Try GOLD - Free
'Little Rope' makes grief palpable
Mint Mumbai
|February 10, 2024
Sleater-Kinney’s new album is about finding a light in the darkness, coping with loss through friendship, communion, and hard-headed stubbornness

Late in 2022, Carrie Brownstein half of the influential feminist rock act Sleater-Kinney on the way to the studio when she got a call from long-time friend and bandmate Corin Tucker. Someone at the US embassy in Italy was trying to get in touch with Brownstein. Suspecting it was a prank, she headed into a recording session for Little Rope, Sleater-Kinney's 11th studio album. When she checked her phone a couple of hours later though, she had terrible news. Her mother and stepfather, vacationing in Italy, had died in a car crash. Devastated, Brownstein threw herself into the album's recording, finding refuge in the comfortable rituals of playing music. "Guitar was a way of giving myself shape again," she said in an interview to NPR. "And to create songs with it was a way of giving form to something that felt very nebulous."
Brownstein's grief is palpable on Little Rope, infusing the album's 10 tracks about societal despair, depression and existential burnout with a sense of deeply personal pathos. You can hear it in her voice on the dance-punk anthem Hunt You Down, as she sings of things left unsaid: "I forgive you, I wish I'd told you so." It's there in the fuzzed-out, disintegrating guitars of Six Mistakes, Tucker's stripped-back vibrato emerging from dark clouds of detuned loss. It anchors the anxiety-edged mania of Don't Feel Right, with its lyrics about driving through the night to "drown the pain out".
This story is from the February 10, 2024 edition of Mint Mumbai.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
In a sea of tech talent, companies can’t find the workers they want
There has rarely, if ever, been so much tech talent available in the job market. Yet many tech companies say good help is hard to find.
4 mins
October 03, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Hexaware sued for $500 million in US over patent breach
American IT services firm Natsoft Corp. has sued Hexaware Technologies Ltd for breach of contract and patent infringement, seeking $500 million in damages from the latter, in one of the biggest patent cases against an Indian IT firm.
3 mins
October 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
GST boom ahead?
India's latest goods and services tax (GST) revenue figures paint an optimistic picture.
1 min
October 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
H-1B clampdown may extend to US college faculty
Rising anti-immigration sentiment in the US is no longer confined to moves to limit foreign technology workers from entering the country.
2 mins
October 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
FPIs pull record ₹2 tn on valuations, weak rupee
Heavy outflows could cap market gains; Nifty returns just 0.3% in dollar terms
2 mins
October 03, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Instant grocery delivery is going luxe to stand out
Blinkit joins the race as it expands to ozone-washed fruits and artisanal breads to cheese
2 mins
October 03, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Next-gen reforms to tackle land, women's participation
The initiatives seek to tackle some of the intractable challenges in India's development story
2 mins
October 03, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Why India's best students face a tough job market
Students entering this year's placement season are stepping into a rough job market.
2 mins
October 03, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Govt scans e-commerce cos’ COD charges, refund delays
The government will examine if cash-on-delivery charges imposed by online retailers are aimed at nudging consumers to pay upfront, and why refunds are delayed or blocked if prepaid orders are cancelled, said two people aware of the matter.
2 mins
October 03, 2025

Mint Mumbai
WHY INDIA IS SEEKING A NEW SUNRISE IN JAPAN
India missed out on Japanese investment in its initial post-reform years. That could change now
7 mins
October 03, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size