Fontanelle

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Fontanelle album cover
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Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 37:08

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Sam Adams

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Sam Adams writes for the Los Angeles Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Onion A.V. Club, Time Out New York, Time Out Chicago, Cowbell and the Philadelphia Ci...more »

01.11.10
An unjustly overlooked riot-punk landmark
1992 | Label: Reprise

The second album by this Minneapolis trio is a scalding blast of primal ferocity that laid the foundation for bands like Bikini Kill, Sleater-Kinney and Bratmobile. Favoring images of broken dolls and the wardrobe of a preteen runaway, singer Kat Bjelland couples the unrestrained emotions of childhood with an adult (and frequently obscene) vocabulary of abuse, betrayal and revenge. Her voice swings from a baby-doll coo to a ragged scream in the course of a single line, augmented by her ragged guitar riffs and the powerful thud of Lori Barbero's drums.

A former bandmate of Courtney Love and L7's Jennifer Finch, Bjelland was drawn into a public feud over whether she or the future Mrs. Cobain was responsible for the "kinderwhore" look, a trumped-up contretemps that played into Love's talent for public self-immolation and may have inspired some of Fontanelle's more violent assaults. Songs like "Bruise Violet" and "Handsome and Gretel" are as oblique as they are inflamed, but their savagery is cathartic regardless of their intended targets.

Lacking the political aims of her riot grrrl descendents, Bjelland is unfailingly, even uncomfortably, personal. "Bluebell" starts off as an empowering anthem, but Bjelland's voice breaks just as the song… read more »

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the soundtrack of my misspent youth

smartyboots

Less metal than L7 and about a million times angrier than Sleater-Kinney, this is a great album to put on when you need to vent your rage in the car (while maintaining a safe driving speed for conditions etc).

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a classic of its era

NoelZevon

Maybe this hasn't aged super well, but it's an essential part of the alt-rock milieu in 1992: grunge, riot grrrl, Minneapolis, etc.

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They Say All Music Guide

Babes in Toyland’s most focused and powerful statement, Fontanelle was vaguely associated with grunge upon its release, and tossed in with the Pacific Northwest-centered riot grrrl movement after the fact. In truth, it lies somewhere in between, its raw punkish fury and metallic grind making it the spiritual kin of L7. Fontanelle isn’t necessarily explicitly feminist, since the glorious noise of rock & roll is viewed as the ultimate empowerment. And that noise is all over Fontanelle — it’s arguably the harshest, most abrasive recording to come out of any part of the riot grrrl camp. Like L7, Babes in Toyland are more about pure sound than songs, but the similarities end there. Instead of just grinding away on simple power chords, Kat Bjelland’s distinctive guitar work is full of intentionally grating dissonance, which is complemented by the jittery rhythm section. Vocally, Bjelland can move from a faux little-girl coo to a bellowing snarl in the space of one line; put together, all of this imbues Fontanelle with a terrifically explosive tension. Fittingly, the closing track features nothing but Bjelland, her guitar, and the sound of breaking glass bottles. Measured by any standard, Fontanelle is a frighteningly primal record, one whose sheer ferocity Babes in Toyland never quite captured this convincingly anywhere else. – Steve Huey

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