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Sleater-Kinney

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (314 ratings)
  • Formed: Olympia, WA
  • Years Active: 1990s, 2000s
  • Website: http://www.sleater-kinney.com/
  • Recent Activity: 07.20.09 Anyone going to the Jarvis Cocker show on the 30th??
  • Sleater-Kinney

  • Sleater-Kinney

  • Sleater-Kinney

Albums

Biography All Music Guide

All Music Guide:

Formed in 1994 from the ashes of Heavens to Betsy and Excuse 17, a pair of groups that rode the first wave of the riot grrrl movement, Sleater- Kinney became one of the most important feminist punk rock bands of the '90s. Singer/guitarists Corin Tucker and Carrie Brownstein first met in 1992, when Tucker was one half of the duo Heavens to Betsy. Brownstein, a classically trained pianist, was so inspired by Tucker and other grrrl musicians like Bikini Kill and Bratmobile (not coincidentally Tucker's own influences) that she formed her own band, Excuse 17, a year later. Sleater-Kinney, which earned its name from a local freeway off-ramp, initially began as Tucker and Brownstein's side project. Things changed in late 1994, though, when Australia-born Lora MacFarlane signed on as the group's first permanent drummer. Over the course of the following two weeks, the trio recorded its self-titled 1995 debut for Chainsaw, a label run by Team Dresch bassist Donna Dresch.

Upon its release, the album earned widespread acclaim for its visceral intensity as well as the group's passionate vocals, intricate melodies, and provocative, politically charged lyrics. With 1996's Call the Doctor, Sleater-Kinney garnered even greater media exposure and critical applause on the strength of their incisive rants against gender inequity, consumerism, and indie rock's male-dominated hierarchy. Their Kill Rock Stars label debut, Dig Me Out, recorded with new drummer Janet Weiss from Quasi, followed in 1997, and was again among the most acclaimed releases of its season; The Hot Rock appeared two years later, and in the spring of 2000, Sleater-Kinney resurfaced with All Hands on the Bad One.

In August 2002, the group returned with its most musically accomplished record to date, One Beat. Sleater-Kinney upped the ante again with 2005's The Woods, a powerful, inventive album that was released by Sub Pop, produced by Dave Fridmann, and inspired by, among other things, the political climate of the mid-2000s and the freedom of the improvised parts of their gigs supporting Pearl Jam on a 2003 tour. During the summer of 2006, though, the group announced they were going on an "indefinite hiatus" after finishing the remaining dates on their tour. Brownstein went on to create the Spells with Mary Timony, and Corin Tucker launched a solo career in 2010.

eMusic Features

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Icon: Sleater-Kinney

By Nick Marino, eMusic Contributor

From their formation in Washington State in the mid-1990s to their amicable split in 2006, Sleater-Kinney were more than just the standard-bearers of riot grrrl, transcending both gender and the signature post-grunge sound of the Pacific Northwest. They were what Greil Marcus called them: America's greatest rock band. And it's fitting that they ascended right alongside the moaning, dude-rock format known as Alternative — Sleater-Kinney was the alternative to Alternative, a fiercely independent power trio… more »

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Who Are…The Coathangers

By Caryn Ganz, eMusic Contributor

The Coathangers couldn't play their instruments when they formed on a whim five years ago but now — somewhat to the dismay of singer/guitarist Julia Kugel — they're getting sort of awesome. "We're still kind of shitty. I tell myself that to keep the pressure off," she says on a break from her day job at a prom and bridal dress store. On their third disc, Larceny & Old Lace, the Atlanta quartet polish up… more »

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Who Are…Screaming Females

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

The bartender at Knitting Factory Brooklyn doesn't believe that Marissa Paternoster is 24. She laughs at first, until it becomes clear that he's not pulling her leg but is, in fact, skeptical, despite the insistence of both her and her bandmates. When she finally produces her New Jersey driver's license, his eyes widen. "Wow, OK! You look so young! I guess you must be eating your vegetables." She gets that a lot. Indeed, one of the… more »

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Who Are…Grass Widow

By Caryn Ganz, eMusic Contributor

"A major theme in the way we work is we don't have a frontperson and we really do everything together," says Hannah Lew, "so I'm going to do my best to represent all of us." She makes a good point: Grass Widow's sound is completely dependent on interlocking voices and roaming guitar and bass lines that zip past and into each other, generating tense pockets of dissonance and beautiful moments of resolution. The group's second… more »

Activity

  • 07.20.09 Anyone going to the Jarvis Cocker show on the 30th??
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