domingo, 14 de janeiro de 2024

KREATOR: Mille Petrozza faz balanço de 2023 e fala sobre o futuro





KREATOR: Mille Petrozza faz balanço de 2023 e fala sobre o futuro






“O mundo está em chamas, mas estamos unidos!”, declara Mille Petrozza, o irredutível timoneiro dos KREATOR.

Mille Petrozza, guitarrista, vocalista e líder dos thrashers KREATOR, usou o seu perfil oficial no Facebook para fazer um balanço de 2023 e revelar os seus planos para o novo ano. “Quero reservar um tempo para reflectir sobre 2023“, começou por escrever o músico alemão. “Foi um ano incrível para os Kreator. Demos concertos fantásticos e fomos convidados para os maiores e melhores festivais de metal do planeta… Num total de 85 espectáculos, visitámos amigos de todo o mundo. É difícil escolher um momento entre todos os momentos mágicos que criámos juntos durante esta jornada. Vocês, os fãs, têm sido fantásticos em todo o lado! Fico feliz e orgulhoso de fazer parte da comunidade do metal.



Mas adivinhem? 2024 vai ser ainda melhor! Vamos iniciar o ano a levar a digressão KLASH OF THE TITANS ao Japão, Austrália, Índia, Indonésia, Tailândia, China e vamos visitar os nossos fãs na Malásia e Singapura novamente depois de muitos anos de ausência. Em Janeiro, vai haver um anúncio ENORME para as nossas hordas europeias. Ainda não posso revelar detalhes, mas deixem-me dizer uma coisa: nenhum maníaco do thrash metal ficará desapontado!

Também estamos a trabalhar noutra digressão norte-americana, e planeamos gravar o próximo disco no início de 2025, já que estou a trabalhar em novas músicas dos Kreator neste momento! Em 2025, vamos estrear também o nosso documentário cinematográfico, criado pela realizadora Cordula Kablitz Post. O mundo está em chamas, mas estamos unidos! Paz“, conclui Mille Petrozza na publicação que podes ver na íntegra em baixo.

Como noticiado anteriormente, no próximo ano, os KREATOR regressam à estrada para uma digressão pelo Velho Continente que, entre actuações em festivais e espectáculos em nome próprio, os vai trazer a Portugal para uma data única na Sala Tejo da Altice Arena, em Lisboa, no 15 de Junho de 2024.

Por esta altura, Mille Petrozza e os seus KREATOR são muito bem conhecidos do público nacional, tendo construido uma relação sólida e bastante próxima dos portugueses desde que, nos idos de 1993, se estrearam por cá num marcante concerto no Armazém 22, em Lisboa.



Quando chegou ao nosso país pela primeira vez, o quarteto – que fica hoje completo com Ventor na bateria, Frédéric Leclercq no baixo e Sami Yli-Sirniö na segunda guitarra – já era uma figura de proa do speed/thrash germânico, parte de um triunvirato demolidor que incluía também os Destruction e os Sodom. Hoje, mantêm-se como uma das faces mais reconhecidas do movimento thrash europeu.

Porta-estandartes da tendência em território germânico, os KREATOR surgiram no início dos anos 80 e, ao longo da década seguinte, estabeleceram-se como um dos nomes mais influentes da sua geração graças a uma sequência de clássicos intemporais – e seminais! – composta por «Endless Pain», «Pleasure To Kill», «Terrible Certainty» e «Extreme Agression». Combinando o extremismo inerente ao estilo que os caracteriza com uma implacabilidade mordaz – espelhada em letras fortemente politizadas que têm uma clara tendência para apontar o dedo e não se furtarem a expor assuntos controversos – a banda de Essen não só sobreviveu incólume aos anos 90 como acabou por influenciar todas as gerações vindouras interessadas em replicar o seu génio violento.



Pelo caminho, mantiveram-se sempre persistentes e uma força imparável ao longo de uma carreira que, por esta altura, já ultrapassou a marca das quatro décadas, assinando verdadeiras declarações de vitalidade com os registos mais recentes, de que são ótimos exemplos «Phantom Antichrist», «Gods Of Violence» ou «Hate Über Alles».

