| Stereolab |

Lætitia
Sadier of Stereolab playing a Moog synthesizer during a live
performance
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
London, England |
| Genre(s) |
Post-rock, Indie rock |
| Years active |
1990–present |
| Label(s) |
Duophonic,
Elektra, Too Pure |
Associated
acts |
McCarthy,
Monade,
Snowpony,
High
Llamas, Imitation Electric Piano |
| Website |
www.stereolab.co.uk |
| Members |
Tim
Gane
Lætitia Sadier
Andrew Ramsay
Simon Johns
Dominic Jeffery
Joseph Watson
Joseph Walters |
| Former members |
Mary
Hansen (deceased)
Sean
O'Hagan
Katharine Gifford
Morgane Lhote |
Stereolab are an English alternative
music band formed in 1990 in London. The band originally comprised Tim
Gane (guitar/keyboards)
and Lætitia
Sadier (vocals/keyboards/guitar),
both of whom have remained at the helm across many lineup changes.
Other long-time members include Andrew Ramsay (drums) and Mary
Hansen (vocals/keyboards/guitar).
Ramsay joined the group in 1993, while Hansen joined ten years before
her accidental death in 2002.
Called "one of the most fiercely independent and original
groups of the Nineties",
Stereolab were one of the first bands to be termed "post-rock".
Their primary musical influence is 1970s krautrock,
which they combine with lounge, 1960s pop, and experimental
music. They are noted for their heavy use of vintage electronic
keyboards, and their sound often overlays a repetitive "motorik" beat
with female vocals sung in English or French. Stereolab have stirred up
controversy for the socio-political themes they incorporate into their
work. Some critics say the group's lyrics carry a strong Marxist message,
and Gane and Sadier admit to being influenced by the Surrealist
and Situationist cultural and
political movements. However, Gane is skeptical of labels such as
"Marxist pop", and defends the band against accusations of
"sloganeering".
Although many of the band's albums have been underground hits,
they have not found larger commercial success. The band were released
from their recording contract with Warner Music when Warner's imprint Elektra
Records folded. The release was reportedly due to poor record sales,
and since then Stereolab's self-owned label, Duophonic
Records, has signed a distribution deal with Too Pure.
Duophonic holds the copyrights to the band's recordings, and on the
label the band have released many limited-edition records.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 1990–1993
- 1.2 1994–2001
- 1.3 2002
- 1.4 2003–present
- 2 Musical
style
- 3 Lyrics
and titles
- 4 Impact
- 5 Selected
discography
- 5.1 Studio
albums
- 5.2 Compilations
- 6 Notes
- 7 References
- 8 External
links
|
History
1990–1993
The 1991 10" vinyl EP Super 45 was
Stereolab's first release. (The figure on the cover appeared on several
of the band's early records.)
In 1985, Tim Gane formed McCarthy,
a band from Essex, England known for their
left-wing politics.
Gane met the French-born Lætitia Sadier
at a McCarthy concert in Paris, and the two quickly fell in love. The
musically-inclined Sadier was disillusioned with the rock scene in
France, and soon moved to London to be with Gane and to pursue her
career.
After three albums, the group broke up in 1990 and Gane immediately
formed Stereolab with Sadier (who had also contributed vocals to
McCarthy's final album).
The group's name was taken from a division of a 1960s record label that
released records demonstrating hi-fi effects.
Gane and Sadier, along with future Stereolab manager Martin
Pike, created a record label called Duophonic Super 45s—which, along
with later offshoot Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks, would be
commonly known as "Duophonic".
The 10" vinyl EP
Super
45 was the group's and the label's first
release, and was sold through mail order and the Rough
Trade Shop in London. Super 45's band-designed
album art and packaging was the first of many customized and
limited-edition Duophonic records. In a 1996 interview in The
Wire Gane calls the "do-it-yourself" aesthetic
behind Duophonic "empowering", and says that by releasing one's own
music "you learn; it creates more music, more ideas".
Other independent bands such as Tortoise, Broadcast,
and Labradford
would also release material on Duophonic.
