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All proceeds benefit incarcerated and formerly incarcerated communities;

funds administers by Southern Center for Human Rights.

The Prison Music Project

In May 2010, Zoe Boekbinder paid their first visit to New Folsom Prison, a maximum-security penitentiary outside Sacramento, California. They volunteered in New Folsom for four years, until the end of 2014, playing concerts and teaching workshops in songwriting.

Over the years, a lot of poems, raps and songs were created and shared by the incarcerated men who participated in the workshops. Some of the writers asked Zoe to collaborate with them and Zoe found themself contributing a melodic hook to a rap or setting some words to music. One of the participants, Ken Blackburn, was already an accomplished songwriter and offered up to the group finished songs to sing. A body of work developed that was as diverse as the people who contributed to it. The songs — overflowing with pain and regret, longing, perseverance and hope — form a collective snapshot of the hidden face of America: the two million people living inside its prison systems.

 

Mass incarceration in the United States is a human rights abuse that, in a perfect world, would be addressed as such by an international court and dealt with accordingly. In this imagined scenario, America would abandon all policies which led us into this human rights crisis and concede to move immediately towards de-escalation and retroactive reform. We would admit that turning prison systems into for-profit industries was absolutely the wrong way to go. We would awaken to the reality that it is, in fact, unconscionable. 

Moving beyond policies which were designed to further entrench poverty, perpetuate racial inequality, and encourage mass incarceration is something we can do on our own, of course; we don’t actually need an international tribunal. We have already learned which are the harmful policies and we have imagined and designed alternatives. One powerful alternative to our current approach is the Restorative Justice model. Restorative Justice has been employed widely in places ranging from South Africa and Angola (in the aftermath of wide-scale violence) to the everyday criminal justice system of New Zealand. It is, to put it simply, a conversation between those who have been harmed (victims), those who have caused harm (perpetrators), and their communities, facilitated by a mediator. In the US, it is used in schools and even, occasionally, in a murder trial, but usually only when the designated victim asks for it and the court allows it.

 
 

We may not be quite to the point of a feminist reinvention of our very institutions but, thankfully, there are steps being made towards reforming our justice system, steps which have finally begun backing down from the tough on crime policies initiated in the Nixon era and greatly propelled by the Reagan, Bush, and Clinton administrations. In December 2018, Cory Booker (a Democrat from New Jersey) led a bipartisan congressional team to pass the First Step Act which rang like a bell of hope across the country. Governors of various states have begun to volunteer to do the work of commuting unjust and extreme sentences. Minimum sentencing laws are being repealed. The so-called drug war, which incarcerated scores of non-violent drug offenders and yet somehow managed to overlook the opioid epidemic, is finally being called into question. Cell phone cameras are showing us how deeply racism is embedded into our society and how implicit bias plays out through us all. The excessive force of police departments is being scrutinized. 

Restorative Justice is powerfully healing because it fosters empathy and restores the broken connection that either caused, or allowed for, the violence to occur in the first place. It provides space for everyone’s voice and experience to be heard and felt. It allows those that have been harmed to be a part of deciding what the repercussions are. Restorative Justice, as a method, has actually been used for centuries. It is heavily influenced by Native American peacemaking practices. In a modern context, it reimagines the role of the state from that of administering punitive systems of incarceration and execution (perpetuating cycles of violence) to providing safety while facilitating restorative justice mediation, reparation, and amends (transforming cycles of violence).

Imagine what we could manifest in society if we stopped funding violent institutions and policies and instead poured our resources and collective intelligence into fostering social relationships and finding alternatives to violence. What if the Restorative Justice System was one of the main functions of a greater Federal Department of Peace? Imagine an organization with the budget of the Pentagon designed to oversee domestic as well as international policy with the goal of achieving peace, safety and stability for all people. We could end the dissemination and proliferation of mass killing machines on our streets, for instance. Imagine if it was somebody’s job to figure out how. 

