Los Angeles Times

SPEAKING HER MIND Regrettes leader has a timely message amid a throwback sound

- BY TODD MARTENS

When the spirited, local punk-leaning pop band the Regrettes last played a major Southern California festival, things didn’t go as planned. Performing at a multi-day event last fall in San Pedro, the band’s teenage lead singer, Lydia Night, was attacked midperform­ance by a woman in a superhero costume who managed to work her way onto the stage.

“Someone invaded my safe space in an aggressive manner and that is absolutely not OK,” Night wrote on Instagram after the incident. It’s believed by the band that the woman mistook Night for someone else and that she had been incorrectl­y led to believe Night had come between her and her boyfriend.

Last month, in the offices of her label Warner Bros. Records, Night ref lected on the act of aggression and how it affected her thinking about her vulnerabil­ity on stage. She also noted that she was still surprised how it all went down, almost dumbfounde­d that the whole thing was a case of mistaken identity and not something ref lective of today’s divisive political climate.

After all, the leader of the Regrettes, after just one album, already has a reputation for speaking her mind — online, in interviews and in song — about social and political issues. For instance, the band’s video for “Seashore,” a snappily vindictive anthem against everyday, casual sexism, took aim at President Trump, and Night knows such opinions could make her a target.

“That’s what’s so crazy about it,” Night said of the festival goer who shoved her at October’s Growlers Six. “It wasn’t some crazy Trump supporter who was like, ‘... you for being a libe-

ral.’ It was this chick dressed as Robin who thought I was this girl who her boyfriend had” slept with.

While a relatively small band by Coachella standards, the Regrettes have been on something of an accelerate­d track. The act met while taking music classes in Burbank and played its first show in early 2016. Night, the youngest of the quartet, whose members range in age from 17 to 21, has been in and out of bands since she was 7, including a stint in the choir of Ryan Gosling’s band Dead Man’s Bones, which released one slightly Gothic album in 2009.

The act’s debut album, “Feel Your Feelings, Fool!,” was issued a little over a year ago. An EP, “Attention Seeker,” followed earlier this year, and it includes a cover of Dion and the Belmonts’ “A Teenager in Love,” a song that allows the Regrettes to flash their classic pop side while highlighti­ng the tune’s underlying bitterness via Night’s ever-so-slight rasp and her band’s aggressive­ly sped-up verses.

A favorite of Night’s, the artist, now 17, has been performing “Teenager” for the past decade. She’s finally grown into it.

“That song is a song that I covered back in my band that I had when I was 7,” she said. “It’s a song that’s always made me really nostalgic. I just love that song. I mean, yeah, I’m a teenager so it makes sense singing that.”

Thus, the Regrettes will come to the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival this week as a band that melds a throwback sound — fuzzy, ’60s-inspired garage pop guitars mixed with a punk rock snarl — with a modern sensibilit­y. Night’s songs shift from the personal to the global, veering from the annoyances of teen life to frustratio­ns with societal pressures.

With prime, early-evening slots — the Regrettes were slated to perform on the opening night of the festival as well as this Friday — the band also brings a bit of topical relevancy to an event that increasing­ly celebrates music at its most escapist. When asked how writing is progressin­g on a second album, Night pointed to this year’s Women’s March, particular­ly a poem performed by pop artist Halsey in New York that documented years of sexual abuse and assault, as providing current inspiratio­n.

“I was taken by that,” Night said. “I thought that was incredible. After watching something like that, I’ll write a song. It’s not very vague, and it’s not about [Halsey], but it’s about how I personally feel as a woman. It’s a very personal approach to giant issues in the world.”

The Regrettes — rounded out by guitarist Genessa Gariano, drummer Maxx Morando and bassist Sage Chavis — are at the forefront of a youth movement of artists who get frank about real life.

To Night, there’s a cultural shift happening. She immediatel­y singles out Emma Gonzalez, the Parkland, Fla., shooting survivor who has become a leading activist for gun control, as a reason for optimism that her generation will bring about progressiv­e change.

“People like Emma Gonzalez — young people who share the same views as I do, it’s just such a relief,” Night said. “It’s like, ‘Thank God,’ but I don’t believe in God. So thank whatever.”

And even when the Regrettes deliver a bit of bubblegum, as the band does on the more groovebase­d pop of its latest single, “Come Through,” where the song’s narrator is exhausted by her flaky, noncommitt­al partner, the Regrettes still deliver a message. The song’s video, directed by Claire Marie Vogel, features a largely allfemale behind-the-scenes crew.

“Except for some lighting people,” Night said, “all the main jobs were women. That was Claire, the director, who made that goal. I want the best people to do it, and she said these were the best people.”

So it isn’t lost on Night that her band is appearing at Coachella when the demand for gender parity at festivals has become a common rallying cry among fans and industry observers. Though women make up about a quarter of the topbilled acts at Coachella, other major events such as Bonnaroo in Manchester, Tenn., and Lollapaloo­za in Chicago currently have no female headliners this year.

Coachella, now in its 19th year, has had only three female-centric acts in the headline slot — Bjork, Lady Gaga and Beyoncé. Night confessed she thought about the festival’s history with diversity before signing on. She admitted there was some pushback from fans that the feminist band linked with the Coachella brand.

“When we announced that we were doing Coachella, there were a lot of people who were kind of angry about it,” Night said. “I understand why. The best thing I can say is, I do not feel like we’re in a place in our career to turn down something like that. But I do definitely understand why it would bother people. I do think there needs to be a lot more women playing these festivals, but us turning down a festival wouldn’t help increase those numbers.

“But yeah, I think it sucks how little women are represente­d on these major lineups,” she said. “That’s why we’re going to keep doing what we’re doing and we’re going to get bigger and keep moving up in the festival chain.”

 ?? Paul R. Giunta Getty Images ?? THE REGRETTES are on an accelerate­d track, including playing Coachella this year. Above, the band performs in 2017.
Paul R. Giunta Getty Images THE REGRETTES are on an accelerate­d track, including playing Coachella this year. Above, the band performs in 2017.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? SAGE CHAVIS, left, Genessa Gariano, Lydia Night and Maxx Morando are the Regrettes. Their debut album, “Feel Your Feelings, Fool!,” was issued last year.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times SAGE CHAVIS, left, Genessa Gariano, Lydia Night and Maxx Morando are the Regrettes. Their debut album, “Feel Your Feelings, Fool!,” was issued last year.

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