Showing posts with label Sleater-Kinney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sleater-Kinney. Show all posts

Friday, May 03, 2024

Day After Day #121: Entertain

Day After Day is an ambitious attempt to write about a song every day in 2024 (starting on Jan. 4).

Entertain (2005)

Nostalgia is a powerful thing. One could argue this entire year-long feature is an exercise in nostalgia. My take is nostalgia is fine as long as you're not consumed by it. But when you're a rock band, the line between nostalgia and "inspired by" is thin indeed. 

One of my favorite bands of the last 25 years or so is Sleater-Kinney, who got their start as part of the riot girrrl movement and became one of the most influential indie rock acts going. The group was formed in 1994 in Olympia, Washington by Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker, inspired by punk and indie rock. There were three drummers before Janet Weiss of Quasi took over in 1996.

Over the course of seven albums, Sleater-Kinney developed a reputation as one of the best bands in the business. The band was known for Tucker's caterwauling vocals, which had a polarizing effect; eventually, Brownstein started singing some songs. Tucker and Brownstein both played guitar, while Weiss was a powerhouse on drums.

In 2005, they released The Woods, their loudest album to date. The band had opened for Pearl Jam in 2003, which influenced their foray into a harder rocking style. There are echoes of Led Zeppelin, from the massive guitar riffs to Weiss' Bonham-esque pounding. It's a visceral and thunderous affair.

The lead single "Entertain" slams the seeming appetite for nostalgia acts.

"So you want to be entertained?/Please look away, don't look away/We're not here because we want to entertain/You can go away, don't go away/Reality is the new fiction, they say/True is truer these days, truth is man-made/If you're here cause you want to be entertained/You can go away, please go away."

The song is also a broadside at bands who were emulating post-punk icons like Joy Division, the Cure, Gang of Four and Wire (think Interpol et al). Brownstein angrily swipes at the wave of early aughts nostalgia in indie rock.

"You come around looking 1984/You're such a bore, 1984!/You star child, well you're using it like a whore/It's better than before, oh it's better than before/You come around sounding 1972/You did nothing new, 1972!/Where's the fuck you?/Where's the black and blue?"

She calls herself out as well. 

"1-2-3! You can drown in mediocrity, it feels so nice, sublime/1-2-3! Yeah, it sounds like someone pushed the rewind/1-2-3! Yeah, give it to me easily, fill your mind this time/1-2-3! Yeah, make it sweet and syrupy with wine."

The album reached #80 on the Billboard Top 200 chart. It was the last Sleater-Kinney for nearly a decade. Weiss joined Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks for a few albums and a tour. Tucker recorded a few solo albums and Brownstein started Wild Flag with Weiss, Mary Timony and Rebecca Cole. Brownstein also became a TV star after she and Fred Armisen launched the IFC sketch comedy show Portlandia.

Sleater-Kinney reformed in 2014 and released three albums before Weiss left after the recording of The Center Won't Hold, citing a lack of creative input. Since then, S-K has released two more albums and toured with multiple backing musicians. The albums are decent, but they don't have the spark of that first run of releases.

Saturday, May 30, 2020

Ye Olde Hit Parade: Entertain

Editor's note: Ye Olde Hit Parade takes a look back at my favorite songs year by year (starting in 1978, when I really started paying attention to music).

2005: Sleater-Kinney - Entertain

Some big stuff happened in '05. Hurricane Katrina and the botched response to it. A new video-sharing site called YouTube was launched (wonder if it's still around?). Pope John Paul II died. Lance Armstrong won his 7th straight Tour De France, cementing a record that would never be tarnished (right?).


In my world, things were good. The girls turned 3 and 1 and Lily started walking early in the year, so we had our hands full. After taking 2004 off from marathons, I had planned to run Vermont in the spring of '05, but I had some Achilles issues that forced me to bow out. But I recovered to run New York City for the second time in the fall.

We vacationed on the Jersey Shore again, but this time, I had to do some work editing a book while I was there. Check out the technological fun I had (from my blog post on 7/22/05): I also had to do some work the first few days down there, inputting edits to book chapters that came in late; I borrowed a laptop from work but had to get creative because the room had high-speed wireless but the laptop was not enabled to work with it. Ended up getting a 256 MB USB storage card, transferred the documents I needed from PC at the hotel's business center, spent parts of two days finishing the chapters, and then emailed the finished versions from the biz center. Not how I originally envisioned my vacation, but it had to be done.

I've had other years when I had to work on vacation, but it's a lot easier now.

It was another big year for indie rock and I was immersed in reading a bunch of MP3 blogs to learn and hear about new stuff. Among my favorite new acts were Black Mountain, LCD Soundsystem, Kaiser Chiefs, Okkervil River, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Bloc Party and Wolf Parade. I even posted a few MP3s from this blog, but that was short-lived because the buddy was providing me with access to his FTP site to host the songs ended up shutting it down or something, and I was too cheap to pay for my own. Whatevs.

The NHL's 2004-05 season was wiped out because of a labor lockout, so I ended up going to a lot of college and minor league hockey games. Still went to some concerts, though: Queens of the Stone Age, Mudhoney, Sloan and U2.



The song of the year for me was Sleater-Kinney's "Entertain" from their kickass album The Woods. I had been a fan since 2000's All Hands on the Bad One, but this album really crushed it. S-K redefined the power trio, driven primarily by Janet Weiss' pummeling drumwork. On "Entertain," Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker trade vocals while Weiss just destroys.The band split up after this tour, reuniting in 2015 with a new album and tour. Sadly, Weiss left the band after making their 2019 album The Center Won't Hold, due to musical differences. Too bad, because she rules.

Honorable mentions: Black Mountain - "Druganaut"; LCD Soundsystem - "Daft Punk Is Playing at My House"; The Mars Volta - "The Widow"; Kaiser Chiefs - "I Predict a Riot"; Kaiser Chiefs - "Everyday I Love You Less and Less"; Brendan Benson - "Alternative to Love"; Queens of the Stone Age - "Little Sister"; Queens of the Stone Age - "In My Head"; M.I.A. - "Galang"; Beck - "E-Pro"; Tom Vek - "I Ain't Saying My Goodbyes"; Okkervil River - "Black"; Robert Plant - "Shine It All Around"; Teenage Fanclub - "It's All In My Mind"; The Hold Steady - "Cattle and the Creeping Things"; The Hold Steady - "Your Little Hoodrat Friend"; Nine Inch Nails - "The Hand That Feeds"; Spoon - "Sister Jack"; Spoon - "I Turn My Camera On"; Gorillaz - "Feel Good Inc."; Maximo Park - "The Coast Is Always Changing"; Sleater-Kinney - "Jumpers"; Art Brut - "Formed a Band"; The White Stripes - "Blue Orchid"; The Dropkick Murphys - "I'm Shipping Up to Boston"; Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - "In This Home on Ice"; The Subways - "Rock and Roll Queen"; Frank Black - "I Burn Today"; The New Pornographers - "Use It"; Bloc Party - "Like Eating Glass"; Metric - "Monster Hospital"; Wolf Parade - "You Are a Runner and I am My Father's Son"; Franz Ferdinand - "Do You Want To"; Broken Social Scene - "7/4 (Shoreline)"; My Morning Jacket - "Off the Record"; Paul Weller - "From the Floorboards Up"; Snoop Dogg - "Drop It Like It's Hot"

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