The album is another solid effort in an unexpectedly fruitful late period.
The album fails to recapture the lightning in a bottle that made the band’s initial run so magnetic.
Review: On Path of Wellness, Sleater-Kinney Chooses a Path of Stability Over Invention
Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker stay on the safer side for most of their 10th album.
The album’s pop and synth elements mark a radical departure for the seminal rock band.
The L.A. trio’s third album is a cathartic expression of estrangement in a cruel world.
The album plays to its principals’ strengths without sounding like an exercise in nostalgia.
The album is all about trying—striving to best a catalogue without peer, and sounding, minute-to-minute, like its makers might’ve done it.
Baltimore-based Beach House is a band with a problem.
What Sleater-Kinney could not do was control the equatorial heat afflicting the city like an incurable disease.