Vampire Fitness
Vampire Fitness is the debut extended play by American drag performer Katya Zamolodchikova, released by Producer Entertainment Group on November 13, 2020. The EP features guest appearances by fellow RuPaul's Drag Race contestants Alaska Thunderfuck and Trixie Mattel.
Composition
The EP has five tracks, which Katya has described as "a dark and brooding international musical boat ride through the brain and mouth of famous cross-dresser". The overall sound of the EP is designed to resemble "the soundtrack to a late-night gym for vampires"."Come in Brazil", which features fellow RuPaul's Drag Race contestant Alaska Thunderfuck, has been described as a "divine intercontinental expression of lust as the pair crafts a lush soundscape inspired by incessant fan pleas for drag queens to perform in the song's titular South American nation". The song is about anilingus and has a Portuguese chorus. Katya has said of the song, "These are things I learned not through reading books or watching television programs, but through people screaming them at me all the time."
Katya has described "ГЛАЗ" as "a very experimental song" and said, "At one point we recorded me having an orgasm and then shrieking as I was being violently murdered. Then we were like, 'What if an alien chipmunk were to go through that thing?' It's just fun. But it's a real groovy beat."
"Ding Dong!" features Drag Race alumnae and frequent collaborator Trixie Mattel. Katya has described the song as a "bar mitzvah barn-burner" and said Trixie Mattel was "really cooperative" during the songwriting process. The song was influenced by Eurodance and Svetlana Loboda's song "Boom Boom", and references Jame Gumb, the real name of the fictional character Buffalo Bill in Thomas Harris novel The Silence of the Lambs.
"Ravioli" is about the pasta of the same name and has been described as "a milestone for fluid representation as it touches on five different variations of the bodily liquid, ranging from that of humans to dogs, cats, and even rodents". Katya has said the body fluids are mentioned "mostly for the purposes of rhyming in the songwriting".
The spoken word track "Be Your Own Dentist" has Katya offer advice for removing one's own teeth in "linguistic construction that's not really a song, but not really full slam poetry, either". She has said of the piece: