
Tucson-based stoner-rock/"boogie-pop" band Black Pussyâwhose members, as you can see, are white menâwere slated to play the Funhouse on Saturday, March 17, but that show is no longer happening. According to a February 26 post on the group's Facebook page, it was their decision to cancel.

However, El Corazon boss and Funhouse co-owner Dana Sims says, "Iâm not sure what they are talking about exactly. The show was cancelled by the club on Saturday [February 24]. After some constructive discussions with people I love and respect both in the scene and the community at large, I felt it was the right thing to do."
Attracting much scathing criticism over the last few years for what many perceive to be their racially insensitive and objectifying name, Black Pussy have doubled down on their reasons for keeping the moniker. On their Facebook page, they deny that it derives from the original title of the Rolling Stones' "Brown Sugar," as some detractors have accused.
In a phone interview, Black Pussy frontman Dustin Hill admits that Sims "pulled the plug" on the gig, but he made that Facebook post to stress that he doesn't "want to work with people who are racist and sexist and not inclusive. Thatâs what they are, so since theyâre pulling the plug on us, Iâm pulling the plug on them, simultaneously."
When asked what exactly is racist about the Funhouse's decision, Hill says that, "The people attacking us personally about the Seattle show continuously call me âwhiteâ and âmale,â and I shouldnât play Seattle because Iâm white and male. I think thatâs some sexist and racist stuff. Itâs my band name and because Iâm white and male, Iâm not allowed to have this band name. Thatâs it.
"Iâm fed up with being called a Nazi and a racist and a sexist because some people donât like my band name," he continues. "Iâm none of those things. My music is none of those things. My band members are none of those things. The reality is, itâs the other side that are those things. Dana [Sims] is siding with the sexists and racists."
Does Hill not understand why people are upset about the name, or does he just not care about their reactions? "No, I donât understand why people are upset with the name. The name is ambiguous, a multi-entendre. Itâs art, and art is ambiguousâat least my art is. And itâs rock and roll, real basic shit. Weâre just trying to have a good time. These identity politics⌠I donât get it. It has nothing to do with my band."
Black Pussy, Hill claims, play about 200 shows a year, with about five per annum getting cancelled. "Itâs a small percentage," he says, "but still, itâs someone fucking with my job. These people are bullies; they harass people. Thatâs why venues cancelâtheyâre getting threats. And the difference is, these venues donât call the FBI or the cops. Instead of handling it within our judicial system, [club owners] just punish us.
"One person in Seattle kept writing us; sheâs in the music scene herself. Itâs hilarious to me. What are we, back in the â50s or the â40s, where weâre burning books or records? Elvis canât do his thing? Itâs the same shit over and over. Itâs really sad that people are still this dumb. There are real issues in the worldâŚ"
While Black Pussy have had dates cancelled in America and Canada, so far no European promoters have nixed them. "Not yet," Hill says with a laugh. "Little Richard got cancelled. Elvis got cancelled. Slayer got cancelled. Sex Pistols couldnât even tour the States under their name. [The Sex Pistols actually did tour the US; I recently reviewed a film documenting that experience, D.O.A.: A Rite of Passage.] Whatâs changed? We havenât progressed at all. Weâre still talking about race and sex, amongst us ants. Ants attacking ants. Itâs just stupidity. I canât be nice about it anymore."
Hill goes on to lament the attitude of progressives in the Northwest. "Theyâre eating themselves. Iâve lived in Seattle and in Portland for over 20 years. I left. I live in Tucson now. I canât stand what has happened to [the Northwest]. My left[ist] team has gone off the deep end."
Hill's disappointment with the region extends to Sims, whom he say he's known for many years. "What can you do? Thereâs no support for rock and roll anymore. People shouldnât be in rock and roll anymore if theyâre willing to cave on issues like this. I was at a buddyâs store today. He sells Persian rugs. âPretty soon youâre gonna be attacked for appropriating someone elseâs culture and making money off it.â Because thatâs how far shit is going.
"I care about [progressive music fans], and they think I donât care," Hill complains. "Thereâs nothing I can do anymore⌠theyâre just insane to me. Iâve repeated this conversation over and over and I tried to be nice about it. âNo, man, weâre the most inclusive band I know.â
"And out of every rock band Iâve ever played in, I have more black women at my shows and black men dancing, but people donât see that in the Northwest because itâs so white. But down in the SouthâAtlanta, Savannah, New Orleansâmy crowd is mixed. Itâs hilarious to me. In the Northwest and in San Francisco even, itâs getting more and more segregated. Itâs becoming the new South, in my opinionâbut pretending to be all-inclusive, as they donât include me," he concludes, laughing.
Kim Selling, The Strangerâs music calendar editor and co-author of the essay âIs Your Band Sexist, or Are Womxn Just Annoying?,â which ran in this paper last year, takes issue with Hillâs defense of his band. âIf you make a choice that is rooted in white privilege and systemic racism and sexism, like naming your all-white-man rock group Black Pussy, you have to take responsibility for that choice."
She continues, "Reverse racism is not a real thing, and no one is oppressing you by telling you why youâre wrong or not booking your band or cancelling your show for having a racist and sexist name. In fact, those actions are accurate and measured responses to your initial choice. Free speech and the First Amendment being what they are, the judicial system cannot (and will not ever) 'punish' you, which is why your dumb ass is handled by the court of public opinion. If youâre fed up with being called out, hereâs a thoughtful suggestion: Change your fucking band name."
Selling also disputes Hill's contention that âThereâs no support for rock and roll anymore," noting that The Stranger's Things to Do calendar currently has 430 rock/pop showsâ which is over 50 percent more than any other genre. "Rock and roll is here to stay," she says. "No one is trying to kill off an entire genre because of the offerings of one mediocre Zabriskie Point-is-my-spirit-animal bullshit nonsense desert-rock group."