Este último, já o 15º registo de originais num fundo de catálogo irrepreensível, prova que continuam a ser extraordinariamente inovadores e a estar um largo passo à frente de toda competição, sempre prontos a apresentar novas ideias e a tratar de si mesmos e dos seus fãs com a maior honestidade possível.

sexta-feira, 12 de janeiro de 2024

Tommy Thayer não está “completamente pronto” para se aposentar




Tommy Thayer não está “completamente pronto” para se aposentar
“Não estou pensando em continuar tocando em outra banda ou algo assim – isso não me atrai”


Tommy Thayer, atual guitarrista do Kiss, falou sobre seu futuro e os avatares da banda.

Em uma entrevista recente ao Guitar World, o tema do último show da banda foi discutido. A performance aconteceu no dia 02 de dezembro de 2023 e a banda anunciou que continuaria em versão avatar. Tommy Thayer descreveu a experiência como “interessante” até agora, mas que “levará algum tempo para termos as imagens onde queremos.”

“Eu realmente não pensei sobre o que tudo isso significa no cenário geral, mas com a tecnologia evoluindo tão rapidamente, não há dúvida de que esta é a direção que muito [do] entretenimento está tomando.”

Com relação ao futuro, ele explica que ainda não está “completamente pronto” para se aposentar: “Tenho ideias e certamente opções em cima da mesa.”

“Não estou pensando em continuar tocando em outra banda ou algo assim – isso não me atrai. Mas estou ansioso por um futuro emocionante, trabalhando duro e fazendo parte das coisas boas que estão por vir.”

Tarja Turunen :Entrevista








Tarja Turunen é a maior vocalista mulher de metal da história. Confira entrevista exclusiva aqui.

Você está vindo ao Brasil com a turnê "Living the Dream - The Hits Tour". Como o nome sugere, os shows se concentrarão em seus maiores sucessos, certo? Podemos esperar músicas de toda a sua carreira solo, bem como de sua época no Nightwish? Acredito que você esteja super animada!

Você está correto. Estou em turnê com meu álbum "Living the Dream - Best Of". Essa turnê continuará até o final de 2024. Estou muito animada em retornar ao Brasil, sentir o amor de vocês e ouvir seus gritos :) Estou pronta!!!

O guitarrista Rafael Bittencourt, do Angra, participou do seu show "Circus Life". Foi uma honra para nós brasileiros! Você poderia compartilhar como foi tê-lo no palco? Como é sua relação com ele?

Conhecemos o Rafael há muito tempo e sempre foi um prazer fazer música com ele. Temos trabalhado juntos em diferentes eventos no passado, sendo o último deles o "Circus Life". O convidei para fazer parte do meu show especial, pois ele não é apenas um músico talentoso, mas também uma pessoa muito legal para passar tempo junto. Considero-o um amigo.

Você tem uma filha linda chamada Naomi. Você é finlandesa e seu marido Marcelo é argentino. Quais características da Naomi você percebe que vêm mais da cultura finlandesa e quais da cultura argentina?

A Naomi é uma bela mistura de nós, seus pais. Eu só espero que ela seja uma versão melhor de nós... Haha. Ela é uma menina muito aberta, destemida e feliz, que fala três idiomas e viajou pelo mundo várias vezes aos 11 anos de idade. Essa vida internacional com pais trabalhando com arte lhe deu liberdade para se expressar e compreensão das diferenças culturais e das pessoas. Da cultura finlandesa e da mãe finlandesa, ela adotou a mentalidade de buscar a perfeição, e da cultura latina, ela tem sua mente aberta e personalidade destemida.

Recentemente, você cantou "The Phantom of the Opera" com Marko Hietala, e isso tocou profundamente muitos fãs que esperavam ansiosamente por esse encontro. Quais foram seus sentimentos naquele momento?

Foi muito emocionante cantar essa música com ele depois de 18 anos. Já tínhamos apresentado a música tantas vezes no passado que agora, após todos esses anos, ainda parecia que estávamos destinados a cantá-la juntos. Foi realmente adorável. Não havia estresse, tensão, apenas felicidade e boas vibrações. Vamos repetir essa experiência em alguns dias na Finlândia em outro show.

Falando de Marko Hietala e do seu tempo no Nightwish, qual música você considera o seu melhor dueto com ele e por quê? Na minha opinião, é "Dead to the World"!

