Kittie Reveiws

CMJ New Music Reveiw

So, you think Josie & The Pussycats are the quintessential chicks who rock with reckless abandon, huh? Well, the teenage babes in Ontario, Canada's Kittie will scratch and claw their way into the darkest recesses of your hearts thanks to their debut, the smashing 'n' stomping Spit. Don't let the quartet's tattered 'n' torn, baby-dominatrix image or its adolescent, Courtney Love-style feminist posturing fool you. These dirty grrrls really pounce atop their primal, gnarling riffs. Instead of growing up to become dope-addled strippers, these devil dolls have funneled adolescent angst into a netherworld of no-holds-barred metal. Six-stringer Fallon Bowman slings her axe as competently as any meathead death metallist, while singer Morgan Lander hisses and moans with equal skill. Spit is a bitchin' dose of metal that'll leave you delirious with cat scratch fever, while it redefines your notions of "girl power." Kittie is the band that your kid sister will happily adopt when she rebels and grows outta her Backstreet Boys phase. Me-fucking-ow. © 1978-1999 College Media, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved

VH1 Reveiw

In the press material accompanying the debut album from Kittie, no fewer than three references are made contrasting the band with Britney Spears. Even though the members of Kittie are four girls ranging in age from 15 to a grizzled 17, they are taking great strides to ensure they are not lumped in with the current kiddie-pop phenomenon. (Actually, when exactly did this phenomenon ever go away? Are we so vain that we can't remember Another Bad Creation? The Osmonds?) But methinks Kittie doth protest too much, since there's not much chance these girls will be mistaken for the reigning wholesome teen queens anytime soon. In fact, these are the sort of girls who beat up the Britney Spears of the world for lunch money, then cut class to smoke in the parking lot. If there's any bandwagon that this kiddie grindcore band is jumping on, it's not the little red one steered by the moppets of Hanson or the maidens of LilithFair, but the stolen one piloted by the thrash bands of Ozzfest. Simply put, Kittie is to Fear Factory as the Donnas are to the Ramones. They look like the Muppet Babies version of L7 and trade in a bottom-heavy, gloomy brand of goth-metal that is more closely associated with an overabundance of testosterone. Lacking any perceivable musical virtuosity or lyrical acumen, the young women of Kittie are nonetheless capable players. Spit offers 12 bile-spewing dirges featuring churning guitars and angry growling vocals that are probably no worse than your average Coal Chamber tune, although that may be damning with faint praise. The lyrics are world-weary and bitter beyond the bandmembers' years. High school must be worse than I remember. Some of the tunes, such as the impressively layered "Charlotte" and "Paperdoll," showcase the softer side of lead singer Morgan Lander's voice while still maintaining the band's heavy sound, but most songs, including the title track, threaten to shred her vocal cords by the time she's old enough to buy beer. The climactic riffage in the bludgeoning "Raven" sounds exactly like Rocket From the Crypt's "On a Rope," but this is where the similarities end. The songs are by and large loud, bombastic and one-note, with too few jumping out as distinctive or memorable. But it might be interesting to see where Kittie are in a few years, once their chops improve and their teen angst evolves into good old-fashioned cynicism. Though Spit is far from sugar-coated or commercial, there is a vague underlying sense of gimmickry to the whole endeavor. The sheer familiarity of many of the songs begs the question: If this band was comprised of four teen-age boys, would there be anything here of note at all? Of course, it may be that sort of narrow-minded statement from square, curmudgeonly critics that contributes to Kittie's sense of defensiveness, not to mention all that anger. © 1999 Viacom International Inc. All Rights Reserved.

MTV Reveiw

There's nothing remotely cute or fluffy about Kittie, despite what their name might suggest. Singer Morgan Lander sounds like Korn frontman Jonathan Davis' long lost soul sister growling, sobbing, crooning, and gnashing her way through an array of tunes that are every bit as virulent as anything the Korn-Bizkit continuum has spewed in recent years. Lander, her sister Mercedes (on drums), bassist Tanya Candler, and guitarist Fallon Bowman certainly know how to dish out raw and chunky fare, tackling track after track as if it were an athletic competition. "Brackish" is a blazing hard-core outburst with Lander doing a Tasmanian Devil-style rap interlude a la Davis; "Suck" and "Spit" grind mercilessly. Other numbers ("Charlotte," "Raven") cover more ground, veering from squeaky tight syncopated stretches to gales of gritty brooding and acrid distorted guitar. Likewise the songs' sentiments range from such point blank quips as "Do You Think I'm A Whore?" and "Get Off (You Can Eat a Dick)" to (relatively) subtler expressions like "Choke." Like others of the au courant aggro camp, it's easy to overlook the musicians' genuinely impressive chops amid all the bluster, but if these gals really are all still juveys and can whip up this much of a furor, Korn, Alanis, Limp Bizkit, and anyone else who gets in their way better watch their asses. © 1999 MTV Networks. All Rights Reserved.

From AntiMtv.com

Look at the signs : sixteen years old, cute as hell... it could have been a recipe for disaster. Instead, Kittie are one of the new wave of heavy-as-fuck bands and you definitely don't want to mess with them. And, when I say heavy, imagine heavy as in Will Haven meets Static X heavy, the sort of heavy that loosens your teeth and rattles your bones. Songs like album opener Spit and, my personal fave, Suck, are songs that sort the boys from the men so to speak. On Raven when Kittie scream "Get away from me, stay the fuck away from me"... they mean it! Despite all the, ahem, balls and heaviness, Kittie have the added bonus of being easy to look at. I mean, if it was a choice of looking at somebody like System Of A Down or watching Kittie.. there is no contest is there ? And when vocalist Morgan teases the listener with the "Jonny's been a very bad boy" you can imagine hormones racing in bedrooms the world over! In a world that judges more on image than on talent, Kittie are lucky in that they possess both by the bucketload. You'd be mad to ignore them! (Graham Finney)