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Artist
Born in Evanston, Illinois to a concert pianist mother and musical Dutch father, Kristin Lems learned to sing and play several instruments before settling on folk music. She achieved a national following in venues large and small during the 1970's and 80's, bringing her high energy and musical skills to social movements such as women's rights, racial equality, peace, and ecology. The New Yorker called her "a charmer in the most literal and least artificial sense of the word." She shared the stage with many luminaries during the national campaign for the Equal Rights Amendment and other social causes, including two First Ladies, Captain Jacques Cousteau, Dan Fogelberg, the BoDeans, Pete Seeger, Michele Shocked, Gloria Steinem and many others. While at University of Illinois, she founded the National Women's Music Festival, now located in Madison, Wisconsin, and got to know many performers of women's music. She briefly performed as a pianist on a Midwest tour by "Little Boxes" author Malvina Reynolds and they enjoyed a warm relationship. Lems' songs have gotten praise and attention, especially the satirical song "Mammary Glands," spun regularly on Doctor Demento, The Most Annoying Music Show, and folk syndications. Her song "How Nice" (on In the Out Door, Carolsdatter Productions, 1979) may be the first documented song supporting gay marriage, according to Queer Music Heritage. Her country style song, Farmer, about the rights of farm women, was written up in an Ann

Equality Road

Oh Mama - plus!
The Best of Broadside 1962-1988: Anthems of the American Underground from the Pages of Broadside Magazine
Equality Road: In The Out Door

Imagine That! Songs for Creative Teachers

Upbeat!

The Social Power of Music

Sharing CD plus book
You, Me, and All of the Above

Gay and Straight Together
What Now People?, Vol. 2
The Best Of Broadside 1962-1988