Stereolab followed up with another EP, Super-Electric,
and a single, "Stunning Debut Album" (not actually their debut). The
band's early material was rock and guitar-oriented; of Super-Electric,
Jason Ankeny wrote in All Music Guide
that "Droning guitars, skeletal rhythms, and pop hooks—not vintage
synths and pointillist melodies—were their calling cards …."
In 1992 Stereolab's first full-length album, Peng!,
and first compilation, Switched On,
were released on independent label Too Pure. Around this time, the
lineup coalesced around Gane and Sadier plus vocalist Mary Hansen,
drummer Andrew Ramsay, bassist Duncan Brown, keyboardist Katharine
Gifford, and guitarist Sean O'Hagan. Hansen, an Australian,
had been in touch with Gane since his McCarthy days. After joining, she
and Sadier developed a style of vocal counterpoint that distinguished
Stereolab's sound until Hansen's death ten years later in 2002. O'Hagan
would later leave to form The High Llamas, but would
frequently return to contribute to Stereolab's records.
Starting with their 1993 EP Space Age Batchelor
Pad Music, the band began incorporating easy-listening
elements into their sound. This release raised Stereolab's profile and
landed them a major-label American record deal with Elektra Records.
Their next album, 1993's Transient
Random-Noise Bursts with Announcements, was
their first American release under Elektra, and became an underground
hit in both the U.S. and the U.K.
Mark Jenkins commented in The
Washington Post that with the album Stereolab
"continues the glorious drones of [their] indie work, giving celestial
sweep to [their] garage-rock organ pumping and rhythm-guitar strumming".
In the U.K. it was released on Duophonic Ultra High Frequency Disks,
which is responsible for domestic releases of Stereolab's major albums.
The year would also see a collaboration with industrial
stalwarts Nurse With Wound, in the form of
the Crumb Duck EP.
1994–2001
Emperor Tomato Ketchup,
released in 1996, has been called Stereolab's "high-water mark".
On 8
January 1994,
Stereolab achieved their first chart entry when their 1993 EP Jenny
Ondioline entered at #75 on the UK
Singles Chart. (Over the next three years, four more releases by the
band would appear on this chart, ending with the EP Miss
Modular in 1997.) With their 1994 full-length, Mars
Audiac Quintet, Stereolab focused more on pop
and less on rock, resulting in what All
Music Guide described as "what may be the
group's most accessible, tightly-written album".
Mars Audiac Quintet makes heavy use of the Moog
synthesizer, and also contains the single "Ping Pong", which has gotten
press for its allegedly explicitly Marxist lyrics.
After releasing a 1995 collection of singles and B-sides called Refried
Ectoplasm: Switched On, Vol. 2, Stereolab
followed with an EP titled Music for
the Amorphous Body Study Center. This EP was
their musical contribution to an interactive art exhibit put on in
collaboration with New York City artist Charles Long.
Stereolab's 1996 album, Emperor Tomato Ketchup,
was a critical success and was played heavily on college
radio.
A record that "captivated alternative rock", it represented Stereolab's
"high-water mark" according to music journalists Tom Moon and Joshua
Klein, respectively.
Krautrock techniques were still present, but the band stirred the pot
with hip-hop sounds and complex instrumental arrangements.
Stephan Davet of French newspaper Le Monde
claimed to see musical influences as diverse as The Velvet Underground, Burt
Bacharach, and Francoise Hardy on the album.
John
McEntire of the band Tortoise assisted with production and also played
on Emperor Tomato Ketchup, while Katharine Gifford
was replaced by Morgane Lhote before its recording, and bassist Richard
Harrison by Duncan Brown afterward.
Dots and Loops
was released in 1997, and was Stereolab's first album to enter the Billboard
200 charts, peaking at #111. Barney Hoskyns wrote in Rolling
Stone that with it the group moved "ever
further away from the one-chord Velvets drone-mesh of its early days"
toward easy listening and Europop.
A review in German newspaper Die Zeit echoed
this observation, claiming that in Dots and Loops
Stereolab transformed the harder Velvet Underground-like riffs of
previous releases into "softer sounds and noisy playfulness".