Há muitas músicas que compartilhamos no passado, mas minha favorita será "The Phantom", pois essa música é uma das razões pelas quais sou cantora hoje e por que eu queria aprender tudo sobre canto lírico quando era jovem. Foi realmente especial para mim que tenhamos gravado a música com o Nightwish, já que ela significa muito pessoalmente. O desafio vocal que vem com a música é simplesmente incrível. Eu gosto de me desafiar com ela.

"Outlander" levou bastante tempo para ficar pronto, cerca de 10 anos. Por que levou tanto tempo? E qual é o seu sentimento geral em relação a ele?

Foi um projeto que não tinha um prazo definido. Não estávamos com pressa para criar as músicas com o Torsten, e sempre que eu viajava para Antígua, no Caribe, onde o Torsten mora, trabalhávamos juntos nas músicas. Mas quando a pandemia atingiu o mundo e precisamos ficar em casa e não conseguíamos fazer turnês, decidi terminar o projeto. Escrevi o restante das músicas e suas letras, gravei todos os meus vocais sozinha em casa, na Espanha, entrei em contato com todos os guitarristas e o Torsten finalizou a produção das músicas em Antígua. Foi ótimo usar esse tempo e me inspirar com essas músicas e com os incríveis guitarristas com quem tivemos a oportunidade de trabalhar. Nunca pensei que conseguiria contar com Al Di Meola, Trevor Rabin, Joe Satriani, Mike Oldfield, entre outros músicos incríveis, mas consegui com "Outlander". O projeto é muito diferente de tudo o que fiz em minha carreira, e me deu liberdade para me expressar de forma diferente e sem pressão. Foi um projeto maravilhoso para trabalhar e isso não é o fim. Já estou me preparando para escrever novas músicas para o "Outlander"! Não deixe de conferir nosso álbum de estreia que foi lançado recentemente!

Este ano, comemoramos 25 anos de "Oceanborn", um de seus grandes trabalhos com o Nightwish. Qual é a sua música favorita desse álbum, e qual memória você mais guarda da produção desse disco?

Na verdade, a produção do álbum foi um processo bastante estressante para a banda, inclusive para mim como cantora. Queríamos lançar um álbum incrível, já que no início de nossa carreira nunca imaginamos conseguir um contrato com uma gravadora que acreditasse em nós, mas isso aconteceu felizmente já com nosso álbum de estreia. Essa situação nos colocou muita pressão, já que as expectativas eram altas. Naquela época, eu estava no início dos meus estudos de canto lírico na universidade e ainda não sabia muito bem como projetar minha voz para as músicas desse álbum. Então, me lembro de chorar no estúdio enquanto as gravava e não recebia ajuda nem apoio de nenhum outro membro da banda, na verdade, foi exatamente o oposto. Portanto, não posso dizer que tive um ótimo momento durante a produção do álbum. Talvez a música que eu mais valorize no álbum seja "Swanheart".

Seu primeiro álbum pós-Nightwish foi o excelente "My Winter Storm", que ainda apresenta músicas que você interpreta em seus shows até hoje. Um dos grandes sucessos é "I Walk Alone". Poderia compartilhar como foi o processo de composição dessa música?

Essa música me deu asas como artista. É uma música muito importante que me conecta com o meu público. A música não foi escrita por mim, mas sim por três compositores suecos: Mattias, Anders e Harry. Quando comecei a trabalhar no meu primeiro álbum solo, a gravadora Universal Music me enviou mais de 500 demos de músicas, esperando que eu escolhesse todas as músicas para o meu álbum. Isso não aconteceu, mas encontrei "I Walk Alone" entre todas essas demos e me apaixonei instantaneamente por ela. Alterei apenas um pouco a letra para tornar a música mais pessoal para mim e a gravei. Desde o início de minha carreira solo, foi muito difícil para mim trabalhar com músicas que não são de minha própria autoria, porque preciso sentir uma conexão muito profunda com as músicas. Eu prefiro escrever minhas próprias músicas, mas com "I Walk Alone", a situação foi diferente. Essa música me fez sentir que precisava dela para seguir meus sonhos, e eu estava certa.

