Lingua Ignota (musician)

Kristin Hayter (born 1986) is an American classically trained multi-instrumentalist originally from Southern California and currently residing in Rhode Island. In 2017, she self-released two albums—Let the Evil of His Own Lips Cover Him and All Bitches Die—under the moniker Lingua Ignota (Latin for "unknown language"). Through word-of-mouth, Hayter's music caught the attention of Profound Lore Records, who re-issued All Bitches Die and released her third studio album Caligula in 2019. She draws on her experiences as a survivor of domestic violence for musical and lyrical inspiration, and describes her music as "survivor anthems".[1]

Kristin Hayter
Musician Kristin Hayter performing live under the name Lingua Ignota at Roadburn Festival 2019.
Background information
Birth nameKristin Hayter
Born1986 (age 3334)
Del Mar, California, U.S.
OriginLincoln, Rhode Island, U.S.
Genres
Instruments
Years active2017–present
LabelsProfound Lore
Associated actsSightless Pit
Websitelinguaignota.net

Early life

Hayter was born in Del Mar, California in 1986.[2][3] She felt like she didn't fit in in Southern California and was often bullied.[3] About her hometown, she said: "I think of [Del Mar] as a sort of hell in the way that I was so different than everyone else when I was growing up and couldn't situate myself, couldn't find myself there at all."[2] Hayter was raised Catholic and studied in parochial school until the sixth grade, when she entered the public school system.[2] A teacher noticed her voice's natural vibrato when she was eight years old, which lead to her becoming a church cantor, singing every week at her local church and beginning classical voice training lessons.[3] Despite a religious upbringing, she considered herself to be an atheist for several years starting as a teenager.[4] However in 2019, Hayter became interested in Roman Catholicism (iconography).[1]

Hayter studied interdisciplinary creative arts at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts, and earned a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degree in Literary Art from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island in 2016.[1][2][3] She is also classically trained in piano and voice.[1] Her undergraduate thesis, titled Architect and Vapor, deconstructed Johann Sebastian Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier, and centered its poetry component around anorexia, a disorder Hayter herself endured for over a decade.[2] For her MFA thesis, titled Burn Everything Trust No One Kill Yourself, she created a 10,000-page manuscript (a page count selected because it was approximately Hayter's weight in paper[3]) linking real-world examples of misogyny in music with her own personal life using a Markov chain. In her own words, it was composed of "lyrics, message board posts, and liner notes from subgenres of extreme music that mythologize misogyny, […] [and] court papers, audio recordings, and police filings from my own experiences of violence."[2] In addition to the manuscript, her interdisciplinary performance included music and a black-and-white video projection with footage of serial killer Aileen Wuornos and burning buildings.[3]

Kristin Hayter is a survivor of domestic violence and has been in several relationships that were "physically, emotionally, sexually, or psychologically" abusive.[2] Her most abusive relationship lasted five years[2] with "a very powerful noise musician in the Providence community".[1] While the events of her abuse were traumatizing, she says what came after was worse, elaborating: "He was arrested for assaulting me and some of my most traumatic memories are from being re-victimized by police, by my school, and by the court. The system is so fucking broken for victims of sexual and domestic violence."[2]

Music career

An illustration of Hildegard of Bingen receiving a vision from God and sketching on a wax tablet. The concept of God speaking through someone inspired Kristin Hayter's moniker "Lingua Ignota".

