The HIRS Collective
The HIRS Collective, formerly known as simply +HIRS+, is an American queer punk musical collective based in Philadelphia. Founded in 2011 by vocalist Jenna Pup and guitarist Esem, they have amassed over 50 releases, including two studio albums for Get Better Records, Friends. Lovers. Favorites. and We're Still Here. Both albums drew media attention for their extensive high-profile featured artists, including Garbage's Shirley Manson, Screaming Females' Marissa Paternoster, and My Chemical Romance's Frank Iero. The group has also been noted for their fluid lineup, short, abrasive songs, and radical queer/trans-minded politics. They have been branded "Queercore's resident supergroup" by Alternative Press.
History
2011–2018: Origins and early releases
The HIRS Collective, originally known as +HIRS+, was formed in 2011 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by vocalist Jenna "JP" Pup and guitarist Scott "Esem". Their name is derived from the eponymous third-person neopronoun, commonly used by non-binary people.During the group's first few years, they issued a string of limited-release splits, 7" singles, EPs, cassette tapes, lathes, and a MiniDisc, as well as the 2012 compilation album The First 100 Songs. Earlier that year, HIRS appeared at Two Piece Fest with Trophy Wife and were a headlining act at Riot Fest, alongside Refused, The Promise Ring, August Burns Red, Off!, and BoySetsFire. They also joined the 2013 Philadelphia Ladyfest with acts including Screaming Females, U.S. Girls, Aye Nako, Priests, and Black Wine, and performed at the First Unitarian Church of Philadelphia in April 2014 with Perfect Pussy and Yamantaka // Sonic Titan. During the month of October, the group released a series of daily covers of acts including System of a Down and God Is My Co-Pilot. These were subsequently included on a split cassette with the band Slothspring, which Impose Magazine named one of the "Best Splits, Compilations & Collaborations of 2014".
The band came to the attention of SRA Records, which had also issued releases by Flag of Democracy and Trophy Wife and whose owner, BJ Howze, knew the members of HIRS from a previous band. SRA re-released The First 100 Songs in 2014, and released the group's follow-up compilation, The Second 100 Songs, on May 12, 2015. During this time, the group toured in Philadelphia, Australia, and the West Coast, developing a following in both extreme music circles and in the queer punk scene.
While recording a 2015 split with the group Peeple Watchin', the band brought in additional musicians due to Pup recovering from surgery, which led to the group taking a more collaborative approach going forward. Pup and Esem began characterizing HIRS as a collective rather than a traditional band, and by their 2017 EP How to Stop Street Harassment, the lineup had expanded beyond the original duo and they had renamed themselves The HIRS Collective.
In April 2017, the HIRS Collective performed at Get Better Records's 4th annual Get Better Fest alongside Soul Glo, Amanda X, Thin Lips, Pinkwash, and Radiator Hospital, which benefitted the Trans Assistance Project, Youth Emergency Services, and Women Against Abuse. They also appeared on the label's compilation album A Benefit Comp To Help Pay Medical Bills For Those Activists Fighting Against Fascism & Racism alongside Cayetana, Potty Mouth, Screaming Females, Sadie Dupuis, Worriers, Palehound, Mannequin Pussy, and Joe Jack Talcum. Produced in the wake of the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, the album's proceeds benefitted two "Defend C-Ville" fundraising efforts as well as relief efforts for Hurricane Harvey in Houston.
2018–2020: ''Friends. Lovers. Favorites''.
In February 2018, the HIRS Collective announced the release of their first full-length album, entitled Friends. Lovers. Favorites.''. Released April 20 via SRA and Get Better,' the album was noted for its long list of high-profile guest artists, which included Garbage's Shirley Manson, Against Me!'s Laura Jane Grace, Screaming Females' Marissa Paternoster, Soul Glo's Pierce Jordan, RVIVR's Erica Freas, G.L.O.S.S.'s Sadie Switchblade, Limp Wrist's Martin Sorrondeguy, and The Bags' Alice Bag,' a lineup that NPR wrote "truly ties together a long history of queer punk". Pup noted that, in contrast to prior releases that were written and recorded quickly, Friends. Lovers. Favorites. took around four years to assemble. The album was released with the group's out-of-print 2016 EP You Can't Kill Us, as well as a remix project titled You Can't Remix Us featuring mixes by Moor Mother, Kilbourne, and Lilium KobayashiThe album's release coincided with HIRS supporting Screaming Females on tour alongside Thou, as well as a split album with the latter, I Have Become Your Pupil. In June, they recorded a five-song flexi disc EP, Coming Out of the Coffin, for a cover issue of New Noise Magazine, which featured Paternoster, RVIVR's Mattie Jo Canino, War On Women's Shawna Potter, Night Witch's Rosie Richeson, and Thou's Bryan Funck. The following month, they supported Paint It Black at a show in Asbury Park alongside Screaming Females and Bacchae. In 2019, they performed at Empath's album release show in West Philadelphia and with The Body and Stinking Lizaveta at Philadelphia's Kung Fu Necktie venue, and were ranked by Kerrang!'' as one of the "50 Best American Hardcore Bands Right Now".