Você colaborou com Tony Kakko do Sonata Arctica em "Beauty and the Beast" há muitos anos e cantou com Timo Kotipelto do Stratovarius em "Forever", em apresentações ao vivo. Poderia compartilhar sua opinião sobre essas duas grandes bandas finlandesas?

Estou extremamente orgulhosa desses caras. Fico feliz que ambos ainda estejam ativos na indústria após todos esses anos e estejam indo bem. Conheço ambas as bandas há muito tempo e sempre gostei de sua música e da companhia deles. Eles são como irmãos para mim! Recentemente, fiz uma turnê com o Stratovarius na Europa. A primeira banda de metal que fui ver ao vivo foi o Stratovarius, muitos anos atrás, então fazer turnê com eles me fez sentir que o ciclo estava se fechando. Foi uma experiência incrível.

BRUCE DICKINSON REFLECTS ON HIS 1999 RETURN TO IRON MAIDEN - "STEVE HARRIS WAS VERY SUSPICIOUS"





BRUCE DICKINSON REFLECTS ON HIS 1999 RETURN TO IRON MAIDEN - "STEVE HARRIS WAS VERY SUSPICIOUS"





In a wide-ranging, career-spanning interview in the new issue of Classic Rock magazine, Bruce Dickinson revisits his decision to rejoin Iron Maiden in 1999. Following is an excerpt from the feature, where Dickinson recalls that bassist Steve Harris wasn't initially convinced his return was what the band needed.

Dickinson: "Steve was very suspicious. He said: 'Why do you wanna come back?' I actually said (laughing), I want to come back, Steve, because, in the words of my mates, ‘the world needs Iron Maiden’, and secondly I think we can make amazing music.' What I said was: 'We will sweep away the past by doing an amazing future,' though the first words out of my gobby mouth were: 'Of course we are better than Metallica!' People said: 'You can’t say that.' I said: 'I just did.' Then they started going: 'Maybe he’s right.'"

DEATH ANGEL GUITARIST ROB CAVESTANY REVEALS "THE FIRST TIME I HEARD METALLICA"

 

DEATH ANGEL GUITARIST ROB CAVESTANY REVEALS "THE FIRST TIME I HEARD METALLICA"

DEATH ANGEL Guitarist ROB CAVESTANY Reveals "The First Time I Heard METALLICA"

EMG artist Rob Cavestany of Death Angel remembers hearing Metallica for the first time! In the video below, Rob also shared some great stories about meeting Metallica, opening for them, and having the band take the young Death Angel under their wing.

In live news, Death Angel will be touring Latin America later this year. Confirmed dates are as follows:

Bring Me The Horizon, Bournemouth International Centre



REVIEWS

Live review: Bring Me The Horizon, Bournemouth International Centre

Bolstered by one of the best support line-ups we’ve seen in yonks, Bring Me The Horizon’s spectacular NX_GN tour rolled into Bournemouth for a ferocious night of spellbinding production, daft gags and modern metal classics.

January 11, 2024
Words:Nick Ruskell
Photos:Jonti Wild


Oli Sykes has a question: “Does it still say ‘BMTH’ on the roads here?”

At the right junctions in Bournemouth, yes it does. Tonight, though, the authority with which Bring Me The Horizon stamp their name all over the south-coast seaside is more than a simple amusing coincidence of street-painted abbreviation. Barely a fortnight after the departure of Jordan Fish, and with the expected new record delayed again – this time confidently until summer – some had wondered about the effect of all this on a gigantic arena run. The answer is simple: after 20 years, theirs is a boat not so easily rocked.

Unlike Bournemouth, who get just that, in multiple fashions. First up on an excellently selected bill that amply shows the breadth and brilliance of music’s current crop of young bucks, Static Dress. Making Machine Gun Kelly look like a chump on Twitter isn’t the only thing frontman Olli Appleyard is good at, and he and his bandmates are an energetic treat for the early arrivers. The songs from their killer Rouge Carpet Disaster album are now absolutely jacked thanks to being dragged halfway around the world for the past year, and tonight they sound even more electrified than usual.

