* En anglais uniquement
With their hypnotic rhythms and mesmerizing singsong vocals,
Stereolab was one of the most influential and distinctive bands to emerge in the '90s. Led by
Tim Gane and
Laetitia Sadier, the group celebrated forms of music that were on the fringe of rock and brought attention to strands of pop music -- bossa nova, lounge-pop, movie soundtracks -- that were traditionally banished from the rock lineage. On early singles and albums such as 1993's
Transient Random-Noise Bursts with Announcements,
Stereolab combined '60s pop melodies with an art rock aesthetic borrowed from Krautrock bands like
Faust and
Neu!, but by the time of 1996's
Emperor Tomato Ketchup, their sound incorporated jazz, hip-hop, and dance. Later, their collaborations with
John McEntire and
Jim O'Rourke on 1997's
Dots and Loops and 2001's
Sound-Dust reflected an increasingly intricate, experimental approach. Following the tragic 2002 death of member
Mary Hansen, the band returned to a poppier style for albums like 2008's
Chemical Chords.
Stereolab's unmistakable sound had a lasting impact: During the '90s, indie contemporaries like
Pavement and
Blur aped their style, while hip-hop artists such as
J Dilla and
Tyler the Creator sampled the band's music or collaborated with its members in the 2000s and 2010s.
Tim Gane (born July 12, 1964; guitar, keyboards) was the leader of
McCarthy, a London-based band from the late '80s that functioned as a prototype for
Stereolab's sound.
Gane met
Laetitia Sadier (born May 6, 1968; vocals, keyboards), a French-born vocalist, at one of
McCarthy's concerts. The pair began a romantic relationship that became a musical collaboration after
McCarthy disbanded in 1990;
Sadier sang on the final
McCarthy album. The duo began recording as
Stereolab, borrowing the name from Vanguard Records' hi-fi effects division in the '50s.
Gane and
Sadier also formed the label Duophonic Records with manager Martin Pike to release their singles.
Stereolab's first year of existence was prolific: The debut EP
Super 45 arrived in May 1991, followed quickly by the Super-Electric EP that September and the
Stunning Debut Album EP that November. At that point, the group were working with
Th' Faith Healers drummer
Joe Dilworth and former
Chills bassist Martin Kean;
Gina Morris occasionally provided backup vocals.
Too Pure released the band's first full-length,
Peng!, in May 1992, and the EP compilation
Switched On in October. As with all of the group's releases from this era, both albums featured the visual trademark of a maniacally grinning cartoon taken from a '70s Swiss political comic (which the band named "Cliff"). That year,
Stereolab also issued the Lo-Fi EP and added keyboardist/vocalist
Mary Hansen and drummer
Andy Ramsay to the fold.
Released in early 1993,
Stereolab's
The Groop Played "Space Age Bachelor Pad Music" EP featured the core group of
Gane,
Sadier,
Hansen, and
Ramsay, along with ex-
Microdisney guitarist
Sean O'Hagan and bassist
Duncan Brown. One of the first '90s alternative records to explicitly draw from the "Space Age" lounge-pop music of the '50s,
The Groop became an underground sensation, paving the way toward
Stereolab's first American record contract with Elektra Records. Their next album, and first American release, was
Transient Random-Noise Bursts with Announcements. Released in August 1993, it became an underground and college hit throughout the U.S. and U.K. They followed it that October with Crumb Duck, a split EP with
Nurse with Wound. Early the following year, the Jenny Ondioline EP became
Stereolab's first charting release when it entered the U.K. Singles chart at number 75.
Stereolab soon became a hip name to drop for many musicians, including
Sonic Youth,
Pavement, and
Blur, who had
Laetitia Sadier provide guest vocals on their 1994 hit single "To the End." Where
Transient was dominated by a lo-fi experimentalism, the group's sound became lusher and more layered with
Mars Audiac Quintet, which was released in August 1994.
