Formed in 1994 in Olympia, Washington by Corin Tucker from Heavens to Betsy and Carrie Brownstein of Excuse 17, this 3-woman band's disaffected indie-rock worms its way into this 1996 release with its catchy, yet mishappy harmonies and crunchy, stick-in-the-molars power chords. One of the best of the no-guff-taking grrrl sound, their guitar/drums churn away under bluffing bravado vocals, wailingly sweet. As they put it, 'I'm not waiting till I grow up to be a woman'. Turn it up until your speakers' distortion kicks in... it hurts so good.
Call the Doctor is the second album by the punk band Sleater-Kinney. It was released on March 25, 1996 on Chainsaw.
Allmusic praised the album, saying: "Forget the riot grrrl implications inherent in the trio's music — Call the Doctor is pure, undiluted punk, and it's brilliant."
Personnel
* Corin Tucker - vocals, guitar, drums (on "Heart Attack")
* Carrie Brownstein (credited as "Carrie Kinney") - guitar, vocals (on "Call the Doctor", "Stay Where You Are", "I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone" and "Heart Attack")
* Lora Macfarlane - drums, vocals (on "Hubcap", "Stay Where You Are", "Taste Test"), guitar (on "Heart Attack")
Macfarlane was incorrectly credited with vocals on "Taking Me Home" (she actually sang on "Taste Test")
Category:1996 albums
Category:Sleater-Kinney albums
This text has been derived from Call the Doctor on Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0Artist/Band Information
Sleater-Kinney was an indie rock band from Portland, Oregon in the United States, originally formed in Olympia, Washington in 1994, and disbanded in 2006. The group's name is derived from Sleater Kinney Road, Interstate 5 off ramp #108 in Lacey, Washington, the location of one of their early practice spaces. They formed in and were a vital part of the riot grrrl and punk scenes in the Pacific Northwest. The band was known for its feminist politics.
History
Sleater-Kinney was founded by Corin Tucker and Carrie Brownstein. Tucker was formerly in the influential riot grrrl band Heavens to Betsy, while Brownstein was formerly in the queercore band Excuse 17. They often played at gigs together and formed Sleater-Kinney as a side-project from their respective bands. When Heavens to Betsy and Excuse 17 disbanded, Sleater-Kinney became their primary focus. Janet Weiss (of Quasi) was the band's primary drummer, though Sleater-Kinney has had other drummers throughout its existence, including Lora Macfarlane, Misty Farrell, and Toni Gogin.
Upon Tucker's graduation from Evergreen State College (where Brownstein remained a student for three more years), she and then-girlfriend Brownstein took a trip to Australia in early 1994. Their last day there, they stayed up all night recording what would become their self-titled debut album. It was released the following spring. They followed this with Call the Doctor (1996) and Dig Me Out (1997), and became critical darlings as a result.
Their next few albums pushed the band towards mainstream listeners, culminating in 2002's One Beat. The group opened for Pearl Jam at many North American shows beginning in 2003, and the band cited the experience of playing to large arenas as part of the inspiration and motivation for the music found on their last album, The Woods. The Woods was released in 2005, and was a departure from the sound of their previous albums. In its place, The Woods featured a denser, heavily distorted sound that drew on classic rock as its inspiration. In 2006 they helped to curate an edition of the British All Tomorrow's Parties festival.
Renowned critics Greil Marcus and Robert Christgau have each praised Sleater-Kinney as one of the essential rock groups of the late 90s/early 00s. Marcus named Sleater-Kinney America's best rock band in a 2001 issue of Time magazine.
