All Women Are Bitches

"All Women Are Bitches"
Single by Fifth Column
from the album 36-C
B-side "Donna"
Released 1992
Format 7", 45rpm
Length 2:48
Label K Records IPU 33
Writer(s) Caroline Azar, G.B. Jones (lyrics); Fifth Column (music)
Producer(s) Walter Sobczak, Fifth Column
Fifth Column singles chronology
"Boy, Girl"
(1983)
"All Women Are Bitches"
(1992)
"Don't"
(1993)

All Women Are Bitches is a single by the Toronto band Fifth Column.

The lyrics were written by Caroline Azar and G.B. Jones and the music was composed by Fifth Column. It was produced by Walter Sobczak at Wellesley Sound Studios in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The song was inspired by the 1977 Canadian/French horror film Cathy's Curse.

The cover featured photos from the G.B. Jones film The Yo-Yo Gang.

The song first appeared as a single released by K Records in 1992. It was the 33rd single in the K Records 'International Pop Underground ' series. It was reviewed for the UK music publication Melody Maker by Everett True and voted 'Single of the Week'. The song was also on the Fifth Column album, 36-C, released by K Records in 1994. As well, it was included on the 1993 K Records compilation, International Hip Swing.

It has been featured on the soundtracks of the films A Gun For Jennifer, directed by Todd Morris, released in 1996. The band appeared in She's Real (1997), directed by Lucy Thane, performing the song live in San Francisco, and in the documentary by Kevin Hegge, She Said Boom: The Story of Fifth Column, released in 2012, performing the song at the Kumbaya Festival in Toronto.

"All Women Are Bitches", has been 'covered' and re-imagined by Lesbians on Ecstasy as "Bitchsy" in 2004,[1] appearing on their first self-titled album. In 2005, "Bitchsy" was featured on the TV series Queer as Folk. "Bitchsy" and "All Women Are Bitches" were remixed and sampled together by Kids on TV in 2005,[2] and appeared on the Lesbians on Ecstasy remix album, Giggles in the Dark.

Personnel

References

  1. Draper, Jimmy, "Ladies First". San Francisco Bay Guardian.
  2. Schmidt, Andy, "Interview: Kids on TV", Toronto Indie.com Oct 2007 Archived September 30, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.