Contributors to the album once again included John McEntire, along with
Sean
O'Hagan of The High Llamas
and Jan St. Werner of German electropop duo Mouse
on Mars.
A second Nurse With Wound collaboration, Simple
Headphone Mind, appeared in 1997, and the third
release in the "Switched On" series, Aluminum
Tunes, followed in 1998.
The band then took a break from traveling while Gane and
Sadier had a child.
In 1999, Stereolab's next album appeared, titled Cobra
and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night.
Co-produced by McEntire and American producer Jim O'Rourke, the album
earned mixed reviews for its lighter sound, and peaked at #154 on the
Billboard 200.
An unsigned NME
review said that "this record has far more in common with bad jazz and
progressive rock than any experimental art-rock tradition."
In a 1999 The Washington Post article, Mark Jenkins
asked Gane about the album's apparent lack of guitars; Gane responded,
"There's a lot less upfront, distorted guitar … But
it's still quite guitar-based music. Every single track has a guitar on
it."
Stereolab added a new bassist, Simon Johns, for the Cobra and
Phases Group … tour.
The full-length Sound-Dust
followed in 2001, and rose to #178 on the Billboard 200. Again
featuring producers McEntire and O'Rourke, it was more warmly received
than Cobra and Phases Group ….
Critic Joshua Klein said that "the emphasis this time sounds less on
unfocused experimentation and more on melody … a
breezy and welcome return to form for the British band." Klein also
commented that "never has it been harder to discern just what [Sadier]
is singing, but rarely has her gibberish sounded so pleasant."
2002
In 2002, Stereolab began to plan their next album, and started
building a studio north of Bordeaux, France. In October 2002,
the band released ABC Music: The Radio 1 Sessions;
a compilation of BBC Radio 1 sessions. The year also saw
Gane and Sadier end their romantic relationship.
On 9
December 2002,
most of Stereolab showed up at a rehearsal to find their manager,
Martin Pike, standing outside talking on the phone. The news he
delivered was devastating—Mary Hansen had been killed in a traffic
accident.
As tributes from fans poured in, the band published a statement on
their web site expressing their grief.
Born in Maryborough, Queensland, Australia,
Hansen earned the most attention for her vocal work with Stereolab,
although she also played the guitar and keyboards. The music journalist
Pierre Perrone said that Hansen's "playful nature and mischievous sense
of humour came through in the way she approached the backing vocals she
contributed to Stereolab and the distinctive harmonies she created with
Sadier."
For the next few months, Stereolab lay dormant as the members coped
with their grief. They eventually decided to continue; as Sadier
explained in a 2004 interview: "Losing Mary is still incredibly
painful … But it's also an opportunity to transform
and move on. It's a new version. We've always had new versions, people
coming in and out. That's life."
(Future album and concert reviews would mention the effects of Hansen's
absence.)
In a 2004 interview Sadier said that "Our dedication to her on the
album [2004's Margerine Eclipse] says `We will love
you till the end', meaning of our lives. I'm not religious, but I feel
Mary's energy is still around somewhere. It didn't just disappear."
2003–present
The 2003 EP Instant 0 in the Universe
was recorded in France, and was Stereolab's first release following
Hansen's death. According to the music journalist Jim DeRogatis, the EP
marked a return to their earlier, harder sound—"free from the
pseudo-funk moves and avant-garde tinkering that had been inspired by
Chicago producer Jim O'Rourke".
That year, Sadier's side-project, Monade, released their debut album Socialisme
Ou Barbarie: The Bedroom Recordings. Both the name of the
group and the title of the album were references to the work of
Greek-French intellectual Cornelius Castoriadis.
The full-length album Margerine
Eclipse followed in 2004 to generally positive
reviews, and peaked at #174 on the US Billboard 200.
The track "Feel and Triple" was written in tribute to Hansen; according
to Sadier "I was reflecting on my years with her...reflecting on how we
sometimes found it hard to express the love we had for one another."
