Unsprung
by Keith Harris for Village Voice, May 16th, 2005
Three Olympia women-not-girls turn their trampoline solid, intuit their din
into the red.
I can't imagine any woman having left Sleater-Kinney's March 3 show at the
Mercury Lounge without wanting to form a band, and I can't imagine any man
having left without wanting to be a woman. Then again, I never figured I'd fall
in love with a girl who lives four states away and thinks Corin Tucker and
Carrie Brownstein bleat like goats, so my imagination can evidently be
bushwhacked. Down-to-earthers like me need rock 'n' roll to remind us how
limited our expectations can be, to repeatedly enact the unfolding of limitless
potential on disc and onstage, so we won't lose sight of the necessary illusion
that anything can happen.
That's not to say anything will happen. In fact, Sleater-Kinney's success has
depended on the reverse, as Tucker and Brownstein slot their guitars' jagged
teeth into the grinding cog of Janet Weiss's drumming with a precision teetering
on OCD. The thrill comes as the rising intensity from each musician threatens to
unbalance the tenuous symbiotic stability; we wait for the overheated core to
spew springs and screws and gear shafts, but the motor pops and whirs and races
cleanly as intended. Until now. Their new The Woods is the sound of
Sleater-Kinney unsprung�and also of the band's machinery persistently lurching
forward. Surprise!
Surprise No. 2: They cheat a little. Dave Fridmann, best known for his strung-up
streamlining of the Flaming Lips, nudges the din into the red, a gimmick as
surefire as anything stored on the Matrix's hard drive. Weiss pretends to push
the limits of recording technology, and caked distortion outfits Tucker's
low-end crunch in full bass-guitar drag. The three women still intuit each
other's moves, but their collaborations are now less a taut trampoline to vault
Tucker upward than a solid platform from which Brownstein can improvise.
Strutting in full fuck-it-I'm-a-guitar-hero mode, she dive-bombs repeatedly into
potential Live at Leeds cacophony only to pull up with her riffage impeccable
and intact.
Before you gender that wankery "male," note Brownstein's latent discipline on
freak-outs like "What's Mine Is Yours" and heed the insight that Eddie Vedder's
recent
Magnet interview of the band threatens to muffle beneath bouts of mutual
appreciation. Vedder dubs Brownstein's style "surfing guitar," in that she rides
the crest of her own music rather than pushing from behind, and that holds for
Sleater-Kinney as a whole. Previous albums have never quite captured those
onstage moments when the power they generate seems to catch them unawares, but
on The Woods you can hear not only the deliberation in Weiss's eyes as she
ponders the exact placement of beat and crash, or Brownstein's bedroom-mirror
rock-star poses, but also the stunned grin Tucker can never contain after
emitting her most gravity-defiant shrieks.
To reclaim a perfectly apt adjective from the anti-feminists, Tucker's recorded
vocals have often been strident�purposely intent on inspiration through
irritation. Now her increased range and better-rounded wailing elevates the
taunts on "Let's Call It Love"� "A woman is not a girl," "Hit the floor honey,
let's battle it out"�from tummy-markered grrrl-prop to blues-mama gender
aggression. On her fractured fairy tale "The Fox," the increased trust she
places in her voice as it vibrates around the vowels of "Land ho!" belies the
song's unsettling undercurrent of seduction and betrayal.
Yet unsettling it is, and from "Jumpers," a nervous breakdown in 4:24, to
"Modern Girl," a breezy denial of same with Weiss wheezing harmonica past
Brownstein's blithe la-di-da's, the lyric sheet reveals a neurosis rarely
indicated by the immediate pleasure of the noise up front. And that's OK by me.
Sleater-Kinney's jitters and discordance once warned that you can't enjoy the
giddiness of anticipation without the flutter of fear. Punk's duty was once to
shatter stasis as America dozed. But with rabid Christo-fascism and
laissez-faire devolution humping to breed a litter of tragic inevitabilities,
we're quite edgy enough today, thanks. Now Sleater-Kinney's exploration of their
musical range offers reassurance that moments of crisis are unexpected
opportunities for renewal. Anything can happen.