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  2. Pussy Riot - Wikipedia

    • Pussy Riot is a Russian feminist protest and performance art group based in Moscow that became popular for its provocative punk rock music which later turned into a more accessible style. Founded in the fall of 2011 by 22 year old Nadya Tolokonnikova, it has had a membership of approximately 11 women. The group staged unauthorized, provocative gue… See more

    Origins

    Pussy Riot is a collective formed in late 2011 in response to national politics in Russia. Its name, consisting of two … See more

    Membership

    The group was started by 15 women, several of whom were previously involved in Voina. While there is no official line-up and the band says anyone can join, it usually has between 10 and 20 members. The memb… See more

    Image result for Pussy Riot. Size: 308 x 200. Source: www.newsweek.com
    OriginMoscow, Russia
    GenresProtest music · pop · punk rock (early) · hardcore punk (early) · Oi! (early)
    Years active2011–present
    MembersNadya Tolokonnikova · Yekaterina Samutsevich · Pyotr Verzilov · Taisiya Krugovykh · Vasily Bogatov · Diana Burkot · Maria Alyokhina · Lusine Dzhanyan · Alexey Knedlyakovsky · Rita Flores · Veronika Nikulshina · Olga Kurachyova · Olga Pakhtusova · Olga Borisova · Alexander Sofeyev · Lucy Shtein
    Musical and performance style

    In an interview with Gazeta.ru, a band member described their two-minute concerts as performance art, creating images of "pure protest, saying: super heroes in balaclavas and acid bright tights seize publi… See more

    Costumes

    Costumes usually consisted of brightly colored dresses and tights, even in bitterly cold weather, with faces hidden by balaclavas. During interviews, band members used nicknames such as "Balaclava"… See more

    Ideology

    In an email interview with The St. Petersburg Times, the group explained their political positions further, saying that members' perspectives ranged from anarchist to liberal left, but that all were united by fe… See more

    Songs and videos

    Pussy Riot released seven songs and five videos. An Associated Press reporter described them as "badly recorded, based on simple riffs and scream-like singing" and stated that critics had dismissed them as "amateur, p… See more

    Legal problems

    On February 26, 2012 a criminal case was opened against the band members who had participated in the Moscow cathedral performance on February 21. On March 3, Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, … See more

     
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  1. Nadya Tolokonnikova: Pussy Riot's resistance against Putin - NPR

     
  2. Leader of Pussy Riot Band Escapes Russia, With Help From …

  3. Nadya Tolokonnikova - Wikipedia

  4. Pussy Riot: The story so far - BBC News

  5. Pussy Riot’s Tolokonnikova: ‘Russia wants me poisoned, dead, …

  6. Pussy Riot's powerful message to Vladimir Putin - TED

  7. Nadya Tolokonnikova | Speaker - TED

  8. Pussy Riot: 100 Women of the Year - TIME

  9. Nadya Tolokonnikova - Pussy Riot

  10. Pussy Riot on the Run From Vladimir Putin - New York Magazine

  11. Pussy Riot - Police State (Official Music Video) - YouTube

  12. 'It's Not A Band, It's A Movement' — Pussy Riot Rages On

  13. Pussy Riot — Википедия

  14. Russian protest art group Pussy Riot wins Woody Guthrie Prize

  15. Pussy Riot talks 'Matriarchy Now' - NPR

  16. A Party Crawl With Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova - The New …

  17. Pussy Riot Announces U.S. Fall Tour: See the Dates - Rolling Stone

  18. Watching Putin Burn with Pussy Riot - The New Yorker

  19. Something Wicked This Way Comes: Pussy Riot - SPIN

  20. Pussy Riot – Wikipedia

  21. Il ritorno delle Pussy Riot, parla la fondatrice Maria Aljochina: “La ...

  22. Russia’s Pussy Riot protests Ukraine war on North American tour …

  23. Diana Burkot — Wikipédia

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