The
Observers Molloy Woodcraf awarded the album
four out of five stars, and described Sadier's vocal performance as
"life- and love-affirming", and the record as a whole as "Complex and
catchy, bold and beatific."
However, Kelefa Sanneh argued in Rolling Stone that
Margerine Eclipse was "full of familiar noises and
aimless melodies".
Margerine Eclipse was Stereolab's last record on
their American label Elektra Records, which closed down in 2004.
Future material would be released on Too Pure, the same company which
released some of the band's earliest material.
The album was followed by Oscillons from the
Anti-Sun; a 2005 three-CD and one-DVD
retrospective of the group's rarer material. Monade's second album, A
Few Steps More, also appeared that year.
In 2006, Stereolab released three limited-edition singles which were
collected in Fab Four Suture,
and contained material which Mark Jenkins thought continued the brisker
sound of the band's post-Hansen work.
Serene Velocity,
a "best-of" compilation focusing on the band's Elektra years, was
released in late 2006. As of June 2007, Stereolab's lineup comprises Tim
Gane, Lætitia Sadier, Andrew Ramsay, Simon Johns, Dominic
Jeffrey, Joseph Watson, and Joseph Walters.
Musical style
Stereolab's music combines a droning rock sound with lounge
instrumentals, and overlays it with singsong female vocals and pop
melodies. Their records are heavily influenced by the motorik
technique of 1970s krautrock groups such as Neu! and Faust.
Tim Gane has supported the comparison: "Neu! did minimalism and drones,
but in a very pop way."
Stereolab's style also incorporates easy-listening music of the 1950s
and '60s. Said Joshua Klein in The
Washington Post, "Years before everyone else
caught on, Stereolab was referencing the 1970s German bands Can and
Neu!, the Mexican lounge music master Esquivel and the decidedly unhip
Burt Bacharach."
Picture of a 1970s-era Minimoog analog electronic synthesizer.
Stereolab often use vintage Moog synthesizers in their music.
The band make use of vintage analog electronic instruments
such as the Farfisa
and Vox organs, and the Moog
synthesizer, which was featured prominently on 1994's Mars
Audiac Quintet.
Gane has praised these older instruments for their superior
controllability: "We use the older effects because they're more direct,
more extreme, and they're more like plasticine: you can shape them into
loads of things."
Funk,
jazz, and Brazilian
music are inspirations,
and the sound of minimalist composers Philip
Glass and Steve Reich can be found on 1999's Cobra and Phases
Group ….
Several critics have commented that the band's later work, like Instant
0 in the Universe (2003) and Margerine Eclipse
(2004), sound similar to their guitar-driven earlier style.
Lætitia Sadier's bilingual French and English vocals have been
a part of Stereolab since the beginning.
She writes the group's lyrics, which have a tendency towards Marxist
social commentary rather than "affairs of the heart" (in the opinion of
music journalist Simon Reynolds).
In reference to Sadier's laid-back delivery, Peter
Shapiro wrote in The Wire
that she has all the "emotional histrionics" of 1960s German singer Nico.
Sometimes Sadier will just sing wordlessly along with the music.
Before Mary Hansen's death in 2002, she and Sadier would often trade
vocals back-and-forth in a singsong manner that has been described as
"eerie" and "hypnotic".
Critic Jim Harrington commented that Hansen's absence is noticeable on
live performances of Stereolab's older tracks, and that their newer
songs could have benefited from her backing vocals.
In interviews, Gane and Sadier have discussed their musical
philosophy. According to Gane "to be unique was more important than to
be good."
On the subject of being too obscure, he said in a 1996 interview that
"maybe the area where we're on dodgy ground, is this idea that you need
great knowledge [of] esoteric music to understand what we're doing." In
the same interview Sadier responds to Gane, saying that she "think[s]
we have achieved a music that will make sense to a lot of people
whether they know about Steve Reich or not."
The duo is up-front about their desire to grow the group's sound—for
Gane, "otherwise it just sounds like what other people are doing,"
and for Sadier, "you trust that there is more and that it can be done
more interesting."
