HEAVENS TO BETSY
More than three decades after they founded heavens to betsy, Corin Tucker and Tracy Sawyer still have something important to say.
Just as riot grrrl punk rock and feminism pushed for inclusivity, bodily autonomy, and gender equality in the early-to-mid ’90s, there is arguably an even greater need for the scene to rematerialize in an age where women’s voting rights and healthcare access are under siege, as is the safety of any marginalized community. Now, the longtime friends and musicians have answered the call by reuniting as heavens to betsy, the DIY punk project they famously founded back in the riot grrrl halcyon days, among like-minded Olympia artists in Bikini Kill, Team Dresch, and Bratmobile.
Corin and Tracy first met growing up in Eugene, Oregon, bonding over a shared love of music before forming heavens to betsy after Corin’s move to Olympia and immersion in the burgeoning riot grrrl scene. Their first performance came at the International Pop Underground convention’s landmark Girl Night, where the fledgling duo played for an audience that included members of Fugazi, Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Calamity Jane. Buoyed by the support of their peers, heavens to betsy quickly became one of the defining voices of a movement that reshaped punk rock and feminist culture alike.
Between 1992 and 1994, heavens to betsy released three 7" records and their now-classic full-length, Calculated, via Kill Rock Stars. Powered by Corin Tucker’s unmistakable howl and Tracy Sawyer’s driving musicianship, their songs tackled subjects rarely addressed in punk at the time: rape culture, body image, queerness, friendship, and intersectional politics. Just as importantly, heavens to betsy became a space for Corin and Tracy to process their own experiences while giving other women a place to unpack theirs, transforming personal rage and vulnerability into songs that helped define a generation of punk.