 

Meanwhile, Zoe, having been touched by the men they met during their time at New Folsom and by the songs they created together, hatched the dream of transforming these songs into an album. To realize that dream, they enlisted the help of activist, producer and Righteous Babe Records founder Ani DiFranco. Six years after that saw the completion of the sprawling collaboration you now hold in your proverbial hands. Many singers, producers, artists and musicians were brought in along the way and together, we form a collective we call The Prison Music Project. All of the contributing musicians were paid a minimal honorarium for their work and Zoe and Ani worked for free. 

The ten-year process of this record seemed to play out in slow motion, but it seems only fitting because many of the songwriters here are serving life-without-parole sentences. For them, there is nothing but endless gaping time. Daring to hope and daring to feel in such a context becomes a revolutionary act. Our intention, with this project, is to simply reflect the shared humanity of people on both sides of prison bars, and maybe even to reflect how hoping and feeling are revolutionary acts for any of us, in any context. In defiance of a dehumanizing mass incarceration system, The Prison Music Project facilitates the best of our shared humanity: collaboration, community, and good art. And, of course, we also support other organizations which are out there helping people whose lives have been impacted (and sometimes devastated) by incarceration. All the proceeds from this record support incarcerated and formerly incarcerated communities.

Spoon Jackson has been in prison for forty years. He was handed a life-without-parole sentence at the age of twenty and now he is sixty. Amazingly, while in prison, he published a memoir entitled By Heart (co-written with his first creative writing teacher, Judith Tannenbaum) and also produced a book of poetry called Longer Ago. He has done guest teaching by proxy with friends on the outside in academia and he is currently a contributor to the podcast Uncuffed. Spoon once wrote a poem called Nowhere but Barstow and Prison, which Ani adapted into song for this record. In the process, he and Ani became friends. He was aware of Ani’s work with the folksinger and storyteller Utah Phillips even before the two met over the phone. Spoon had long since evolved into a peaceful and connected person but, to this day, he has no legal mechanism for having his personal transformation recognized by the state. Without the governor of California personally commuting his sentence, thereby making him eligible for parole, Spoon has no path to freedom no matter what he does. Multiply Spoon’s story times a number that takes your breath away and you are approaching the reality of justice in America.

Recording devices were not allowed into the prison, so only a few of the songs on this record are performed by their authors, recorded over the phone. The rest of the songs, for the most part, have been reinterpreted by women. The voices and musicianship of women weave themselves through and around these incarcerated men’s stories, emphasizing the universality of a dream deferred and also highlighting, with each juxtaposition, our human capacity for empathy. Of the songs that feature performances by the writers themselves, only one was recorded in an actual recording studio, after its author, Alex Beatriz was released.

We hope you enjoy this record and that the songs move you as they do us. We hope, as a society we can be moved swiftly to make America great, truly great for all of us, for the first time. What does it mean for any of us to forgive each other? We believe it is a process which involves hard work. And where do we begin? We begin by listening. 

“I’m feeling like I’m getting something up off of my chest.” said Alex (Shell Dogg) when asked what he thought about Zoe using his raps on the album.

“It tickles the shit out of me,” Ken says when asked what he thinks of Zoe’s version of his song. “The biggest compliment one songwriter can pay to another is to use their material.”


Illustrations by Wendy MacNaughton. See the full comic with text by Angela Watercutter.


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Can I give you gifts while we work to smash patriarchy, rape culture, prison, and classism? I want to write songs with you. Join my community songwriting project because a more diverse message is a more powerful message. Let’s make our voices heard! See below for details - join me and my feminist collaborators!

Here is a way to amplify the artists whose message you agree with. The music industry is still largely run by rich, straight, white men. Because I’m queer and politicly outspoken, I won’t get picked by them. I am unwilling to tow that line, so I’m going about this a whole different way. I’m asking you to lift up my music and what it stands for. The simplest way to do that is to fund my art with a monthly subscription. Each level comes with its own set of bonuses.

When you decide what level to choose, please think about how much you want to raise awareness about rape culture, mass incarceration, classism, prejudiced wage gaps, and the normative binary. Please think about how much you want to end slut shaming, queer shaming, and oppression of people’s true identities. Together we can create a world that is fair and just for for EVERYONE. Don’t subscribe at a level that is more than you can afford, and please do subscribe at the level that is as much as you can afford! You don’t have to be rich to smash prejudice! Lift up queer women!