On stage
Stereolab tour regularly to support their album releases.
"Listening to Stereolab play can be a life-affirming, mind-boggling,
even religious experience," said journalist Ryan Gilbey.
The band is not afraid to turn up the volume in concert. In a 1996 The
Washington Post gig review, Mark Jenkins wrote that Stereolab
started out favoring an "easy-listening syncopation", but eventually
reverted to a "messier, more urgent sound" characteristic of its
earlier performances.
In another review Jenkins said that the band's live songs "frequently
veer[ed] into more cacophonous, guitar-dominated territory", in
contrast to lighter albums like Cobra and Phases
Group ….
In the Minneapolis Star Tribune
John Bream compared the band's live sound to feedback-driven rock bands
like the Velvet Underground, Sonic
Youth and My Bloody Valentine.
However, several critics have said that Stereolab lacks stage presence,
arguing that Sadier's vocal delivery is too subdued and that the band
tends to play instead of perform its music.
Regarding being onstage, Gane has said that "I don't like to be the
center of attention … I just get into the music and
am not really aware of the people there. That's my way of getting
through it."
Lyrics and titles
Stereolab's music is politically and philosophically charged.
Lætitia Sadier, who writes the group's lyrics, has reportedly been
inspired by her anger at the Iraq War.
The Surrealist
and Situationist
cultural and political movements are also influences, as noted by
Sadier and Gane in a 1999 Salon.com interview.
Stewart Mason commented in an All-Music
Guide review that the lyrics from the 1997 song
"Miss Modular" "sound influenced by the Situationist theory of the
'spectacle'."
When asked to explain her intentions in a 1991 Melody
Maker interview, Sadier responded that "Basically I want to change the
world. I want to make people think about how they live every day, shake
them a bit."
Critics have seen Marxist allusions in the band's lyrics, and
several have gone so far as to call the band itself Marxist.
"Ping Pong", a single included on Mars
Audiac Quintet (1994), has been put forward as
evidence. In the song, Sadier sings "about capitalism's cruel cycles of
slump and recovery" with lyrics that constitute "a plainspoken
explanation of one of the central tenets of Marxian economic analysis"
(said critics Simon Reynolds and Stewart Mason,
respectively).
The song opens with these lines:
It's alright 'cause the historical pattern has shown,
How the economical cycle tends to revolve,
In a round of decades three stages stand out in a loop,
A slump and war then peel back to square one and back for more.
Band members have resisted attempts to link the group and its
music to Marxism. In a 1999 interview, Gane stated that "none of us are
Marxists … I've never even read Marx." Although Gane
admitted that his partner's lyrics touch on political topics, he argued
that they do not cross the line into "sloganeering".
Sadier herself has mentioned that she has read very little Marx.
Stereolab's album and song titles occasionally reference avant-garde
political groups and artists. Gane said that the title of their 1999
album Cobra
and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night
contains the names of two Surrealist organizations, "Cobra" and "Phases
Group".
The title of the first song on Dots and Loops,
"Brakhage", is a nod to experimental filmmaker Stan
Brakhage.
Other examples are the 1992 compilation Switched
On, named after a 1969 Wendy
Carlos album, and the 1992 single "John Cage Bubblegum", named after
experimental composer John Cage.
Impact
Stereolab have been called one of the most "influential
alternative bands of the 90's",
and one of "the decade's most innovative British bands".
Simon Reynolds commented in Rolling Stone that the
group's earlier records form "an endlessly seductive body of work that
sounds always the same, always different."
In The Wire, Peter Shapiro compared the band
favorably to Britpop
bands Oasis and Blur,
and defended their music against the charge that it is "nothing but the
sum total of its arcane reference points".
Stereolab was one of the first groups to be called post-rock—in
a 1996 article, journalist Angela Lewis applied the "new term" to
Stereolab and three other bands who have connections to the group.
The band's 1996 album Emperor Tomato Ketchup,
their "high-water mark" according to critic Joshua Klein,
was a critical success and underground hit.
