They were founded in 1990 by songwriters Tim Gane (guitar, keyboards), formerly of the band McCarthy, and Laetitia Sadier (sometimes credited as Seaya Sadier; vocals, keyboards, trombone, guitar), who is from France and sings in both English and French.
Over the years, Gane and Sadier have enlisted a large number of other musicians to accompany them on stage and on record. The initial line-up featured Martin Kean, formerly of The Chills, on bass, and Joe Dilworth (from their Too Pure label-mates Th’ Faith Healers) on drums, with Russell Yates (of Moose) and Mick Conroy (ex-Modern English) also appearing at early live shows. In 1993 they recruited Andy Ramsay (drums), who has remained in the group line-up ever since, and Mary Hansen (vocals, guitar, keyboards, percussion). Hansen’s distinctive backing vocals became an important aspect of the Stereolab sound, and she remained a regular feature of the line-up until her death in a cycling accident on December 9, 2002. Multi-instrumentalist Sean O’Hagan of The High Llamas has also been a frequent contributor, particularly with string, brass and keyboard arrangements to the band’s studio albums. John McEntire (Tortoise) has also contributed keyboard, electronic effects and studio help over the years. Other members have come and (in some cases) gone over the years, including Duncan Brown, Dave Pajo (from Tortoise), Richard Harrison and Simon Johns (all bass); Gina Morris (vocals); and Katharine Gifford and Morgane Lhote (both on keyboards).
Early Stereolab material displayed a heavy influence of krautrock sounds, particularly Neu! and Faust, characteristically relying on droning, repetitive guitar or keyboard riffs, with or without vocals. Early heavy use of distorted Farfisa combo-organ sounds were also reminiscent of early recordings by The Modern Lovers. As the band developed, they incorporated new instrumentation, and an increasingly complex sense of rhythm and structure, frequently making use of irregular time signatures as well as unorthodox chord progressions and melodic intervals. The band has often made copious use of female backing vocal lines.
Lyrically, Stereolab’s music is quirky (song titles evoke memories of 1950s science fiction stories, and are often borrowed directly from old films and records of the period, but have nothing to do with the song’s content), but highly politically and philosophically charged, sometimes with a decidedly Surrealist or Situationist bent. (Sadier notes the libertarian Marxist theoretician Cornelius Castoriadis as a particular inspiration.) Sadier’s lyrics, in both French and English, often read like highly condensed sociological texts, standing in deliberate and distinct counterpoint to the lush hedonic pop sound of the band. A prime example would be “Ping Pong” from Mars Audiac Quintet, which is an explicit restating of Marxist theory concerning the relationship between economic cycles and war cycles.
Stereolab earned a minor place in the Britpop movement, with their sound proving influential to bands like Blur: occasional keyboard-driven b-sides and singer Damon Albarn’s love of retro keyboards showed the influence, and in recognition Laetitia Sadier was invited to provide vocals on “To The End” from Parklife.
Despite the band’s fan base and critical acclaim, Stereolab has not achieved high levels of financial or popular success. On June 7, 2004, suits at the Warner Music label (to whom the band was signed in the U.S.) announced they were dropping Stereolab in response to the poor sales (40,000 to that date) of Margerine Eclipse. This was part of an ongoing effort by Warner to cut costs; The Breeders and Third Eye Blind were also dropped from the label for this reason. Laetitia Sadier is now also a member of Monade, which is essentially expressive of her own singular musical goals.
Metronomic
Stereolab Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Crazy, brutal, a torpedo
Who knows does not speak,
Who speaks does not know,
Keep the mouth closed,
Rounding the sharpness
Untie the tangles,
To be infinite,
Leap into the void
The opening lines of the Stereolab song "Metronomic Underground" depict wild, powerful and unstoppable force, characterized by torpedoes. The lines "Who knows does not speak, Who speaks does not know," is a play on the Taoist principle which suggests that those who act in accordance with the Tao do so without words. Inversely, those who speak about the Tao do not know it. The Taoist principle is about the importance of actions over words. Likewise, the line "Keep the mouth closed, Rounding the sharpness" encourages the listener to stay quiet and to be humble. The next lines suggest a search for enlightenment or fulfillment. "Untie the tangles" could be interpreted as "untying" the knots or difficulties of life, while "to be vacuous, to be infinite" suggests that a lack of ego or self can lead to greater fulfillment. Finally, "Leap into the void" denotes taking risks or leaving one's comfort zone to achieve something better.
Overall, the song seems to encourage the listener to embrace change and take risks in order to achieve greater fulfillment. The line about vacuity suggests that avoidance of ego and materialism can help foster a greater sense of purpose and freedom. The song utilizes Taoist principles to inspire listeners to live life to its fullest potential.
Line by Line Meaning
Crazy, sturdy, a torpedo
Unconventional, strong, and forceful in approach
Crazy, brutal, a torpedo
Unpredictable, harsh, and unrelenting in execution
Who knows does not speak,
Those who truly understand and possess knowledge remain quiet
Who speaks does not know,
Those who constantly speak do not truly possess knowledge
Keep the mouth closed,
Remain silent and refrain from speaking unnecessarily
Rounding the sharpness
Softening one's approach and avoiding being too harsh
Untie the tangles,
Solve problematic situations or issues and free oneself from obstacles
To be vacuous,
To be open and receptive, to clear one's mind
To be infinite,
To possess boundless potential and possibilities
Leap into the void
To take a leap of faith into the unknown with confidence and conviction
Lyrics © DOMINO PUBLISHING COMPANY
Written by: LAETITIA SADIER, TIMOTHY JOHN GANE
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
@Richard--
Used to listen to this back when I was drinking and using. First time in sobriety I've heard it and guess what? I experienced a high induced by the music and music alone that was equal to or greater than the poison I used to put in myself. Thank you, thank you for the clean high!
@tisue
using what?
@lucasskovgaard3526
right on bro
108 days clean today myself
@t.c.bramblett617
This is beautiful.
@benmainwaring4391
Soundtrack to the classic Welsh 🏴 underground comedy-crime Film “TWIN TOWN”.
@el_mal_de_ojo
Stuff to let your mind's eye open up, could unfold infinitely
@morgan599
one of the best bands of all time
@numbernine2207
Will never forget seeing them live with Mary.
@lilic1
I could listen to this for hours.
@astrolabe1976
I just realized today this is totally ripped off from Gil Scott Herons The Revolution Will Not Be Televised