Cassyette, on the other hand, hadn’t played a gig since last summer before yesterday's tour curtain-up in Cardiff, instead beavering away on her long-awaited debut album. It’s slowed her down not one bit, mind. In songs like Petrichor and an enormous Dear Goth, Essex’s finest is an incandescent mix of star power and gobby sass, while on new banger Ipecac and Sex Metal’s burst of drum’n’bass “for all the ravers”, she grinningly teases 2024 as the year she finally explodes properly.




“I’ve heard people say I look bored onstage,” says Bad Omens’ Noah Sebastian. “I am…” Joker. Actually, he’s “disappointed” that so often in America he’ll look out to a sea of cellphones. “You don’t do that over here.” Thanks very much. Instead, tonight Noah looks out at an ocean of circle pits, faces absolutely belting THE DEATH OF PEACE OF MIND and raucous closer CONCRETE JUNGLE back at him, and at one point, a load of people sitting on the floor and rowing. True, he’s not the most athletic of performers, but Bad Omens can set off a place like this without even breaking a sweat. Anyway, their Matrix-ish visuals and dizzying lights are enough if you want something to look at amongst the mayhem. As their star continues to rise, Bad Omens would have to step in an enormous pile of shit to throw themselves off their firmly upward course.

From the moment opener DArkSide hits full throttle, Bring Me The Horizon are on fire this evening. Opening with an explosive run that takes in Empire (Let Them Sing), MANTRA and a particularly enormous Teardrops, in some ways they swing even harder than they did at Download last year. Kool-Aid – currently on track to be their first Top 10 single – is already a smasher on only its second day out, sitting next to Shadow Moses’ immortal sing-alongs comfortably indeed. Diamonds Aren’t Forever is absolutely fierce, Kingslayer is a technicolour techno blur, Parasite Eve has become even more snarky with time.







As ever, the production is incredible. They’re in a cathedral thing with stained glass windows. Then they’re in what looks like Hell. Then in a videogame-looking future. There’s fire, there’s dancers, there’s a different thing for almost every song. Such is the force when they choose to simply throw a fist, though, that it barely registers when they strip back the bells and whistles and simply go for the throat.

They give something of an update as to what’s going on plan-wise via an endearingly naff segment in which Oli ‘talks’ to the digital head that narrates proceedings between songs. Giggling that they’ve had some internal issues when it asks him where the hell the new album is, he also quickly scrolls through three-second snippets of new jams, before recording gang vocals of thousands of people yelling “Oli is a knobhead”, before there’s a reference to 1997 Jim Carrey LOL-fest Liar Liar ("Put some stank on it!" the head demands of the crowd's vocals), and business is resumed. When Noah Sebastian joins for a fuming Antivist – in a fetching yellow ski-mask – the place almost falls down.






Bring Me The Horizon have always been a band moving forward and upward, not allowing grass to grow beneath them. In a moment of big change such as this, it’s simply another door through which to go into somewhere new.

“It’s so fucking mental that we’ve been a band for 20 years now,” says Oli towards the end. Time flies, sickeningly so. But even after such a long shift, Bring Me The Horizon still feel like a band with plenty of worlds left to explore and conquer. As a new chapter begins, you’re very right to be excited.

Bring Me The Horizon's tour continues throughout the UK and Ireland – get your tickets now

THE COVER STORY



THE COVER STORY

“We’re pissing off the right people”: Sleater-Kinney, Lambrini Girls and the eternal power of riot grrrl

Riot grrrl might’ve originated in the Pacific Northwest in the 1990s, but the shockwaves it sent throughout the alt. scene are still being felt today, in the sound, lyricism and ethics of non-male bands across the globe. Here, pioneers Sleater-Kinney sit down with new breed (and superfans) Lambrini Girls to discuss punk, politics, progress and why that revolutionary attitude will never die…




Phoebe Lunny is frantically tapping at her phone screen searching for images of the actor Laura Dern in the cult 1982 punk movie Ladies And Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains. The Sleater-Kinney duo of Corin Tucker and Carrie Brownstein have just remarked how she’s the spitting image of her, and as the Lambrini Girls vocalist and guitarist shows the results to Kerrang! and her bandmate, bassist Lilly Macieira, the resemblance is undeniably uncanny.

“That’s interesting, because the only other celebrity I’ve ever been told I look like is Lewis Capaldi,” Phoebe deadpans.