In high school, Hayter played in various metal garage bands with her friends.[3]

Kristin Hayter began releasing music in 2017 under the moniker "Lingua Ignota". Literally translating to "unknown language", the name is derived from the sacred constructed language Lingua Ignota created by the German Christian mystic Hildegard of Bingen.[2] She chose this name because of her interest in glossolalia or ecstatic language, relating it the idea of a "possession" or God speaking through a body.[4] She said, "I'm trying to construct something that speaks the unspeakable, and so I use this sort of amalgam of musical devices to make my own sonic language which is meant to also be ecstatic or outside the self."[5] Hayter released her first album under the name Lingua Ignota on Valentine's Day 2017. Titled Let the Evil of His Own Lips Cover Him, 100% of the proceeds were donated to the National Network to End Domestic Violence not-for-profit organization and combined original compositions used in her MFA thesis Burn Everything Trust No One Kill Yourself with a cover of the Inner Circle song "Bad Boys", famous for its use as the opening theme on Cops.[2] There are about 10 songs from Hayter's Burn Everything Trust No One Kill Yourself thesis performance that may be released one day.[4]

Four months later, Lingua Ignota self-released its second album All Bitches Die through Bandcamp in June 2017. The album consists of four "murder ballads" loosely inspired by Angela Browne's 1987 book When Battered Women Kill, a study of victim violence.[3][4][6] Hayter was not expecting to tour in support of the album and only expected to sell a few copies,[7] however, word-of-mouth buzz surrounding All Bitches Die eventually made its way to Chris Bruni, owner of the Canadian extreme metal independent label Profound Lore Records.[1] Profound Lore reissued All Bitches Die with updated artwork and a bonus track in 2018. Hayter said of the label: "Lingua Ignota is not a neutral project by any means and I've been asked to tone it down in various capacities since I've started. But Profound Lore only encouraged me to remain uncompromising and brutal, and that was ultimately what sold me to them as a label. I feel like they really believe in my work and won't ask me to dilute it to make it more fashionable or palatable."[7] Lingua Ignota opened for experimental metal band The Body during their North American June–August 2018 tour, who Hayter credits for welcoming her into the experimental metal scene.[1] The Body was touring in support of I Have Fought Against It, but I Can't Any Longer., an album that features guest vocals from Hayter.[8]

After All Bitches Die, Lingua Ignota began working on a full-length album of cover songs that were reinterpreted in her unique music style, often with re-written lyrics. Songs from this session included Eminem's "Kim" and Foreigner's "I Want to Know What Love Is".[2] A split EP with The Rita was released in 2019 that featured covers of Dolly Parton's "Jolene" and Scott Walker's "The Girls from the Streets". With the covers album still unannounced, Lingua Ignota released its third studio album Caligula through Profound Lore on July 19, 2019.[5] The album is about one of her abusive relationships, specifically about "speaking out about abuse and feeling invalidated, and people who I thought were my friends no longer being my friends, and the crushing experience of how that feels."[1]

A few years prior to its announcement, Hayter formed the supergroup side project Sightless Pit with Dylan Walker (Full of Hell) and Lee Buford (the Body). The noise project released its debut album Grave of a Dog on February 21, 2020 through Trill Jockey.[9][10]

On March 25, Lingua Ignota released a single titled "O Ruthless Great Divine Director," which Hayter states "embodies the hypocrite and the false prophet."[11]

Musical style and influences

Lingua Ignota's two 2017 releases, Let the Evil of His Own Lips Cover Him and All Bitches Die, have been described using a wide range of musical genres, including Baroque,[7][12] black metal,[5][12] classical,[4][6][7] death industrial,[2][12] doom metal,[4] electronic,[4] extreme metal,[1][2] experimental,[4] folk,[1][12] harsh noise wall,[6] metal,[1] industrial,[1][4][7] neoclassical,[2] noise,[5][6][7] opera,[5] power electronics[6][12] and spiritual.[1] Her third studio album Caligula features less industrial and electronic influences.[5][13] Hayter herself admits she has difficulty describing her musical genre.[2]

