- Death (XIII) [Jenn Champion Remix] [feat. Jenn Champion] - Single · 2022
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Zorked · 2021
- Perfect Version · 2019
- Perfect Version · 2019
Albums
Music Videos
- 2019
- 2019
- 2019
About Julia Shapiro
With roots in the Seattle indie rock community, Julia Shapiro is known for her work in the bands Chastity Belt, Childbirth, and Who Is She?, as well as making music as a solo act. As a guitarist, Shapiro's sound is wiry and purposefully rough around the edges, falling somewhere between indie rock and garage punk, though she brings an accessible if elemental melodic sense to her music. As a vocalist and lyricist, Shapiro can sound sincere or snarky depending on the material, with a sharp wit informing most of her bands' work (especially Chastity Belt's 2013 release No Regerts and Childbirth's 2015 LP Women's Rights), while her solo material, like 2021's Zorked, can be more reserved, personal, and introspective. In all contexts, Shapiro is a songwriter who has plenty to say about feminism and American life in the 21st century. A native of Palo Alto, California, Julia Shapiro learned to play the guitar when she was 12 years old, but throughout her teens she gave little thought to performing in public or making a career out of music. In 2010, the 19-year-old Shapiro was attending Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington, when she formed a band with three fellow students. Shapiro played guitar and sang lead vocals, Lydia Lund played lead guitar, Annie Truscott was on bass, and Gretchen Grimm handled the drumming. They called their band Chastity Belt, and despite Shapiro's inexperience, they made a reputation for themselves with the keen wit of their lyrics and the rough but exciting indie punk of their music. In May 2012, Chastity Belt self-released a four-song digital EP titled Fuck Chastity Belt, and a three-song effort, Dude, appeared the following October. The group struck a deal with Help Yourself, which released their first full-length album, 2013's No Regerts (the misspelling a reference to the ultimate bad tattoo). Meanwhile, Shapiro had also been working up songs with Bree McKenna of Tacocat and Stacy Peck of Pony Time, and they started playing shows as Childbirth. Performing in maternity clothes, they followed a similar musical template to Chastity Belt's, but with a broader sense of humor and a more garagey sound. Help Yourself issued a ten-song cassette from Childbirth titled It's a Girl! in 2014, and the song "I Only F****d You as a Joke" became a modest hit after it was praised in online publications such as Vice and Pitchfork. Childbirth signed with the indie punk label Suicide Squeeze, which issued their album Women's Rights in 2015. Around the same time, Chastity Belt was picked up by the Sub Pop-distributed Hardly Art imprint, and Shapiro was competing with herself in the marketplace when the sophomore Chastity Belt LP, Time to Go Home, came out the same year as Women's Rights. In 2017, Shapiro and McKenna debuted yet another side project, Who Is She?, which also included Robin Edwards of Lisa Prank. Initially created as a vehicle for songs inspired by Missed Connections ads in the Seattle weekly paper The Stranger, they came out with an album, Seattle Gossip, via Father/Daughter Records in October of that year. By that time, Chastity Belt had already released album number three, I Used to Spend So Much Time Alone, which found the group smoothing out their approach just a bit and allowing Shapiro a more personal lyrical voice. Chastity Belt set out on tour in April 2018; it was a difficult time for Shapiro, as she had just left a romantic relationship and had gone through a health scare after being diagnosed with thyroid cancer (a diagnosis that later proved to be incorrect). After a show in Knoxville, Tennessee, on April 19, Shapiro's physical and emotional maladies came to a head, and the group agreed to cancel the rest of the tour in the interest of her self-care. Depressed and unsure what to do with her future, Shapiro began writing introspective songs that focused on her internal thoughts and struggles, accompanied by languid and spacious guitar work. Learning to record and mix music at home, she recorded a series of demos that evolved into an album. She played all the instruments and sang all the vocals on Perfect Version, which was issued by Hardly Art in June 2019. Shapiro left her longtime home of Seattle for Los Angeles in March 2020, reaching her new home just in time for the early lockdown of the COVID-19 pandemic. Stuck in a new house with nowhere to go, Shapiro focused on making music with the help of her new roommate, Jay Som's Melina Duterte. The house was converted into a makeshift home-recording studio, and Duterte produced a set of new songs that became Shapiro's second solo album, Zorked. Released in October 2021 on Suicide Squeeze, Zorked was heavier, moodier, and more dreamlike than any of Shapiro's work before it. ~ Mark Deming
- HOMETOWN
- Palo Alto, CA, United States
- BORN
- 28 September 1991
- GENRE
- Alternative