O'Hagan moved from a full member to a part-time guest during the recording of the album -- he was busy forming his own band,
the High Llamas -- and the group added keyboardist Katherine Gifford. By the time of
Mars Audiac Quintet's release,
Stereolab's style was prominent throughout the underground, and the band began to change their approach. Created for an interactive art exhibit by Charles Long, the limited-edition 1995 EP Music for the Amorphous Body Center boasted detailed, intricate string and vocal arrangements that were more sophisticated than the group's previous releases. That July, the band issued their second rarities compilation,
Refried Ectoplasm, which was released on
Drag City in the U.S.
Before
Stereolab recorded a new album, Gifford was replaced by
Morgane Lhote. Featuring contributions from
Tortoise's
John McEntire, 1996's
Emperor Tomato Ketchup was an even bigger departure from the band's early drone rock, demonstrating a heavy hip-hop, jazz, and dance influence. It was
Stereolab's greatest success to date, earning positive reviews in both the U.S. and U.K. and becoming a significant college hit in the process. After the recording of
Emperor Tomato Ketchup, bassist
Duncan Brown was replaced by
Richard Harrison. That year, the band worked with
Herbie Mann on "One Note Samba/Surfboard," which appeared on the Red Hot Organization's AIDS benefit album
Red Hot + Rio. At the end of 1996,
Stereolab released the limited-edition, horn-driven Fluorescences EP. For their next album,
Dots and Loops, the band reunited with
McEntire and recruited
Mouse on Mars'
Jan St. Werner; after its September 1997 release, it peaked at number 111 on the Billboard 200 chart. Another
Nurse with Wound collaboration, Simple Headphone Mind, appeared that year, and singer/poet
Brigitte Fontaine joined
Stereolab on the 1998 single "Calimero," which featured the debut of
Sadier's other project
Monade on its B-side. Aluminum Tunes, the group's third rarities collection, appeared in October 1998.
After taking time off from touring following the birth of
Gane and
Sadier's first child,
Stereolab resurfaced in 1999 with the intricate
Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night, which featured production by
McEntire and
Jim O'Rourke. An EP, The First of the Microbe Hunters, quickly followed in 2000. Their seventh full-length, 2001's
Sound-Dust, reunited the band with
O'Rourke and
McEntire and took a more melodic approach. In 2002,
Sadier and
Gane ended their relationship, but
Stereolab continued. The collection
ABC Music: The Radio 1 Sessions arrived that October, just a few months before
Hansen died at the age of 36 when the bicycle she was riding was hit by a truck in December 2002. Following
Hansen's death, the group soldiered on, releasing
The Instant 0 in the Universe EP in October 2003 and the full-length
Margerine Eclipse -- a tribute to
Hansen -- in January 2004. After Elektra Records folded later in 2004,
Stereolab returned to Too Pure, which released a series of six limited-edition singles collected on 2006's
Fab Four Suture. The group re-teamed with producer/arranger
Sean O'Hagan for 2008's
Chemical Chords, a collection of short, poppy songs released by 4AD.
Following their Australian tour in February 2009,
Stereolab went on an indefinite hiatus. Not Music, a collection of material recorded during the
Chemical Chords sessions, arrived in 2010. Subsequently,
Gane formed the kosmiche-inspired trio
Cavern of Anti-Matter, which also featured former
Stereolab drummer
Joe Dilworth.
Sadier pursued several projects, including solo albums and the groups
Little Tornados and the
Laetitia Sadier Source Ensemble. In 2019,
Stereolab ended their hiatus to play a series of concerts and festivals that coincided with deluxe reissues of their albums, beginning with
Transient Random-Noise Bursts with Announcements and
Mars Audiac Quintet that May.
Emperor Tomato Ketchup,
Dots and Loops, and
Cobra and Phases Group Play Voltage in the Milky Night followed that September, and
Sound-Dust and
Margerine Eclipse appeared that November.
Electrically Possessed: Switched On, Vol. 4 arrived in February 2021 and collected singles, B-sides, and rarities from 1999 to 2008, including the entirety of The First of the Microbe Hunters. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Heather Phares