Generally, Hayter draws inspiration from people, "who've been through hard shit and keep going. The people who are still strong even if they're struggling to have their voices heard."[4] She first became interested in rock music when she found a cassette tape copy of Nirvana's 1991 album Nevermind left behind by her cousin, and became "obsessed" with Kurt Cobain. She said, "I became enamored of [Cobain] and wanted to be him, wanted to make music like him, wanted to have a voice like him."[2] The interest in Cobain was what inspired her to take singing lessons in grade school.[3] By high school, her music tastes evolved into underground, extreme and complex artists including grindcore band The Locust, extreme metal band Cattle Decapitation, free jazz founder Ornette Coleman, experimental noise musician Aaron Dilloway, and avant-garde musician John Zorn.[3] Both Trent Reznor and Nine Inch Nails had an early influence, and she estimates that she likely saw the music video for "Closer" when she was about 12 years old. She said of Nine Inch Nails seminal 1994 second album: "The Downward Spiral was a gateway into industrial music and then noise and experimental. It's not too difficult to get from Nine Inch Nails to Neubauten to Merzbow."[14] She's particularly influenced by vocalists, including German musician Blixa Bargeld (Einstürzende Neubauten, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds), German new wave vocalist Klaus Nomi, American composer Cathy Berberian, Hungarian extreme metal vocalist Attila Csihar and Greek-American avant-garde musician Diamanda Galás.[4] Hayter has also studied traditional Bulgarian polyphony.[15]

Hayter is a survivor of domestic violence and draws from her experiences to write what she describes as "survivor anthems".[1] After reading several books about surviving abuse, she noticed common themes and advice around gentleness, self-love and adopting new hobbies as coping mechanisms, but she felt this "enforced patriarchal models of civilized femininity".[2] Instead, her music seeks to explore other avenues of survivorhood, such as rage and despair, and her lyrical approach to topics of violence are emotionally raw (from "All Bitches Die": "he beat me till my teeth were scattered / like pearls across the red, red ground").[1] Hayter's interest in performing extreme music, in part, stems from her relationship with her abuser. He was a prominent figure in the Providence noise music scene, and his abusive behavior changed how she relates to the genre.[1][2] He also wouldn't allow her to perform music, so as soon as he was gone, Hayter used Lingua Ignota to process what she went through.[1][4] Though her music is empowering for women, Hayter has said her work intentionally shares nothing in common with feminism or feminist theory.[4] Instead, she's reclaiming what she describes as a "phallocentric"[1] genre for the benefit of other survivors of abuse. She said:

"I don't find most of the graphic depictions of (forgive my language here) 'sending this dumb slut back to hell hearing her final screams as my throbbing erection pounds her maggot-filled cunt' upsetting to my feminine sensibilities, most of it isn't even well-executed enough to be taken seriously, I just find that it occupies this weird space of being simultaneously very loaded and totally obsolete, especially when we consider that none of these guys are actually sodomizing female corpses in their free time. So my thoughts were to flip this whole paradigm and to try to make it meaningful, to reframe extreme imagery for survivors of violence, upon whom very dark shit has actually been visited, and who may have been confronted with the possibility of committing homicide in self-defense to survive an attack."[4]

Lingua Ignota is known for its energetic and expressionistic live performances. A typical stage setup includes a keyboard with a "believe survivors" sticker and a video projection of violent, beautiful and biblical imagery.[2] Hayter delivers vocals "that oscillate between the venomous and aggressive and the heartbreakingly mournful"[3] and loses control of her body on stage, often hitting herself with objects and leaving bruises.[4] Hayter describes her live performance as an "exorcism"[2][4] in that, similar to her interest in Hildegard of Bingen's "Lingua Ignota" language given to her by God, she feels like a "conduit"[1] with her performance flowing through her.[2] She says, "I very much try to get to a place where [the performance] no longer feels like me, and where something else is moving through me, whether that's my abuser, or god, or something that can create a voice I wouldn't have myself."[2] Repeatedly performing music about violence and surviving abusers can be emotionally taxing, but Hayter says she is motivated when other survivors tell her how much her music deeply resonates with them.[1] Alexis Marshall of the noise rock band Daughters described Lingua Ignota's music as "truly important", and that, "her live sets are ripe with vulnerability and compassion – terror and anxiety. Her commitment to art and the emotional and physical cost her own performances demand of her, is precisely how it should be done."[16]