Musical style
Sleater-Kinney's musical style sprang from and was rooted in Olympia, Washington's fertile punk and independent rock scenes of the early- to mid-1990s, forming around the last years of the riot grrrl movement, and with Tucker and Brownstein coming from veteran acts from the beginning of the movement. Their sound incorporates personal and social themes along with stripped-down music that was influenced by punk and the free-thinking ideals of 1980s-1990s alternative and indie rock. They experimented with this foundation by bringing in different instruments and arrangements. Sleater-Kinney have named influences such as Bikini Kill, Mecca Normal, Bratmobile, Throwing Muses and Sonic Youth. Corin Tucker's emotional vocals and the band's lyrics alternate between personal and political topics, rebelling against war, traditionalism, gender roles and consumerism from feminist and progressive perspectives. Sleater-Kinney contributed the protest song "Off With Your Head" to NOFX leader Fat Mike's Rock Against Bush compilation.
In a documentary about riot grrrl, Tucker revealed that her vocal style has always been intentionally harsh to suit the band's message and to demand focus from the listener,http and her vocals have been described by Allmusic critic Heather Phares as "love-them-or-hate-them vocals." At the beginning of the band's career, lead vocals were often performed by Tucker, though as the band progressed, Brownstein began to appear more as a vocalist. Both Brownstein and Tucker played guitar, with Brownstein usually handling lead and Tucker performing rhythm. Although Sleater-Kinney had no bass player, both Tucker and Brownstein tuned their guitars one and a half steps down ("C# tuning"), and Tucker's tone and style enabled her to fill the same role as a bass guitar.
Hiatus
On June 27, 2006, the band announced an indefinite hiatus, stating there were "no plans for future tours or recordings". Sleater-Kinney's last major public show was at the 2006 Lollapalooza music festival. They did not play an encore. The band's last appearance was at the Crystal Ballroom in Portland, Oregon, on August 12, 2006. No explanation for the hiatus was given, but it is widely believed to be because Tucker wanted to concentrate on raising her child. In a May 2005 interview, Janet Weiss stated, "Corin's hurdles were my biggest hurdles. Her pulling away from the band was the hardest thing for me as far as writing music. She said in a recent interview that she thinks about quitting every week - and that's heavy for me, 'cause this is all I want to do."
Tucker had previously hinted in interviews that Sleater-Kinney might become inactive soon. In a 2005 interview with Bust magazine, she was asked how she would handle touring when her young son started school, and she replied that she didn't even know if they would make another record after The Woods.http
In an interview from March 17, 2010, Carrie Brownstein claimed that Sleater-Kinney may reunite and release an album "sometime in the next five years."
Collaborations
In 1998, the band recorded "Big Big Lights", the first split single (with Cypher in the Snow) in the series of recordings dealing with women's self-defense entitled Free to Fight, and released on Candy Ass Records.
In 1999, Carrie Brownstein recorded a four-song vinyl EP titled The Age of Backwards with Mary Timony in a duo called The Spells.
In 2000, all three members of Sleater-Kinney assisted Robert Forster and Grant McLennan of the now-defunct Brisbane indie band The Go-Betweens to record the album The Friends of Rachel Worth.
In 2003, the band recorded the song "Angry Inch" with Fred Schneider of The B-52's for the Hedwig and the Angry Inch charity tribute album Wig in a Box. Proceeds for the album went to the Harvey Milk School, a school for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth.
Along with performing in Sleater-Kinney, Tucker also was a member of the band Cadallaca with Sarah Dougher and sts (both formerly of The Lookers). In a recent interview, however, she told the public "not to hold breath for a new Cadallaca album." Tucker also featured on Eddie Vedder's (Pearl Jam) solo album Into the Wild, where she performed vocals on the track "Hard Sun" along with Vedder. In 2008, Tucker collaborated again with Vedder on a cover of John Doe's The Golden State on Doe's Golden State EP.