Every level gets access to the community songwriting project - each month I put a call out to my patron community for stories, experiences, and opinions on a topic and I use your words to create a song. Music is a powerful platform - help me lift up a diverse experience for a more impactful message. $5 and up also comes with a special exclusive SURPRISE GIFT (ex: limited edition T-shirt or hand printed poster) once a year(ish), plus the extras of your choosing! Thank you for lifting up queer feminist music and being a part of creating a culture that is safe for everyone!

Goal: 200 patrons

When I reach this goal, I will be able to perform 4 benefit concerts per year. This helps raise funds and awareness about issues of inequality and injustice.

Current: 159 patrons contribute $1590 monthly.

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Jellyfish $5 /month

This is a badass thing to do to support my art. Thank you! As a Jellyfish, you will receive downloads of all new cover songs. You will also get one free concert admittance per year. 


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Octopus $10 / month

Thanks for believing in my art! In exchange, I will send you the art you help me make! As an Octopus, you will get downloads of all new music released.

Sea Turtle $15 /month 

For this serious level of support, I will send you downloads for all new music released plus your name (or whatever they want to go by) will be listed at the bottom of this page.

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Narwhal $20 /month

This is significant support, thank you! As a Narwhal, you will receive digital copies of all recording before they are released, your name listed on this page, plus a physical version (a CD or vinyl) of every new release. These members will also get free admission to two shows (or two free admissions to one show) per year.



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Giant Squid $30 /month

Shape shift into a Giant Squid and I will send you all albums released, your name listed on this page, and a cover song by request (within reason, I’m a musician not a magician, or am I?) plus free entry to all public shows.


Angler Fish $50 /month

This is serious support you are offering! Thank you! I will send you all the albums and the new shirts, free entry to all public shows, your name listed on this page, plus one song commission per year. I will write a song for you on the topic of your choosing!

Seahorse $75 /month

I’ve always strongly identified with this creature… maybe its because the females don’t carry the babies or give birth. They are gender bending warriors, like me. Become a seahorse and you will receive all the albums, shirts, name listed on this page, free show entry, song commission PLUS yearly phone or Skype call with me.

 

Lobster $100 /month

Lobsters (a creature which is biologically immortal, in fact) will receive all of the above plus one private concert every year!!! If location is not along my tour route, you gotta get me there. (This can also happen via Skype.) 

Merperson $250 /month

This is some serious fucking support you are giving me! Thank you! You get all the things including a private yearly concert PLUS a monthly phone or Skype call with me (in which I will likely gush a lot about how super grateful I am… but also I will sing for you or whatever else you want within reason). What we do on our calls is up to you - we can play music together!


Merdragon $500 /month

Holy shit! You are paying my rent (or really half my mortgage, but same idea). You get everything a merperson gets but you can call and text me whenever you want and I will do my very best to respond because I am so indescribably grateful to you. ALSO, you can write a setlist for a show. I will live stream that show so you can watch (if you aren’t there) and I’ll give you a shout-out from stage!

Merwitch / Merwarlock $1000 /month

Wow you are really making magic for me now! Let’s make art. Let’s eat food. Let’s hug. I’ll send you naked selfies (maybe). Also I will send you all the things… so many things. Will you marry me? I’m not really into the idea of marriage because I’m way too distractable… but… could be worth trying.





If you prefer to give at a level not listed here, email zoeboekbinder (at) gmail.com.

Thank you to my deepest of sea creatures: 

Charles Roussel, Michael Barnstijn, Mac Wubben, Jeremiah, Nathalie Boisard-Beudin, Nick Schultz, Ashley Kurtz, Brandon Hayman, Clara Masters, Christopher Legg, Christopher Sauro, Erica Soileau, Guillaume Sancey, Lisa Waters, Shana Williams, Mark Anderson and Tabetha Wallace.

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Physical goodies like CDs, vinyl, shirts, hats and MORE:

Etsy Store

Download and stream:

Bandcamp - Pay what you want.  

iTunes

Spotify


Soundcloud




Or get all the music by becoming a Sea Creature! Sea Creatures support the music through monthly donations and receive awesome gifts as well as music and gratitude. Choose your level and your prizes.