Discography

Studio albums

  • Let the Evil of His Own Lips Cover Him (2017, self-released)
  • All Bitches Die (2017, self-released)
  • Caligula (2019, Profound Lore)

EPs

  • Commissioned (split with The Rita) (2019, Total Black)

As guest

Year Artist Album Track(s)
2018 The Body I Have Fought Against It, but I Can't Any Longer. "Can Carry No Weight" "Nothing Stirs" "An Urn" "Sickly Heart of Sand"
2019 Full of Hell Weeping Choir "Armory of Obsidian Glass"
2019 The Body Remixed "Hallow Hollow" (remixed by Lingua Ignota)
2019 Street Sects The Needle Drop "Fourteen Frames"[17]
gollark: There were frequently biter incursions (peaceful mode, but we deployed MUCH artillery) so I frequently had to send in spiderbots to pacify them.
gollark: It's not, because the bots take ages to go anywhere.
gollark: Something like 150k, although only 40k or so were ever active at most.
gollark: Well, there are enough robots that the machines keep fed.
gollark: No trains, no belts, no pipes, *everything* went over robots, with no efficient buffer chests and vast quantities of bots flying everywhere for everything.

References

  1. Kalev, Maya (April 18, 2019). "'This has been fantastic revenge': metal musician Lingua Ignota on surviving abuse". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  2. Donato, Claire (June 8, 2017). "Lingua Ignota's Liturgical Noise Is a Celebration of Obliteration". Vice. Vice Media. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  3. Low, Jaime (August 8, 2017). "On Her Striking New Album, Lingua Ignota Soars". The Village Voice. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  4. Taylor, Teddie (September 7, 2017). "Lingua Ignota (aka Kristin Hayter) talked to us about sampling Aileen Wuornos, redefining 'heavy' & the humans who inspire her art". Music & Riots Magazine. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  5. Doran, John (May 20, 2019). "Lingua Ignota Announces New LP". The Quietus. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  6. Armstrong, Aimee (January 25, 2018). "Fire, Prayer & Curses: Lingua Ignota Interviewed". The Quietus. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  7. Passaro, Fred (April 18, 2018). "5 Artists You Need to Know: April 2018". Revolver. Project M Group. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  8. Sacher, Andrew (April 2, 2018). "The Body streaming two songs off new LP ft. Lingua Ignota, touring with her". BrooklynVegan. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  9. Gregory, Allie (January 7, 2020). "Lingua Ignota, Full of Hell and the Body Members Join Forces as Sightless Pit". Exclaim!. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
  10. Yoo, Noah (January 7, 2020). "Lingua Ignota, the Body, and Full of Hell Members Form New Band Sightless Pit". Pitchfork. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
  11. "Lingua Ignota Shares New Song "O Ruthless Great Divine Director"". Pitchfork. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
  12. Mandel, Leah (May 14, 2019). "15 Noise and Experimental Artists You Should Really Know About". Flood Magazine. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  13. "Lingua Ignota Announces Sophomore LP". BroadwayWorld. May 20, 2019. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  14. Revolver Staff (March 8, 2019). "Nine Inch Nails 'Downward Spiral': Lingua Ignota on Album's Sacred, Profane Motifs". Revolver. Project M Group. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  15. "Alexander Dupuis and Kristin Hayter". Connecticut College. Retrieved June 28, 2019.
  16. Revolver Staff (December 17, 2018). "Best of 2018: Daughters' Alexis Marshall Picks Favorite Music, Movies, Sports Event". Revolver. Project M Group. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  17. Sacher, Andrew (October 17, 2019). "Street Sects team with Lingua Ignota & Daughters' Nick Sadler for new song (watch the video)". BrooklynVegan. Retrieved October 17, 2019.
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