts, informing them that, to give Cherry Glazerr a shot, she would not be attending New York University. The band for “Apocalipst­ick” signed with esteemed indie label Secretly Canadian, part of the Secretly Group, whose roster includes Bon Iver, Anohni and more.

“It’s definitely not something you want to hear as a parent. ‘I’m going to be a musician with no backup plan,’ ” Creevy says. Both her parents are artist and writers, and her father, Nicholas Wootton, has had success as a television producer-writer on such shows as “Scorpion” and “Chuck.”

“They really wanted me to go to NYU. I did well in school. They did well in school. They’re financiall­y set,” Creevy says. “They were scared but completely supportive of my creative endeavors.”

Already, the bands’ anchors have experience­d some “only in L.A.” moments. Night, for instance, once performed in the choir of Ryan Gosling’s band Dead Man Bones, and Creevy has dabbled in modeling and acting (she appeared on “Transparen­t”).

Though Creevy talks at length about the political and social ramificati­ons of music — or lack thereof — she’s also quick to argue that her own opportunit­ies disqualify her from being a generation­al spokeswoma­n.

“That’s easy to say as a privileged white girl with a band and a lot of awesome aspects to my life,” Creevy says. “I’ve had a generally easy life. I think that music is not inherently political, but a civil society puts meaning on it depending on the social-political climate.”

So when it comes to relating to those who are older, the artists think they have cracked the code: Just be direct.

“Be nice, be dumb, clean the floors and wash your pores,” Night sarcastica­lly muses near the end of “Feel Your Feelings Fool!” before making it clear she won’t be doing any of that.

“The honesty is what makes it mature,” says Gariano. “When you’re younger, being honest is harder. You don’t really know what you’re feeling, so being able to articulate that is what makes it mature.”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? YOUNG MUSICIANS in the band Regrettes are Sage Nicole Chavis, left, Lydia Night, Genessa Gariano and Maxx Morando.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times YOUNG MUSICIANS in the band Regrettes are Sage Nicole Chavis, left, Lydia Night, Genessa Gariano and Maxx Morando.
 ?? Jessica Chan Los Angeles Times ?? CLEMENTINE CREEVY, singer in the L.A. band Cherry Glazerr, says “the only things I take seriously ... are music and feminism.”
Jessica Chan Los Angeles Times CLEMENTINE CREEVY, singer in the L.A. band Cherry Glazerr, says “the only things I take seriously ... are music and feminism.”
 ?? Jessica Chen Los Angeles Times ?? CHERRY GLAZERR singer-songwriter Clementine Creevy, left, and bandmates Tabor Allen and Sasami Ashworth. Creevy says she chose the band over college.
Jessica Chen Los Angeles Times CHERRY GLAZERR singer-songwriter Clementine Creevy, left, and bandmates Tabor Allen and Sasami Ashworth. Creevy says she chose the band over college.

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