Sleater-Kinney: Little Rope album review – New collection of heart and depth
Three becomes two as US indie rockers keep it rolling with raw maturity and spiky balladry

Opening an album with a track called ‘Hell’ is something of a gauntlet-slapping giveaway of things to come on Sleater-Kinney’s 11th outing, their fourth studio album since Carrie Brownstein, Corin Tucker and drummer Janet Weiss reunited in 2014. With Weiss departing in 2019, Brownstein and Tucker may no longer be the punky upstarts of yore, but their confessional meditations on loss, grief, confusion and crisis are born from hard-lived experience.
This is certainly true on Little Rope, recorded in the shadow of the deaths of Brownstein’s parents in a car crash. While much of the album was written before the accident, it nevertheless gives this record its emotional heart. As Tucker sings on ‘Hunt You Down’, ‘the thing you fear the most will hunt you down’.

Despite this, Little Rope isn’t the unfettered howl you might expect. Rather, the pain has been channelled into a well-crafted and eminently grown-up collection tinged with depth and nuance. That’s not to say any edges have been blunted. Producer John Congleton wraps things in a dense and crunchy sheen, but the rawness and vulnerability remain across the record’s ten tracks.
Second single, ‘Say it Like You Mean it’, is a last-gasp challenge to a departing lover that is both defiant and redemptive: it’s also a great pop song. As too is the stadium-sized bounce of ‘Crusader’. Most affecting moment of all comes on ‘Dress Yourself’, a spiky nouveau power ballad and cracked anthem-in-waiting for disaffected middle youth trying to keep it together. The artistry that pervades beyond this collection’s troubled pulse is itself a form of redemption, as Brownstein and Tucker try to make sense of the world on a record full of scars that sounds like a purging.
Sleater-Kinney: Little Rope is released by Loma Vista on Friday 19 January.