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True Story

 

Zoe Boekbinder was born on an early winter morning, in the upstairs bedroom of a brown wooden farmhouse on Regional Route #3, in a small township in Ontario, Canada. When Zoe was four years old their parents sold the family farm and took off for the USA in a big red truck towing a trailer behind it. Them and their three siblings and two parents rode all around the western half of the US. The family stayed in different buddhist communities and trailer parks along their way to California.

After six months on the road their family settled in the Sierra foothills in Northern California. 

In 2005 Zoe formed a band, with their sibling Kim Boekbinder, called Vermillion Lies. Over the five years that they played together they released two albums, “Separated by Birth” (2006), and “What’s In the Box?” (2008). Their sibling still plays music and makes albums. From time to time they still collaborate.

In 2009 Zoe decided to release an album of songs on their own. They recorded with their friend and producer, Cesar Alvarez, in Brooklyn, NY. Thus, “Artichoke Perfume”, was born. Two years later came their second born, "Darling Specimens", produced by Shenandoah Davis in Seattle, WA. Then "Baby Bandit" (January 2014) was recorded live onto two inch tape in Oakland, CA with cellist Danah Olivetree and violinist Dorota Szuta. The latest album, “Shadow”, was self-produced and released in November of 2018.

From May 2010 to December 2014, Zoe volunteered as a performer and teacher at New Folsom Prison. They are working on an album of songs with songwriters, poets, and rappers who are incarcerated there. It is produced by Ani DiFranco and features Amanda Palmer, Mirah, John Boutte, and Ani D herself. The profits of the album will benefit incarcerated and formerly incarcerated communities.

In the fall of 2013, Zoe wrote 100 songs in 100 days. They recorded each one and posted them daily. You can hear it in its immense entirety on bandcamp.

Zoe resides in New Orleans, Louisiana. They have an affinity for mason jars, rusted metal, Dolly Parton, sea creatures, botanical drawings, dilapidated barns, chocolate, avocados, restorative justice, honesty, port wine, and their beagle-mutt Mudbug. They want to live a farm again someday.

Their favorite collaborators over the years have been; Kim Boekbinder, Ani DiFranco, Kaki King, Amanda Palmer, Shenandoah Davis, Cesar Alvarez, Jason Webley, Carla Kihlstedt, Mal Blum, Mirah, Phantom Tides, Justin Peake, Jon Arceneaux, Danah Olivetree, Dorota Szuta, and writers (currently and formerly) incarcerated at New Folsom Prison: Alex Batriz, Greg Gadlin, Spoon Jackson, 'Drifter' Allen, Abraham Banks, Samual Brown, Nathen Jackson, Bruce Dixon and Ken Blackburn. 

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Notable Quotables

 "Zoe Boekbinder opens her mouth, and the voice that comes out is ageless, beautiful, heartbreaking and wise. Zoe looks so young, and so innocent. I think she kidnapped a marvellous singer from long ago Paris, and stole her voice. It's the only explanation." - Neil Gaiman

 "A melody, a cadence, there is always something special going on with Zoe Boekbinder’s music. This album reflects it all brilliantly." - Ani DiFranco about Shadow

““Sometimes losing a friend can be just as devastating as losing a lover.

Zoe Boekbinder explores this terrain in their new music video, "What Have I Done." According to the artist, who identifies as queer, the song was inspired by "a friend who cut me off without a word."

A resident of New Orleans, Boekbinder has collaborated with Ani DiFranco, Amanda Palmer, Jason Webley, Neil Gaiman, Mal Blum, and Mirah in their music career.

During a nearly four-year break in this career, Boekbinder also served as a volunteer teacher at New Folsom Prison. It was there that they had an epiphany to address issues beyond the self in art.

“I wrote about feminism/violence against women, privilege, and prison abolition. I wrote about my best friend who committed suicide. My songs started to feel important,” said Boekbinder. “This album is the least and most personal -- it feels terrifyingly vulnerable.”

