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One Beat [LP]
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One Beat [LP] in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $24.99
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Size: OS
Having consolidated their strengths with
All Hands on the Bad One
,
Sleater-Kinney
revived the ambition of
The Hot Rock
on their sixth album,
One Beat
.
John Goodmanson
gives the group its cleanest-sounding production to date, which brings out all the new trappings in the ever more sophisticated arrangements.
"Step Aside"
boasts trumpet and sax,
"The Remainder"
a string section, several tracks are colored with delightfully weird vintage synths (the sort favored by
Brian Eno
or
Pere Ubu
), and there's even a theremin on
"Funeral Song."
(Trivia: The playful
"Prisstina"
also features the first male vocals ever on a
album, courtesy of
Hedwig & the Angry Inch
mastermind
Stephen Trask
.) Lyrically,
is haunted by September 11;
"Faraway"
and the cry of dissent
"Combat Rock"
are some of the strongest statements on the tragedy any artist has yet released, and the backdrop lends a new urgency to
Corin Tucker
's pleas for a better world for her new son, not to mention the personal catharsis of
"O2."
All of this makes
a much more effective stab at maturity than the often-difficult
. True, the group does occasionally fall into the angularity that made
their least immediate effort, but
offers more rewards upon repeated plays -- the more challenging tracks eventually do sink in. The album does have its minor drawbacks --
Carrie Brownstein
's vocals can be a bit precious at times, and the pointed 9/11 observations make the occasional feminist sloganeering sound like nothing the group hasn't done better elsewhere. All of which is to say that if you've never understood the cultish adoration surrounding
isn't likely to change your mind. But if you're already on board with their idiosyncrasies,
is another triumph from a band that seems to produce them with startling regularity. [
was re-released on LP in 2014.] ~ Steve Huey
All Hands on the Bad One
,
Sleater-Kinney
revived the ambition of
The Hot Rock
on their sixth album,
One Beat
.
John Goodmanson
gives the group its cleanest-sounding production to date, which brings out all the new trappings in the ever more sophisticated arrangements.
"Step Aside"
boasts trumpet and sax,
"The Remainder"
a string section, several tracks are colored with delightfully weird vintage synths (the sort favored by
Brian Eno
or
Pere Ubu
), and there's even a theremin on
"Funeral Song."
(Trivia: The playful
"Prisstina"
also features the first male vocals ever on a
album, courtesy of
Hedwig & the Angry Inch
mastermind
Stephen Trask
.) Lyrically,
is haunted by September 11;
"Faraway"
and the cry of dissent
"Combat Rock"
are some of the strongest statements on the tragedy any artist has yet released, and the backdrop lends a new urgency to
Corin Tucker
's pleas for a better world for her new son, not to mention the personal catharsis of
"O2."
All of this makes
a much more effective stab at maturity than the often-difficult
. True, the group does occasionally fall into the angularity that made
their least immediate effort, but
offers more rewards upon repeated plays -- the more challenging tracks eventually do sink in. The album does have its minor drawbacks --
Carrie Brownstein
's vocals can be a bit precious at times, and the pointed 9/11 observations make the occasional feminist sloganeering sound like nothing the group hasn't done better elsewhere. All of which is to say that if you've never understood the cultish adoration surrounding
isn't likely to change your mind. But if you're already on board with their idiosyncrasies,
is another triumph from a band that seems to produce them with startling regularity. [
was re-released on LP in 2014.] ~ Steve Huey