Stereolab has also received negative press. Barney
Hoskyns questioned the longevity of their music in a 1996 Mojo
review, saying that their records "sound more like arid experiments
than music born of emotional need."
In The Guardian,
Dave Simpson said that "With their borrowings from early, obscure
Kraftwerk and hip obtuse sources, [Stereolab] sound like a band of rock
critics rather than musicians."
Lætitia Sadier's vocals were criticized by author Stuart Shea for often
being "indecipherable".
The tracks on Stereolab's 1995 EP Music for
the Amorphous Body Study Center were recorded
for use in an interactive art show.
A variety of artists—musical and otherwise—have collaborated
with Stereolab. In 1995 the group teamed up with sculptor Charles Long
for an interactive art show in New York City, for which Long provided
the exhibits and Stereolab the music.
They have released tracks by and toured with post-rock band Tortoise,
while John
McEntire of Tortoise has in turn worked on several Stereolab albums.
In the 1990s Stereolab and veteran industrial band Nurse
With Wound released two limited-edition records together; both
contained Nurse With Wound remixes of original tracks provided by
Stereolab.
Stylistically, music journalist J. D. Considine credits the
band for anticipating and driving the late 1990s revival of vintage
analog instruments among indie rock bands.
Indie rock band Pavement (who also toured with
Stereolab) acknowledged the group's sound on their song "Half A Canyon".
Stereolab alumni have also founded bands of their own. Guitarist Sean
O'Hagan went on to form the The High Llamas, while keyboardist
Katharine Gifford created Snowpony with a former member of My Bloody Valentine.
Sadier herself has released two albums with her four-piece side-project
Monade,
whose sound Mark Jenkins called a "little more Parisian" than
Stereolab's.
Despite earning critical acclaim and a sizable fanbase,
commercial success has eluded the group.
Early in their career, their 1993 EP Jenny
Ondioline entered the UK
Singles Chart, but financial issues prevented the band from printing
enough records to satisfy demand.
When Elektra Records was closed down by Warner
Music in 2004, Stereolab was dropped along with many other artists,
reportedly because of poor sales.
Since then, Stereolab's self-owned label Duophonic
has inked a worldwide distribution deal with independent label Too Pure.
Through Duophonic the band both licenses their music and releases it
directly (depending on geographic market). According to Tim Gane,
"… we license our recordings and just give them to people,
then we don't have to ask for permission if we want to use it. We just
want to be in control of our own music."
Selected discography
-
Main article: Stereolab
discography
Stereolab have released dozens of studio
albums, EPs, and
singles
in their career. They have made it a practice to make almost all of
their more obscure material widely available through compilations.
Studio albums
- Peng!
(1992), Too
Pure/American
- Transient
Random-Noise Bursts with Announcements (1993), Duophonic/Elektra
- Mars Audiac Quintet
(1994), Duophonic/Elektra
- Emperor Tomato Ketchup
(1996), Duophonic/Elektra
- Dots and Loops
(1997), Duophonic/Elektra
- Cobra
and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night
(1999), Duophonic/Elektra
- Sound-Dust
(2001), Duophonic/Elektra
- Margerine Eclipse
(2004), Duophonic/Elektra
Compilations
- Switched On
(1992), Too Pure/Slumberland
- Refried Ectoplasm: Switched On,
Vol. 2 (1995), Duophonic/Drag City
- Aluminum Tunes: Switched On, Vol. 3
(1998), Duophonic/Drag City
- ABC Music: The Radio 1 Sessions
(2002), Strange Fruit/Koch
- Oscillons from the
Anti-Sun (2005), Duophonic/Too Pure
- Fab Four Suture
(2006), Duophonic/Too Pure
- Serene Velocity: A Stereolab
Anthology (2006), Duophonic/Elektra/Rhino
Notes
-
Perrone (2002)
-
Sutton (AMG: McCarthy)
-
She is sometimes known as "Seaya Sadier"; see Arundel (1991).
