NIGHT AFTER NIGHT, she watches the watchers. She intoxicates them with the flickering glow of film reels, gazing down from her booth at the backs of their heads and the napes of their necks. If male patrons canโt keep their hands to themselves, she shows no mercy.
Sheโs the Projectionistโthe vampiric heroine of Sweeping Exitsโ new EP.
The Portland glam-punk bandโs latest release functions as a soundtrack to an imagined cinematic narrative created by frontwoman Mira Glitterhound (vocals/guitar). Her bloodthirsty protagonist is a young woman working at a movie theater in the late 1950s who literally consumes predatory men.
โThe vampires in this canon, I made them in the most extreme form in that they eat and devour humans,โ says Glitterhound. โOnce theyโre done, thereโs pretty much just bones left.โ
Glitterhound has released music under the Sweeping Exits moniker for about 10 years, but The Projectionist is her first following this concept and her first joined by Myrrh Crow (keyboard/vocals), Sonia Weber (drums/bass), and Shanley Narens (strings). Itโs a prequel to the bandโs forthcoming full-length, Glitter and Blood, which will serve as an extension of the EPโs storyline.
The Projectionistโs four songs are cloaked in the velvety, temptingly opulent sounds of goth, baroque, and punk. Glitterhound cites influences like the Adverts, the interdisciplinary artistry of David Bowie, and Nick Caveโs macabre literary flair (specifically on his 1986 record Your Funeral… My Trial), but also adds, โI felt that there was this deep connection between the harmonic structures of dark โ60s jazzโstuff like Wayne Shorterโand โ80s goth.โ
Inspired by Italian horror films (particularly Mario Bavaโs Black Sunday), Glitterhound sees the EP as an opportunity to reclaim horror as โan instrument of feminism,โ since the genre often perpetuates images of violence against women. This feeling of reclamation runs throughout The Projectionist, as the vampire takes control away from misogynist men and lavishes in the theaterโs darkness. But itโs also reclaiming the fear queer people face in their daily livesโfear that Glitterhound projects back on to her vampireโs victims.
โFor me it was about experiences Iโve had as a trans woman that were very disempowering, like being harassed on the street, or threatened, or followed,โ she says. โI think the vampireโs a vehicle for all the power I wish that I had in those situations.โ
The EPโs opening title track sounds hopelessly sinister; the cold caress of strings spins into a pocket orchestra of skittish piano, drums that sound like your heartbeat pounding in your ears, and Glitterhoundโs unsparing eulogy: โYou donโt deserve to be free/You deserve to be eaten alive.โ The finger-snapping tempo of โBrigitte Bardotโ shimmies and scoots across the greasy hoods of muscle cars with the overeager bombast of โ50s doo-wop, but with a caustic sneer thatโs as menacing as a poisoned milkshake.
โReprieveโ is spoken-word dialogue over unsettling layers of string melodies. Itโs the EPโs most theatrical moment, but also its most heavy, lyric-wise. Glitterhound assumes the role of a mother trying to convince her daughter not to run away: โArenโt you so lucky to have a good Christian mother to show you what you are and arenโt to do/To protect you from yourself/You canโt be trusted to know yourself.โ The girl does run away, and is taken in by the Projectionist.
The standout closing track, โCharming (Once You Realize Youโre Dead),โ layers catchy guitar riffs, purred โoohsโ and โahs,โ and a cascading organ melody as Glitterhound sings, โYou have very little time to try and change your mind once you realize youโre dead.โ Itโs a complex requiem for the vampireโs victims, since most wonโt try to repent until sheโs already cut off their heads.
Sweeping Exitsโ songs obviously donโt advocate for real-life violence, but instead actualize the profound desire to turn hate into something positive. Glitterhoundโs vampire antihero gets sustenance from the flesh of her oppressorsโshe absorbs their evil, and it makes her stronger.
โTo me, vampires and queers are the perfect analogy, because vampires are these outcasts, but theyโre also so powerful and strong,โ says Glitterhound. โI think all queer people are strong. Weโre just strong because we have to be.โ
