Locations

Downtown

  • 203 SW 9th Ave
  • Portland, OR 97214
  • (503) 222-0990

Hawthorne

  • 3574 SE Hawthorne
  • Portland, OR 97205
  • (503) 239-7561

Hours

  • Mon-Fri 10-7
  • Sat 10-8
  • Sun 11-6

Jackpot VIP Club

Sign-up for updates of new releases, instores, and more!

Online Store:

Sleater-Kinney

Other Albums by This Artist:

Sleater-Kinney

Sleater-Kinney

Dig Me Out
Having reinvented the girl-punk wheel with Call the Doctor, Sleater-Kinney continues to expand the boundaries of the form with the stunning ... (Click the album for more)
  • Vinyl out of stock

Sleater-Kinney

One Beat

Product is currently unavailable, please check back soon!

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 Sleater-Kinney album, courtesy of Hedwig & the Angry Inch mastermind Stephen Trask.) Lyrically, One Beat 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 One Beat a much more effective stab at maturity than the often-difficult The Hot Rock. --Steve Huey

Newsfeed: