The Hot Rock

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (143 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 41:32

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Ack!

joshjellel

I thought music stopped sounding this bad 10 years ago.

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Heartbreakingly beautiful

ktpapa

Although Dig Me Out is my favorite S-K album (for sentimental reasons), I think The Hot Rock is their best album. This is their concept album and I'm always amazed (and grateful) that they did not break up after completing it. Listening to S-K is like reading AS Byatt: passive listeners (readers) need not apply - but the effort is more than rewarded. A must-have.

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Still my favorite SK album

Sten

This is the first SK album where I thought "this is beautiful". It has been years and I still listen to this album on a regular basis; I can't really say that about "the woods" or even "call the doctor"

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S-K slicked up, sounding good

EMUSIC-0205F55C

More polished than their previous releases, still very heartfelt and original. They still rock out, start to introduce Carrie into singing more.

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My favorite from a great band

SwellJoe

Sleater-Kinney never made a less than great album, but this one is my favorite. Deeper and richer than prior albums, but catchier and better produced than later records (The Woods suffers from intolerably bad production...with overcompression to the point of stupidity). "Get Up" is a highlight, but when taken as a whole this album is deeply satisfying.

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They Say All Media Guide

Expectations for Sleater-Kinney’s fourth album were stratospheric, with the raging, tuneful feminist catharsis of Call the Doctor and Dig Me Out having garnered near-universal critical raves and outlandish media hype. Afraid of falling into a predictable rut, though, the band bravely pushed its range of expression into more personal, subdued, and cerebral territory on The Hot Rock. That means the record isn’t quite as immediately satisfying as its two brilliant predecessors, but it does reward those willing to spend time absorbing its nervy introspection and moodiness. Corin Tucker and Carrie Brownstein push relentlessly for more complex interplay, both in their vocal and instrumental work; even the gentlest songs might break into unexpected dissonance or take an angular, off-kilter melodic direction. As such, there’s never an obvious, gut-level anthem that jumps out at the listener in the manner of an “I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone” or “Words and Guitar,” but the intensity simmering under the surface does bubble over often, thanks to the group’s greater use of dynamic shifts. There are fewer protest songs this time around, as most of the lyrics explore failed relationships and personal uncertainty, yet it manages to retain the sense of empowering catharsis that makes the group so compelling. The Hot Rock can invite comparisons to a less jam-oriented Television or a minimalist version of indie compatriots Helium (not to mention the obvious Kim Gordon homage on “Get Up”), but in the end, it stands on its own as Sleater-Kinney’s most progressive and experimental work, as well as their darkest. – Steve Huey

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