“Oh no, you look just like a young Laura Dern,” Corin insists. “She was a total stunner. A fox. But hey, so is Lewis Capaldi… just maybe in a different way.”

The flattery flows freely from that point on as the two bands put the world to rights across a lively afternoon in a cosy corner of the Mama Shelter lounge bar in Shoreditch, London. The Olympia, Washington pair are in the capital on promo business for their forthcoming 11th album, Little Rope. Phoebe’s digs are just a stone’s throw away, but despite Lilly having to brave the uncertainty of the British rail system in winter to get in from Brighton, there was no way Lambrini Girls were going to miss a chance to sit down and shoot the shit with their heroes. Kerrang! are just tagging along for the vibes, fly-on-the-wall-style, as the ensuing conversation takes in everything from trans rights and toxic masculinity to art, music, politics and inspirations.




What follows are the condensed highlights of what can be published without getting anyone into too much drama on the internet. For the uninitiated, Lambrini Girls are one of the most authentic new voices in alternative music, with plenty to say for themselves about the injustices of the world. Sleater-Kinney are among the best to ever do it, with 2024 marking 30 years since the co-vocalists and guitarists holding court today first emerged as integral players in the riot grrrl movement.

Within seconds of the two bands meeting there’s an immediate spark of cross-generational chemistry, shared interests and values…

A Meeting Of Minds


Carrie Brownstein (Sleater-Kinney): “How did you guys meet, are you old mates?”

Lilly Macieira (Lambrini Girls): “Not really. I mean, now we are. But we met in Brighton and it’s a really small city, so we had loads of mutual friends. We played in a band together before Lambrini Girls, called Wife Swap USA.”

Carrie: “Another great name.”

Lilly: “That’s how we became besties, and then I joined Lambrini Girls a year and a half ago.”

Phoebe Lunny (Lambrini Girls): “I remember the first time I met Lilly. She was working behind the bar at a pub called The Hope & Ruin. I came in drunk with some friends and I thought, ‘This girl does not like me.’ It was a really busy night and all of the staff were really stressed. But we met again at a friend’s birthday and she thought I was really funny.”

Lilly: “I think I liked you all along. Bar work is just not the one. I accidentally show my emotion on my face all the time and I don’t know when it’s happening, so I think I was just over-stimulated that first night. Like, ‘Someone’s asking me to do my job? Fuck off!’”

Carrie: “There’s a great Kathleen Hanna [Bikini Kill vocalist] quote, that goes something like, ‘To find your perfect bandmate just look for the biggest bitch in your school’ (laughs).”

(Lilly and Phoebe both point at each other)

Phoebe: “How did you two meet?”

Corin Tucker (Sleater-Kinney): “I had a band called Heavens To Betsy. We were supposed to play a show with Bikini Kill in Bellingham, Washington, but they cancelled. I was arguing with like eight guys after the show about riot grrrl and Carrie came up to me and said, ‘Excuse me, I would like to get more information about this riot grrrl if you could take my number?’ I still have the journal that she wrote her number down in.”

Carrie: “I was going to university up there and I wasn’t loving it. I was 17 and I felt like I had ended up in the wrong place, so I knew I was going to drop out. I did end up finishing university in Olympia, so I gave Corin my dad’s address down there.”

Corin: “She asked me if I should drop out.”

Carrie: “And she was like, ‘Hell yeah!’ So, that’s how we met. I moved to Olympia that summer and then we started hanging out.”



Riot Grrrl And Safe Spaces



Kerrang!: “Hold on, guys were arguing with you about riot grrrl?”

Corin: “Oh yeah. Like, ‘You’re so sexist! That’s oppression against men!’”

Carrie: “At the time there was a lot of that. Kathleen, Corin and the Bratmobile girls would ask women to come to the front. Because a much more violent audience would usually push women to the back, so Kathleen’s ‘Girls to the front’ thing would make guys so mad. It was pretty contentious back then.”

Lilly: “That attitude still exists, but I can only imagine what it must’ve been like back then. You must have had to push back so fucking hard.”

