Their band is only a year old, and two of them are only 15 years older than that, but already the members of Bruise Violet feel like they have some things to clear up.
Like, for instance, how often their trio is compared to the famed riot-grrrl bands of the 1990s. Even local rock heroes Babes in Toyland — whose song "Bruise Violet" gave these Minneapolis teens their band name — avoided that label.
"Every female band that plays some kind of rock with any kind of angry message in it is automatically called riot-grrrl," drummer/co-vocalist Danielle Cusack lamented.
Or the popular theory that those irate songs — sample lyric: "You're just a liar / I wanna throw you down and spit on your grave" — are about boys.
"Most of us haven't even experienced a real breakup yet," guitarist/co-vocalist Emily Schoonover pointed out.
Or the notion that the three of them are walking around mad at the world all the time just because their songs are fueled by anger.
"People think we're trying to be these super bad-ass, feminist, in-your-face, intimidating girls," Cusack said, "but when we get offstage — or even on stage — we're laughing like Beavis & Butt-head and making poop jokes."
There were certainly a lot of Butt-head-ian moments last Saturday morning when the bandmates got together to rehearse at Schoonover's house in the Longfellow neighborhood, where Mom and Dad seemed well versed on staying out of the way. The family's wiry whippet Eugene, however, came off a bit like a pestering groupie who craves the girls' attention (and usually gets it).