Album Facts
Sir Chloe - I Am The Dog (Indie Exclusive Clear Color) Vinyl LP
Bluntly metaphrical with a twangy, soft-loud art-punk sound
Price $27.00
Format 1xLP
Label Atlantic
UPC 075678625589
Color Clear
Year May 19 2023
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint
Album Facts
Bluntly metaphrical with a twangy, soft-loud art-punk sound
Price $27.00
Format 1xLP
Label Atlantic
UPC 075678625589
Color Clear
Year May 19 2023
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint
Sir Chloe unleash their darker desires on their wry, bluntly metaphorical 2023 full-length debut, I Am the Dog. Along with a twangy, soft-loud art-punk sound that evokes the influence of '90s icons like the Pixies and Hole, Sir Chloe have a knack for crafting sharp-tongued anthems that are often built around the struggle between the ego and the id, or more specifically, the human and the animal. It's a vibe that lead singer/songwriter Dana Foote has been exploring from the start, when she put the band together in 2017 as part of her senior thesis project while a composition major at Vermont's Bennington College. Early viral hits "Michelle" (a song about a Fight Club-esque toxic relationship) and "Animal" (in which Foote politely begs to be treated like one) set the tone for her dualistic style. On I Am the Dog, she further answers her own implied question of what are you, human or animal? Sometimes that answer leans toward the more metaphorical, as on the woozy, narcotic title track in which Foote describes herself as something like a rescue dog with emotional issues, fighting the ones who love her. Elsewhere, her imagery is surrealistically literal, as on the wiry, Brian Eno-esque "Hooves," where she expounds the many base virtues of her half-goat/half-human lover, singing "Stand on hind legs/Feed you through the picket fence/Bite my hand, drool, beg/Table manners, what a drag." Vocally, Foote has a knowing, flatly cool delivery in the tradition of singers like Fiona Apple and PJ Harvey. While Sir Chloe's music is never as wildly pugilistic as the Stooges, her dry humor and animal imagery do bring to mind Iggy Pop's own "Wanna Be Your Dog" sexual energy. It's that struggle for control in a chaotic world, whether as master or pet, that Foote sinks her teeth into throughout I Am the Dog