Corin: “Yeah, I think Kathleen probably had the worst time for that. She was like a magnet for that conflict. I argued, but I don’t think I drew the kind of craziness that she did. It was pretty scary for her, I think. It was a hard time in general. There was so much attention on riot grrrl that it kind of suffocated it. It became personally really overwhelming. There was a media blackout, but journalists would sneak in and pretend to be fans when really they’d be from The New York Times or something.”

Carrie: “Everyone stopped doing press. We were so young and they were publishing all this personal stuff. We didn’t really understand the implications of talking about our personal histories.”

Phoebe: “I can totally understand why you’d stop doing interviews. That stuff still scares me. ‘Girls to the front’ is, for me, one of the most iconic phrases ever. It’s something we use and interpret in a different way now. Like, if you are not a cisgender, straight white male, then come to the front.”

Carrie: “Of course.”

Phoebe: “Acts like that are so important; to carve spaces for people who don’t feel like there are spaces for them at gigs. Growing up, listening to riot grrrl, that was something that resonated with me. It’s interesting to see how it’s developed.”


Gender Roles And Pigeonholes


Phoebe: “We played at a festival called Art Rock in Brittany, where there’s a humongous drinking culture, so everybody’s wasted, we get onstage at 2am…”

Lilly: “…it was like looking out into a pit of bellowing gorillas, there was nothing going on behind the eyes.”

Phoebe: “Our first song is called Big Dick Energy, which is about toxic masculinity, and in the middle-eight these two guys start beating each other up, so I get in between them to try breaking it up, catch an elbow in the face and they get thrown out. Back onstage, we make the decision to get all of the women up on the stage to get away from these guys beating the shit out of everyone.”

Lilly: “We could see women were getting squashed in the violence. Even when the stage was filled with women there was total chaos out in front.”

Phoebe: “I remember playing that and thinking, ‘I wonder if this is what riot grrrl bands felt like when they played?’”

Corin: “Seattle had an amazing music scene, but there was this moshing, slam dancing culture that was incredibly masculine and kind of dangerous. It was very off-putting to women feeling a part of things. It was frustrating to be a female artist and feel like you were an accessory or side dish. It wasn’t centre stage at all. So, when Bikini Kill shouted, ‘We’re starting a revolution girl style now!’ it was so galvanising.”

Carrie: “The early language riot grrrl used was so blunt because it had to be. It’s nice that the language is now more nuanced. In early instances of scenes or movements, they can often be rudimentary or blind to intersectionality. Riot grrrl broke down so many doors but I think the interpretation of it now is a better version of it, because it’s adapted and so much more inclusive. It’s exciting for us to witness. Sleater-Kinney, honestly, we often pushed back against the riot grrrl moniker. Not because we were ashamed of it, but because the press had made it very simplistic and reductive.”

Phoebe: “Weird, we literally do the same thing now.”

Lilly: “What we do gets reduced, massively. To the point where what we’re saying gets lost and we’re being pigeonholed, musically and politically.”




Trans Rights And Terf Wars


Phoebe: “We’ve been super outspoken about trans rights. When we played with Iggy Pop and Blondie, it was crazy. We made a visualiser for the background that read 'Trans Rights Now'. There’s this producer geezer in the UK called Graham Linehan – he did The IT Crowd and Black Books – who found out about it and tried calling us out online. We went back and told him to shut the fuck up, which started this crazy drama on Twitter. All of Terf Twitter were coming at us. We went from being this easy little band who ticked the feminism box to becoming this crazy-contentious band. It all went a bit mental. It was a constant parade of absolute shit talking.”

Lilly: “I’m still waiting for the day that JK Rowling comes for us.”

Phoebe: “Oh, she will. Or we’ll come for her first. It’s weird to see a small discourse around the band change when you start saying things that some people don’t want to hear. People really hate us now. But we’re pissing off the right people…”

Carrie: “Do you feel like that exists more vociferously online? I feel like Twitter just amplifies this stuff so much.”

Lilly: “Well, we’ve never been confronted about it in person.”

Carrie: “That’s always the way.”

Phoebe: “Keyboard warriors.”




Humanity Over Hatred


Corin: “We have always done things outside of our comfort zone. I mean, we opened for Pearl Jam during the Iraq war.”

Carrie: “That was a very mainstream crowd, with a lot of military service members in the audience. I remember saying, ‘We’re against this war’ and got booed.”