"What Have I Done" is a track on Boekbinder's latest album, Shadow. Watch the music video below, and learn more at ZoeBoekbinder.com.” - Advocate Magazine

“While some of the music on Zoe Boekbinder’s Shadow could be described as delicate, Boekbinder [themself] is anything but. Described as “ageless, beautiful, heartbreaking, and wise” by Neil Gaiman, Boekbinder’s voice is a powerful thing. Throughout Shadow, the New Orleans singer-songwriter looks straight into the darkness that follows [them] and pierces it, finding something like light on the other side. Boekbinder throws a bit of Amanda Palmer into a songwriting style reminiscent of Songs: Ohia, with a bit of the ol’ Big Easy for good measure.” - Good Times (Santa Cruz, CA)

"Zoe is a real person with human parents, but it's tempting to imagine her springing from the pen of Astrid Lindgren. From a childhood spent vagabonding between the United States and Canada with her family (sporting red galoshes regardless of the weather) to the resourceful use of feedback loops when musical collaborators aren't in town, she has carved out an entirely unique space and sound, and may be Oakland's answer to Bjork. Like the former Sugarcube, Boekbinder is an unusual first listen, but let the sound warm in your headphones and you'll find some perfectly caramelized pop nuggets.

At first listen, Darling Specimens' eclecticism threatens to take over: I kept expecting Tiny Tim to leap out of the closet. But Boekbinder's lyrics are witty, and some of the arrangements are little feats of architecture. The looped vocals, finger-snap percussion, and cash-register dings of "Seven Times" are cushioned and undergirded with keyboards.

Boekbinder's inventive production made me lose my own personal game of "Stop--hey! What's that sound?" again and again. The theremin-like "oohs" and "woos" backing Boekbinder singing about stretching intestines into strings to wrap around "Hollow Bones"? Turns out it was a saw. The oom'pahs and beeps that sounded like synthesizers? A brassy trio of trumpet, trombone, and tuba. Add Boekbinder's triply vibrato vocals and clever lyrical slant, and you've got a mighty rich gumbo to digest.

DON'T LISTEN IN BED - Your action figures will throw a dance party and you'll step on them in the morning. You've been warned."

- Heather Seggel - BITCH Magazine

 

"When Zoe Boekbinder, on tour supporting her new album Artichoke Perfume, took to the stage the entire evening was transported to a whole new level as if by some sort of magical beanstalk. With songs that exhibited playful storytellings containing twists like the barbs of roses, one couldn't help but catch themselves leaning forward as if trying to catch a better glimpse of the stories unfolding in their mind."

- Jamaal Jackson, Seattle Underground
Music Examiner 
 

"Zoe sounds a little like Jolie Holland dancing on Billie Holiday's gramophone player in Tom Waits's New Orleans hotel room."

- Newt Lynn - Read It Here - 
Prescott AZ Weekly Paper 
 

"If I hadn't had the chance to meet her in person I would have thought she was years older than she is. She sings with confidence, authority and a wisdom that seems informed by years of regret."

- SepiaChord.com - CD Review
 

 

Press Bio

 

Zoe Boekbinder's voice sounds like it’s being played off a vinyl record, and it soars over their intricately finger picked guitar. They are difficult to define by a genre, but employ pop, blues, folk, and country styles. They have toured all over Europe and North America since 2009, when they released their first album. Now with four releases, Zoe's current project is a collaboration with songwriters incarcerated at New Folsom Prison, where they volunteered as a teaching artist from 2010-2015. The album is produced by Ani DiFranco and will be a benefit for incarcerated and formerly incarcerated communities. It released on May 22, 2020.


Zoe has shared the stage with Ani DiFranco, Amanda Palmer, Jeff Lewis, Kaki King, and Neil Gaiman. They are also known for the five years they spent touring with their sibling as cabaret-duo Vermillion Lies.

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Links - 

Facebook

Instagram

Twitter

YouTube

Bandcamp

Booking, licensing, and press -

zoeboekbinder (at) gmail (dot) com

Credits - 

Website artwork by Glass Olive

Album artwork by Tim Smith

Production on Artichoke Perfume by Cesar Alvarez

Production on Darling Specimens by Shenandoah Davis

Recording and mastering engineers: Mike Napolitano, Jaron Luksa, Myles Boisen, and Jonah Strauss

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