2020–present: ''The Third 100 Songs'' and ''We're Still Here''
During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the HIRS Collective released on August 26 Covid Covers Vol. 1, a four-song EP composed of covers of Garbage, Björk, and Enkephalin, which featured Paternoster and Dr. Mace. Later in the year, they posted to Instagram looking for vocalists to record unreleased demos.In April 2021, the band announced a new 100 Songs compilation, The Third 100 Songs, alongside the single "Love,". A double album combining new material with songs from past recordings, the album was released on June 25 via Get Better and saw Paternoster, Moor Mother, Funck, Potter, and Canino return as collaborators. In November, they performed with Pissed Jeans in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
In October 2022, the HIRS Collective announced a second full-length album for Get Better, We're Still Here, with an eponymous lead single featuring Shirley Manson and AC Sapphire. A second single, "Sweet Like Candy", was released in December and featured Thou's Bryan Funck, Maha Shami of screamo band NØ MAN, and former Less Than Jake saxophonist Jessica Joy Mills. "Trust the Process", featuring Night Witch's Rosie Richeson and My Chemical Romance's Frank Iero, was released in January, and a music video for "XOXOXOXOXOX" featuring Melt-Banana premiered the following month. The album's other guest artists, totaling 35 over 17 tracks, included a returning Paternoster and Jordan as well as Geoff Rickly, Jeremy Bolm, Damian Abraham, Justin Pearson, Nate Newton, Anthony Green, Dan Yemin, Christina Michelle, Jordan Deyer, Chris Barker, Chip King, Dylan Walker, Derek Zanetti, and Pinkwash. HIRS self-produced the album, recording at Esem's studio as well as Permanent Hearing Damage Studio in Philadelphia.
The album was released digitally on December 25, 2022 with a full physical release via Get Better on March 24, 2023. That same month, the group launched a Spring 2023 tour with a show in Washington, D.C. They were also announced to join Toronto's New Friends Fest in August 2023, alongside Pg. 99, Gulfer, Joie De Vivre, and Stay Inside.
Other projects
Frontwoman Jenna Pup co-founded and co-owns Get Better Records. She has a pop punk solo project, Jenna and the Pups, which has released two albums as well as a 2018 split album with HIRS. In 2021, Pup was featured on a metal cover of Prince's "I Would Die 4 U" by the YouTube channel Two Minutes to Late Night alongside Lamb of God's Randy Blythe, Gorilla Biscuits's Walter Schreifels, Most Precious Blood's Rachel Rosen, and many others.Artistry and beliefs
Musical style
The HIRS Collective are most commonly identified as grindcore, as well as punk rock, hardcore punk, powerviolence, thrash, and metalcore. In the tradition of these genres, their songs are typically abrasive and short in length, with many ranging from less than 30 seconds to under a minute; frontwoman Jenna Pup has said "If something needs to be longer, we’ll make it longer, but it seems we’re able to get our points across quickly." Many songs make use of samples, from sources as varied as Stranger Things, Angelica Ross's Her Story monologue, The Powerpuff Girls, The Crying Game, and an emergency broadcast recorded during the George Floyd protests;' Pup has said that the samples are used to complement her vocals and help explain the song to listeners. Vice described a typical HIRS song in 2015 as: "Sample from a movie. Heavy blastbeats. Fast and pounding guitar riffs. Screamed, mostly unintelligible vocals. Repeat."Pup has disagreed with the group's classification as grindcore, saying, "I understand, there's blastbeats and people want to call it grind and all these other genres, but we've always just agreed that any band that we're ever in is a punk band." NPR's Lars Gotrich similarly wrote that "To simply call HIRS' extreme coalescence 'grindcore' does the band a bit of an injustice", noting that their album Friends. Lovers. Favorites. included "sludgy punk spitballs shot from Iron Lung and His Hero Is Gone, the euphoric digital-grind of Melt-Banana, Nasum's death-metal-grooved grind and hints of Converge's chaotic hardcore roots", as well as Blood Brothers-esque screeching on "Hard to Get". Tiny Mix Tapes described the album as "pop music", comparing its brighter production to that of early 2000s Relapse Records albums, and noted that the group had "moved from the frenetic-burst approach of their countless early EPs" and embraced pop music's "emphasis on movement and emotional response bound together in a joyful, sweaty room". Noel Gardner of The Quietus saw the album as having the vocals of Converge, the guitar and bass of Nails, and the drums of Napalm Death.
For We're Still Here, the group's signature heavy sound incorporated the wide-ranging styles of the album's guest artists, with songs drawing from heavy metal, stadium rock, crust punk, digital hardcore, noise rock, screamo, bubblegum, and cybergrind, while closing track "Bringing Light and Replenishments" features a choir, piano, and cello. Alternative Press described the band's song "Trust the Process" as having "panic chords that recall early Botch and Converge" and Frank Iero's vocals on the song as resembling those of Glassjaw, Antioch Arrow, and Pg.99. The album also paid tribute to the group members' love of hip hop; the music video for "Trust the Process" is an homage to that of the Beastie Boys' 1992 single "So What'cha Want", while the song "Judgement Night" samples Onyx and Biohazard's title track from the 1993 Judgement Night soundtrack and features 808 drops.' Jenna Pup said that she had sought to make "a Hot Topic sampler-meets-hip-hop record where every single song has a feature", and noted at the time of the album's release that she was listening to music by Wu-Tang Clan, Logic, and Bo Burnham.
Punknews.org compared the group's sound and philosophy to that of G.L.O.S.S., although noting that HIRS had a louder, harsher sound and less of a traditional band structure. The group has also drawn sonic comparison to Pig Destroyer, Municipal Waste, and early Liturgy.
Pup and guitarist Esem typically split core songwriting duties, with guest collaborators adding their own touches after the fact. Esem said of this process: "It's almost like there's a framework — the body and the muscles — and then there's like the clothing. And then to make the whole outfit work, so-and-so might put like a cute little hat on." Pup noted that a song on We're Still Here marked the duo's first time collaborating with another songwriter. She also said that, while obtaining features for the album was a relatively simple process, "the mixing and the mastering and putting all the things where they needed to be and figuring out the sequence of the record and how it's going to flow – those were the difficult parts. We did either close to or over sixty hours of mixing – only mixing, not including recording."