Kerrang!: “Did they not listen to Bu$hleaguer?”

Carrie: “Oh, they booed Eddie [Vedder, Pearl Jam vocalist] during that song, too.”

Corin: “We did have some people return to our own shows and tell us they didn’t agree with our politics, but that face-to-face interaction is a much better way to exchange ideas. If we’re losing that – and in America we’ve lost a lot of that, which is a huge part of our problem – you’re definitely not going to have that human exchange on the internet.”

Carrie: “When people speak face-to-face and bring their humanity, most people listen. Unless you’re JK Rowling.”

Corin: “I feel like in a way, her discussions have mostly happened online and she’s almost doubling down.”

Carrie: “She’s tripled-down at this point. It’s cruel. Just shut up.”

Lilly: “It’s so hateful and not constructive in any way now. It feels malicious.”

Corin: “In the U.S. they are passing laws that are hurting trans children who are losing their healthcare. All the Red states are passing legislation so that kids cannot get gender-affirming healthcare.”

Carrie: “And they’re vilifying parents, treating it like child abuse if you want to affirm your child’s gender if they’re under a certain age. I do think that some things are just so dire that you cannot stay quiet about them.”



Words Of Wisdom… Or Not


Carrie: “I have absolutely no advice for these girls. What’s reassuring about younger bands is that there is more of a blueprint and these guys really know what they’re doing. Or maybe they don’t, in a great way. We’ve made our mistakes, too. But they’re our mistakes. It’s about owning it and saying, ‘We’re on our own journey.’ Also, you don’t want that advice when you’re younger. You’ve got to put the feet to the fire for yourself. It’s like the [REM guitarist] Peter Buck story, for me. Corin’s worst nightmare…”

Corin: “We played this small show at The Crocodile Cafe in Seattle…”

Carrie: “…obviously, I do love REM. I’m just not as big a fan as Corin. So, we finished the show, I’m probably 22 years old and I pass him on the stairs going up when he says, ‘Hey, great show’. I was just like, ‘Meh’ and he was so mad. He thought I was so disrespectful.”

Corin: “He wasn’t mad. He thought it was funny. I was mad.”

Carrie: “Yeah, she’s like, ‘You just disrespected Peter Buck!’”

Corin: “My guitar hero.”

Carrie: “I just thought he was some old guy. He wasn’t even that much older than me then, but when you’re 22 anyone over 30 is old. And I didn’t need this old guy’s opinion. That irascibility is good, though. Now Peter and I are totally copacetic. Listen, there’s no way you’re telling me that Peter Buck wasn’t a brat when he was 22, too.”

Lilly: “I’m waiting for the time when we get to open for a big band and I’ll be able to say, ‘Good luck following that!’”



Politics, Pressures And Privilege


Carrie: “When you’re being assessed as a band, there are all these indexers, like you’re a girl band, a feminist band, or a political band. Sure, we’re all those things but we’re also just a band. Our whole career I’ve been so envious of white male bands – mostly cis bands – who don't have to explain what they are.”

Lilly: “I feel exactly the same. It is the reason why we do it, but there comes a point where there’s so much responsibility placed on you. In interviews it’s cool when people ask our opinions on political stuff, but it’s been really out of balance recently. It’s quite daunting sometimes. Like, ‘Do you maybe want to ask me what my favourite band is or who my influences are?’”

Corin: “Yeah, because you’re an artist and a musician, but you’re not getting to talk about that piece of it because you’re carrying around all this baggage.”

Lilly: “Which is great in one sense. But I have that same envy you talk about. My boyfriend plays in a band and they’re amazing, but their focal point isn’t politics whatsoever. It’s nice that they don’t have to worry about all that stuff. The responsibility is a lot on us. There are a lot of eyes on you, especially from those who don’t share your views. They’re waiting for you to trip up and it makes it dangerous. It’s not the safest out there.”

Carrie: “I don’t mind that so much. I would rather have art feel dangerous than sanitised. Aiming for the middle is just mediocrity. We’ve never done that. That’s the death of art.”

Sleater-Kinney's new album Little Rope is released January 19 via Loma Vista. Lambrini Girls' You're Welcome EP is out now via Big Scary Monsters.