Laura Glitsos

Laura Glitsos performing in Purrvert during the early 2000s on the Perth scene

Laura Glitsos (also known as Laura G) is a writer, academic and musician based in Perth, Western Australia. Glitsos continues as a performer and also works as an academic and lecturer at Curtin University and Edith Cowan University.

Musical career

Glitsos formed Purrvert with drummer Nicholas Jonsson (End of Fashion, The Panda Band, Eskimo Joe), Roderick Tompkins (The Deaf Jefferies), and Troy "Spud" Anthony, in late 1999.[1]

Purrvert gigged the Perth local circuit from 2000 to 2004, until Glitsos moved to Paris to work on the first English speaking radio station in the city, Paris Live Radio.[2][3] Purrvert released two EPs entitled Tale Spinners[4] and Weapons of Mass Production.[5] Purrvert toured regionally, in Bunbury and Margaret River, and nationally, playing at St. Kilda's Espy Hotel with Dylan Lewis' alternative funk band Brown Hornet. Purrvert is remembered for playing in Perth with a diverse range of bands, such as The Panda Band, Rollerskates, Karnivool, and Spiderbait.[3] In a 2002 Xpress Magazine review article, Brett Ladhams wrote,

Laura Glitsos with Chris Keksgrinder, while Agent Red were situated in Berlin

The stunning Laura G anchors Purrvert to the hearts of men and the minds of girls with her strong, confident stage presence and inimitable hip hop style. While the band may be sick of hearing it, Purrvert sound unmistakably like the late, great Rage Against The Machine, which is a good thing. A little overbearing at time, Laura's vocals combine with the often-brilliant Purrvert band to create a stage show all its own in Perth.[6]

Laura Glitsos performing in Rubble of Empire, RATM Tribute Act

Glitsos was featured on the cover of Perth's Inside Magazine in 2002, with a range of other notable female musicians including Katy Steele and Rachel Claudio.[7] In 2004, Glitsos was also featured in The West Magazine, which covered her move to Paris to work in radio.[3]

On her return, Glitsos returned to academia and received her Honours in Communications and Cultural Studies at Curtin University, through which avenue she then went on to pursue a doctorate. However, Glitsos briefly returned to original music in 2009 with a new project titled Agent, Red formed with guitarist Rob Lawrence and drummer Ian Tyler (Tuxedo Pig). The band moved to Berlin for several months to write and rehearse but ultimately disbanded on return to Australia.

After several years, in 2015, Glitsos returned to the stage with a Rage Against The Machine tribute band for the purpose of protesting the Abbott Government's tertiary education policies and platform on asylum seekers. The tribute act, titled Rubble of Empire, continues to play shows around Perth and regional Western Australia. In an article on Toward Music, Glitsos is interviewed about the motivations for such a project, in which she says,

All the members of Rubble of Empire were impassioned by the political ideals and influenced by the grooving, heavy style that Rage Against the Machine established. Most importantly, RATM continued a tradition of music to reach out into the very concrete world and cultivate change en masse.[5]

Glitsos formed Rubble of Empire with three other notable Perth musicians Karl Hiller (The Witches, Wormhole), Scott Howard (Ruby Boots, The Witches), and Giles Lowe (Stu Orchard Band).

Writing and journalism career

Glitsos has written feature articles in the fields of music and science/medicine, and had content featured in a diverse range of publications including Xpress Magazine, The West Australian, Astronomy WA,[8] ScienceNetwork WA,[9] The Water Corp, Consult Magazine, Murdoch University's ECOS Magazine, Australasian Science, and SymbioticA Lab at UWA. Glitsos was the editor of Astronomy WA, a Perth-based astronomy science website run by the Department of Science and Innovation for several years.

In her role as a freelance music journalist for Xpress Magazine, Glitsos has interviewed a broad range of artists including Wayne-Static (Static-X),[10] Kerry King (Slayer), Abe Cunningham (Deftones), and many others.

Academic career

Glitsos has completed a doctoral research degree at Curtin University, where she has lectured in popular music studies, communication studies, and Internet studies.[11] Glitsos was invited to speak at Seattle EMP Museum for the annual EMP PopCon 2016, which featured other vocalists such as k.d lang and Valerie June. Glitsos co-presented a seminar with extreme metal vocalist Cain Cressall (The Amenta, Malignant Monster) on the "limits of vocality".[12] In 2013, Glitsos also presented a refereed paper at the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (Aus-NZ Branch) entitled "The ecology of 'sacred space': Indie music's exploration and construction of sacred space in the context of contemporary digital music".[13]

Academic publications

  • "Nice girls don't jive: the rise and fade of women in Perth music from the late 1950s to the early 1970s" in the journal of Continuum[14]
  • "Screen as Skin: The Somatechnics of Touchscreen Music Media" in the journal of Somatechnics[15]
  • "Vaporwave, or music optimised for abandoned malls" in the journal of Popular Music[16]
  • "The ecology of 'sacred space': Indie music's exploration and construction of sacred space in the context of contemporary digital music" in Communities, Places, Ecologies: Proceedings of the 2013 IASPM-ANZ Conference[13]

References

  1. Dave. "Gig Lists – 1998 to 2001". www.musiciscrap.com. Retrieved 2016-05-22.
  2. "Local Laura G goes live to air in Paris". Melville Times Community News. 2004.
  3. 1 2 3 Collins, Simon (16 October 2004). "The West Magazine". The West Australia. pp. 15–16.
  4. "Purrvert Tale Spinner EP". Waterfront Records. 4 March 2002.
  5. 1 2 Ferguson, Jayd (14 March 2016). "Season 4 of The Newport Record Club". Toward Music.
  6. Ladhams, Brett (5 July 2002). "Xpress Magazine".
  7. Inside Magazine. December 2002. ISSN 1447-4239. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. "Astronomy WA". Astronomy WA. Retrieved 2016-05-22.
  9. "Laura Glitsos". www.sciencewa.net.au. Retrieved 2016-05-22.
  10. "X-Press Magazine # 1187". Issuu. 12 November 2009. Retrieved 2016-05-22.
  11. "Laura Glitsos's schedule for Pop Conference 2016". popconference2016.sched.org. Retrieved 2016-05-22.
  12. "Pop Conference 2016: Vocal Coaching". popconference2016.sched.org. Retrieved 2016-05-22.
  13. 1 2 International Association for the Study of Popular Music, Deepak Vasa. "Communities, Places, Ecologies: Proceedings of the 2013 IASPM-ANZ Conference". search.informit.com.au. Retrieved 2016-05-23.
  14. Glitsos, Laura (23 November 2016). "Nice girls don't jive: the rise and fade of women in Perth music from the late 1950s to the early 1970s". Continuum: 1–16. doi:10.1080/10304312.2016.1257695.
  15. Glitsos, Laura (2017-02-28). "Screen as Skin: The Somatechnics of Touchscreen Music Media". Somatechnics. doi:10.3366/soma.2017.0210.
  16. Glitsos, Laura (January 2018). "Vaporwave, or music optimised for abandoned malls". Popular Music. 37: 100–118 via Cambridge University Press.

External Sources

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