Becca Albee is an American musician and visual artist who was a founding member of the band Excuse 17 which was an early pioneer in the Riot grrrl and Third-wave feminism movements.
Quiet Riot | riot | Chicago Race Riot of 1919 | White Riot | I Predict a Riot | Ra Ra Riot | Lager Beer Riot | Riot Act | Pussy Riot | New York City Police Riot | Riot on Sunset Strip | Riot Grrrl | riot Grrrl | riot control | Riot | race riot | Baltimore riot of 1861 | Astor Place Riot | 1985 Kenilworth Road riot | ''Zoot Suit Riot: The Swingin' Hits of the Cherry Poppin' Daddies'' | Urban Chaos: Riot Response | Tulsa race riot | There's Gonna Be a God Damn Riot in Here | Teen Age Riot | Sydney Riot of 1879 | Sir George Williams Computer Riot | Riot grrrl | Riot/Clone | Riot City Blues | Riot (band) |
Babydolls became a prominent part of the "kinderwhore" look during the early-to-mid-1990s due to the popularity of riot Grrrl and grunge performers like Courtney Love and Kat Bjelland.
In 1994, Cañedo and fellow Rice member Rop Vasquez moved to the Bay Area and started The PeeChees with Molly Neuman of the Riot Grrrl band Bratmobile and her then-boyfriend Christopher Appelgren, an employee at Lookout!
The original line-up consisted of singers/guitarists Tobi Vail, Kathi Wilcox, and Billy Karren (all of whom were previously part of the legendary Riot Grrrl band Bikini Kill), and Bratmobile drummer Molly Neuman.
From their first shows, Bratmobile were considered an exciting and important addition to the fertile early '90s NorthWest scene. From 1991 to 1994 Bratmobile released a classic album, Pottymouth, and an EP, The Real Janelle, on Kill Rock Stars, as well as The Peel Session recording before the intense media scrutiny and inner pressures of the Riot Grrrl movement hastened the band's breakup (on stage) in 1994.