The Seattle rock scene of the late '80s/early '90s is strewn with musicians whose promising careers were cut short. But one of the most tragic stories was that of
Gits leader
Mia Zapata, who was murdered just as her band seemed to be receiving the attention it deserved.
Zapata was born on August 25, 1965, and grew up in Louisville, KY, where she picked up the guitar and began singing early on. But it wasn't until college that
Zapata became heavily interested in music, as she formed
the Gits in Ohio during 1986. The group, which featured
Zapata on vocals, guitarist
Joe Spleen, bass player
Matthew Fred Dresdner, and drummer
Steve Moriarty, would relocate to Seattle in 1989, just before the "grunge" movement exploded. The group issued its debut album in 1992,
Frenching the Bully, and also managed to tour outside Seattle, including a European tour. But the events on the evening of July 7, 1993, would change everything.
Zapata left the Comet Tavern after hanging out with friends, and was supposedly going to look for a former boyfriend. A few hours later,
Zapata's body was found on a deserted street, roughly two miles from the Comet Tavern -- she had been brutally raped and strangled to death. The album that the group was working on at the time of
Zapata's death,
Enter: The Conquering Chicken, was issued posthumously in 1994. Sadly,
Zapata's murderer could not immediately be found my police. This led to
Gits fan
Joan Jett (who once compared
Zapata's talents to those of
Janis Joplin) fronting the band for a live album, 1995's
Evil Stig, in hopes of bringing additional attention to the case and hopefully solving the murder. In the ensuing years since
Zapata's death, the ex-
Gits members issued remastered versions of their two studio albums, and put together an odds-and-ends collection,
Seafish Louisville, in 2000. Finally, in December 2002, through DNA evidence a Seattle detective was able to locate
Zapata's murderer, who was later sentenced to 36 years in prison. Interest in
Zapata and
the Gits remains high, as a documentary was issued in 2005,
The Gits Movie; an awareness group was formed in
Zapata's memory, Home Alive (www.homealive.org); and
7 Year Bitch issued an album as a tribute to
Zapata, 1994's
Viva Zapata!
–
Greg Prato, Rovi