Discography
Albums
*Sleater-Kinney (1995) – Chainsaw Records
*Call the Doctor (1996) – Chainsaw Records
*Dig Me Out (1997) – Kill Rock Stars
*The Hot Rock (1999) – Kill Rock Stars
*All Hands on the Bad One (2000) – Kill Rock Stars
*One Beat (2002) – Kill Rock Stars
*The Woods (2005) – Sub Pop Records
Singles
*"You Ain't It/Surf Song" (1994) – Villa Villakula Records
*"One More Hour" (1997) – Matador Records
*"Little Babies" (1997) – Matador Records
*"A Quarter To Three" (1997) – Matador Records
*"Big Big Lights" (1998) – Candy Ass Records
*"Get Up" (1999) – Kill Rock Stars
*"You're No Rock 'n' Roll Fun" (2000) – Kill Rock Stars
*"Entertain" (2005) – Sub Pop
*"Jumpers" (2005) – Sub Pop
Compilation album tracks
*"Big Big Lights" on Free To Fight 7" split 45 (1996) – Candyass/Chainsaw (USA, CDR028)
*"Dance Song '97" (live) on Yoyo A Gogo 1997 (1997) – Yoyo (USA, YOYO10)
*"I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone" on All Over Me (soundtrack, 1997) – n/a (USA, TVT8110-2)
*"Banned From the End of the World" on Everything Is Nice (1999) – Matador (USA, OLE400)
*"Banned From the End of the World" (live) on Yoyo A Gogo 1999 (1999) – Yoyo (USA, YOYO18)
*"The Ballad of a Ladyman" on Turbo's Tunes (2000) – Kill Rock Stars (USA, KRS319)
*"The End of You" on After the Fair: 21st Century Women (2000) – K-Tel (USA)
*"Maraca" on Group (soundtrack, 2000) – Yoyo (USA, YOYO21)
*"What If I Was Right?" on Jackson's Jukebox (2000) – Kill Rock Stars (USA, KRS354).
*"Off With Your Head" on Future Soundtrack for America (2002) – Barsuk (USA, BARK37)
*"Combat Rock" on Peace Not War (Vol. 1) (2003) – Platinum (UK, PNW1CDX).
*"Angry Inch" on Wig in a Box: Songs from and Inspired by Hedwig and the Angry Inch (2003) – Off (USA, OFF994)
*"Oh!" on Mollie's Mix (2003) – Kill Rock Stars (USA, KRS382)
*"Off with Your Head" on Rock Against Bush Vol. 2 (2004) – Fat Wreck (USA, FAT677).
*""Entertain" on Songbook of Songs (2005) – Sub Pop (USA, SP0676)
*"Turn It On" on Whatever – The '90s Pop & Culture Set (2005) – Rhino (USA)
*"Jumpers" (live) on Live at KEXP, Vol. II (2006) – KEXP Seattle (USA)
*"Ballad of a Ladyman" (live) on Calling All Kings & Queens (2006) – Mr. Lady Records (USA, MRLR15). (Also on this CD is a cover version of Sleater-Kinney's "I'm Not Waiting", by Kiki & Herb.)
*"Step Aside" on Safe Haven (2006) – Cherchez la Femme (USA)
*"Jumpers" (live) on The L Word: Season Three (soundtrack, 2006) – Tommy Boy (USA)
*"Modern Girl" on Counter Culture (2006) – Rough Trade Shops (USA)
*"Fortunate Son" (live) and "Step Aside" on Wed-Rock (2006) – Centaurmusic (USA)
*"You're No Rock 'N Roll Fun" (live) on Metro: The Official Bootleg Series, Volume 1 (2010)(USA)
Music videos
*"Get Up" (1999) Directed by Miranda July
*"You're No Rock 'n' Roll Fun" (2000) Directed by Brett Vapnek
*"Entertain" (2005) Directed by Molly & Mariah
*"Jumpers" (2005) Directed by Matt McCormick
Chart positions
Albums
Singles
References
Category:All-female bands
Category:American indie rock groups
Category:Kill Rock Stars artists
Category:Sub Pop artists
Category:Musical groups from Washington (state)
Category:Riot grrrl
Category:Third-wave feminism
Category:Musical trios
Category:Musical groups established in 1995
Category:Musical groups disestablished in 2006
Category:Musical groups from Portland, Oregon
Category:1990s music groups
Category:2000s music groups
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This text has been derived from Sleater-Kinney on Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0