-
Arundel (1991)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab); Sutton (AMG: McCarthy)
-
Perrone (2002)
-
H2O (Chunklet: Tim Gane)
-
Shapiro (1996)
-
Ankeny (AMG: Super Electric)
-
DeRogatis (1993); Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab); Perrone (2002)
-
Phares (AMG: Transient Random-Noise …)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Jenkins (1993)
-
H2O (Chunklet: Tim Gane)
-
Klein (2001)
-
Phares (AMG: Mars Audiac Quintet)
-
DeRogatis (1994); Mason (AMG: Ping Pong); Reynolds (1996)
-
Reynolds (1995)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Klein (2001); Moon (2004)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Emperor Tomato Ketchup)
-
Davet (1996)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Klein (2001)
-
Hoskyns (1997)
-
"Review (Dots and Loops)", Die Zeit,
Die Zeit, 1997-04-04.
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Cobra and Phases Group …); Hoskyns (1999)
-
Cobra
And Phases Group Play Voltage In The Milky Night. NME.
IPC Media. Retrieved on 2007-06-11.
-
Jenkins (1999-11-05)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Klein (2001); Walters (2001)
-
Klein (2001)
-
McNair (2004)
-
McNair (2004); Saraceno (2002)
-
"Tributes
flood in for tragic Stereolab star", NME,
IPC MEDIA, 2002-12-13.
-
Perrone (2002)
-
Laban (2004)
-
DeRogatis (2003); Harrington (2004); Wagner (2004)
-
McNair (2004)
-
DeRogatis (2003)
-
Fritch (2004); Phares (AMG: Monade)
-
Phares (AMG: Margerine Eclipse)
-
Margerine Eclipse. metacritic.com.
CNET Networks, Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
-
McNair (2004)
-
Woodcraft (2004)
-
Sanneh (2004)
-
Eliscu (2004)
-
Monade. Official Website.
Beggars Group, USA. Retrieved on 2007-05-26.
-
Phares (AMG: Monade)
-
Jenkins (2006)
-
Official Stereolab MySpace Page. MySpace
Music. MySpace.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-02.
-
Klein (2001); Shapiro (1996)
-
Reynolds (1996)
-
Klein (2001)
-
DeRogatis (1994); Shapiro (1996)
-
Taylor (2001), p.110
-
Jenkins (1999-11-05);
McNair (2004)
-
Klein (2001)
-
DeRogatis (2003); Wagner (2004)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Reynolds (1996)
-
Shapiro (1996)
-
Klein (2001)
-
Perrone (2002)
-
Harrington (2004)
-
Stark (1999)
-
Shapiro (1996)
-
Hoskyns (1999)
-
Fritch (2004)
-
Gilbey (1997)
-
Jenkins (1996)
-
Jenkins (1999-11-13)
-
Bream (1996)
-
Harrington (2004); Musgrove (2000)
-
Jenkins (1999-11-05)
-
Reynolds (1996); Stanley (2003)
-
Stark (1999)
-
Mason (AMG: Miss Modular)
-
Arundel (1991)
-
Mason (AMG: Ping Pong); Reynolds (1996)
-
Fritch (2004); Jenkins (1999); Reynolds (1996); Shapiro (1996)
-
Mason (AMG: Ping Pong); Reynolds (1996)
-
Jenkins (1999-11-05)
-
Stark (1999)
-
Stark (1999)
-
Stark (1999)
-
Morris (1997)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Jenkins (1998)
-
Reynolds (1996)
-
Shapiro (1996)
-
Lewis (1996)
-
Klein (2001)
-
Erlewine (AMG: Stereolab)
-
Hoskyns (1996)
-
Simpson (2001)
-
Shea (2002), pp.53,54
-
Reynolds (1995)
-
Reynolds (1995)
-
Jenkins (2003)
-
Considine (1997)
-
See:
-
Jenkins (1998); Unterberger (The High Llamas)
-
Jenkins (2005)
-
Eliscu (2004), Stevens (2003)
-
See:
-
Eliscu (2004)
-
Monade. Official Website.
Beggars Group, USA. Retrieved on 2007-05-26.
-
H2O (Chunklet: Tim Gane)
-
Phares (AMG: Fab Four Suture)
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