"Rebel Girl" is a song by American punk rock band Bikini Kill. The song was released in three different recorded versions in 1993 – on an EP, an LP, and a 7-inchsingle. The single version was produced by Joan Jett and features her on guitar and background vocals. Widely considered a classic example of punk music, the song remains emblematic of the riot grrrl movement of the 1990s. In 2021, "Rebel Girl" was listed at number 296 on the updated list of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[1]
Music and lyrics
"Rebel Girl" is one of Bikini Kill's earliest original compositions, and was performed in concert as early as 1991.[2] Songwriting credit is given to all four bandmembers.[3] The lyrics are attributed to Hanna, and were reportedly inspired by the influential feminist artist Juliana Luecking.[4]
The song's theme and lyrics overturn the traditional heterosexual tropes of pop music.[5] Giving voice to an unconcealed lesbian perspective, it is a frank and explicit "tribute to, and love song for, another woman".[6] In a larger sense, it is viewed as an ode to feminist solidarity.[7] It is considered to be Bikini Kill's signature song,[8][9] but it has an equally enduring affiliation with the feminist movement known as riot grrrl. From their start, Bikini Kill was inextricably linked to riot grrrl and, more than any other song, "Rebel Girl" was that movement's most widely recognized musical expression,[10][11] its "one definitive anthem".[12]
Releases
Three different studio versions of "Rebel Girl" were recorded by Bikini Kill.[13] The first version appeared on the split LP that the group shared with fellow riot grrrl band Huggy Bear in early 1993. Sporting front and back titles – Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah for Bikini Kill's side, Our Troubled Youth for Huggy Bear's – the split LP was released by the independent label Kill Rock Stars and was only available on vinyl and cassette. This first version of "Rebel Girl" became available in CD format in 1994 when Kill Rock Stars packaged The CD Version of the First Two Records, a combination reissue that contained all seven songs of Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah as well as the entirety of the band's vinyl debut, Bikini Kill.[14]
The second version of the song appeared in late 1993 on the New Radio +2 single, a 3-song 7-inch vinyl record featuring both "New Radio" and "Rebel Girl" on the A-side, with "Demirep" on the flipside. Former Runaway and solo artist Joan Jett – an ardent early fan of the band – produced all three songs and provided additional guitar and background vocals.[13] Jett toured with the band the next year.[15] Engineering was by John Goodmanson of Kill Rock Stars. The cover art was created by local artist Heidi Arbogast, a former bandmate of Hanna.[16] This second version of the song was included on the 1998 CD compilation, The Singles.[17]
A third version of the song is on the band's first full-length album, Pussy Whipped.[18] Engineering and production was handled by Stuart Hallerman of Avast! Recording Company in Seattle.[19] Although this version had actually been recorded prior to the Jett-produced single, it was held for the album (slated for October 1993) and thus was released last chronologically.[12]
Critical reception
"The unforgettable anthem 'Rebel Girl'", as Robert Christgau calls it,[20] was never a hit single, but it received widespread critical acclaim. It has been called a "classic",[21] and praised as "some of the most vital rock-n-roll of the era".[9] It was selected as the best song of 1993 on the Rolling Stone list of "Most Excellent Songs Of Every Year Since 1967", a playlist assembled by the magazine in 2006 to celebrate its 1,000th issue.[22]Charles Aaron credits Hanna's vocal performance as the key ingredient, dazzling in its zigzags "from envy to lust to joy in the space of a verse".[23]
Opinions vary about which version of the song is superior. Everett True called the Jett version "thrilling" and declared it a "Single of the Week" in Melody Maker.[24] Of the Pussy Whipped version, critic Dave Thompson says it "wipes the floor" with the other takes.[21]
In the 2021 American comedy-drama film Moxie the punk rock band The Linda Lindas covered "Rebel Girl",[31] also performing the song on Jimmy Kimmel Live on June 3, 2021.
In February 2016, political counselor John Podestatweeted a link to an unofficial, homemade video made by a supporter of Hillary Clinton. The video used "Rebel Girl" as the soundtrack for a partisan overview of Clinton's record on feminism and women's rights. Although the video had not been designed for wide release, Podesta's position as chairperson of the Clinton presidential campaign helped make it go viral. Amid mounting rumors that the Clinton campaign itself had created the video, Tobi Vail filed a copyright infringement claim against the user and had the video taken down.[36][37][38] As Vail explained: "Bikini Kill is a collective, we collectively own our entire catalog including songwriting, so in order for a song to be used they need to have the permission of the whole band." With evident finality, she added: "We don't authorize use of our songs in advertisements."[39]
Credits
The members of Bikini Kill sometimes swapped their instruments for certain songs, but all versions of "Rebel Girl" were recorded with the band's standard arrangement:
^Appell, Glenn; Hemphill, David (2006). American Popular Music: A Multicultural History. Stamford, CT: Thomson Wadsworth. p. 427. ISBN9780155062290.
^ abBreihan, Tom (October 28, 2013). "Pussy Whipped Turns 20". Stereogum.com. Spin Media. Archived from the original on August 19, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2016.