This video originally appeared in this space ten years and one day ago, but it had since been pulled by YouTube. Now it has returned, so we can restore this post, updated with new details.
Lili-Marlene Premilovich, better known as Lene Lovich, is a true New Wave pioneer and musical treasure. An artist on the legendary Stiff Records label, Lovich blended her extensive art and dance training with Slavic shtick and New Wave inventivness to create a unique body of work. Quite simply, nobody else has a voice like hers.
Born in Detroit, expatriated to Hull, England when she was thirteen, Lovich, before signing to Stiff Records, rubbed shoulders with such random and diverse people as Salvador Dali, Arthur Brown, and French disco star, Cerrone. Her first appearance on record may have been as an audience member on Chuck Berry’s sing-along live recording of “My Ding-A-Ling.”
It was when Lovich started releasing music made with her musical and life partner, Les Chappell, that ears perked up around the world. With a five-octave range and a voice that could range from delicate and operatic to bombastic and powerful, Lovich made a huge mark on the outsider music scene.
It’s been twenty years since her last new studio album(my review of Shadows and Dust, written for the Gazz.com‘s now-defunct “New Sounds” blog will be restored to PopCult soon), but she has formed a new touring band and was the opening act on the DEVO/B 52s tour last year, which will continue with select dates in 2026 in Europe. She’s also formed a label to reissue her back catalog. You can learn more about that at her website and on her Bandcamp page. The above concert was recorded at Studio 54 in 1981, and features an embryonic Thomas Dolby as one of her keyboardists.














It’s the last day of a year that is best forgotten, and your humble blogger has still not re-written the boilerplate for this feature, so with a focus on events happening on New Year’s Eve, here’s some cool STUFF TO DO all over the state, noted as briefly as possible.




Above you see “Popeye Shirt/Yankees Cap,” a new video edition of Radio Free Charleston, and a special show devoted to Lee Harrah, who passed away on Thanksgiving night.
Plus, he was featured in the unfinished RFC movie, Jazz From Hell, and would turn up on camera several times to plug upcoming shows, or toss in a throw-away gag.
If you want an indication of how important Lee was to Radio Free Charleston and PopCult, just type his name into our search window. It brings up 22 pages of results.
We shot the host segments at Coonskin Park, outside the bandshell where you will see Lee performing a few songs in this show.




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