Childbirth’s sophomore album, Women’s Rights, is out now and NPR have the premiere of the incredible new video for “Let’s Be Bad!”

Directed by Laura Jean Gallagher and starring Alicia McDaid, NPR called the single “an explosion of the patriarchy-warped feminine id…”

Catch Childbirth on tour with Lisa Prank in 2016!

01.24.16 – Portland, OR @ Bunk Bar w/ Lisa Prank
01.25.16 – Eugene, OR @ Snug Mansion w/ Lisa Prank
01.26.16 – Eureka, CA @ Shanty w/ Lisa Prank
01.27.16 – Oakland CA, The Sugar Bowl w/ Lisa Prank
01.28.16 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Smell w/ Upset, Lisa Prank
01.29.16 – Santa Cruz, CA @ Cafe Pergolesi w/ Lisa Prank, Burnt Palms – FREE
01.30.16 – Long Beach, CA @ 4th Street Vine w/ Lisa Prank
02.01.16 – San Diego, CA @ Soda Bar w/ Lisa Prank, Ditches
02.02.16 – Tucson, AZ @ Hotel Congress w/ Lisa Prank
02.03.16 – El Centro, CA @ Strangers w/ Lisa Prank
02.05.16 – San Francisco, CA @ Hemlock Tavern w/ Lisa Prank
02.06.16 – Reno, NV @ The Holland Project w/ Lisa Prank

Early praise for Women’s Rights:

“There probably isn’t a funnier punk band than Childbirth. The three-piece Seattle supergroup of sorts is the offspring of Bikini Kill and Broad City…” i-D

“…the trio is punk’s young, brash, feminist face.” NPR

“…on their second “album” pick up the mantle of Funniest Band That Matters from the sadly departed Das Racist.” SPIN naming Women’s Rights the Album of The Week

““The Seattle supergroup revel in all the effluvia that induces so much discreet pearl-clutching…” Pitchfork

“While the band definitely comes from a place of humor and the cover features a rubber gloved hand holding a glass of wine, pinky out no less, it should not take away from the seriousness of the topics they discuss.” IMPOSE

“Biting satire runs through all 13 garage-punk songs on the album, which are filled with as much poignant feminist and sociopolitical material as you’ll find in most bands’ entire back catalogs.” BITCH

“It’s a crude, serrated anthem for ladies who piss in the shower and don’t clean litterboxes.” Stereogum on “Nasty Grrls”

“Wry, lo-fi, and packing more zing than a jar of Colman’s, hell really hath no fury…” NME

“Women’s Rights proves them effortlessly, riotously funny.” Brooklyn Magazine

“…Childbirth songs tend to be laugh-out-loud funny while also getting at some deeper, more empowering truths.” The FADER

“…some serious Slits vibes going on (“Typical Girls,” anyone?).” MTV