The Breeders

caption-width:500:The Breeders in 1994. Left to right: Kelley Deal, Jim MacPherson (lucky guy!), Josephine Wiggs, Kim Deal

So, what'd ya do if you're in a band and fans like you, but your frontman gets jealous and starts doing the I Am the Band thing and pisses you off?

If you're Kim Deal, the answer is "Start My Own band! With blackjack! And hookers! And become just as popular!".

The Breeders was started by Kim Deal, the girlish-voiced bassist of The Pixies, as a result of frontman Black Francis' aforementioned jealousy at her Ensemble Darkhorse status and I Am the Band tendencies. She has since remained one of the two constant members of the band.

At first, The Breeders were a collaboration between Deal (who switched to guitar) and Throwing Muses guitarist/vocalist Tanya Donelly, augmented by The Perfect Disaster bassist Josephine Wiggs and Slint drummer Britt "Oh wait, that's a guy?" Walford. In this incarnation, the band got signed to 4AD Records (also home of The Pixies) and recorded an album with Steve Albini. The album, Pod, represented a variation on The Pixies' catchy Alternative Rock but with rawer production values, and was well-received upon its release.

After a break to record with their full-time bands, Deal and Donelly returned to the Breeders, this time permanently - Donelly resigned from Throwing Muses shortly thereafter, while the Pixies went on a two-year hiatus and disintegrated. A short Breeders EP followed, Safari. This marked the debut of Kim's twin sister Kelley, who has remained the other constant member of the band since. By the end of the year, Donelly and Walford had left the band, the latter replaced by Jim MacPherson behind the drumset. With the new Kim-Kelley-Josephine-Jim lineup, The Breeders became a full-time band, supporting Nirvana on their 1992 European tour.

After The Pixies broke up for good in 1993, The Breeders went into the studio to record Last Splash. Produced by Kim and Mark Freegard, Splash has slightly better production values (but not by much) and way catchier melodies. It quickly became the band's biggest success, spawning a hit single with "Cannonball" and selling well in excess of a million copies.

However, this success proved Too Good to Last. The band wound down after Kelley ran into legal trouble for drug use, going into a long hiatus. Both sisters started up side projects, namely The Amps (Kim), the Kelley Deal 6000 and The Last Hard Men (Kelley). MacPherson and Wiggs themselves left at some point during this hiatus. The Prodigy also Sampled Up their song "S.O.S." for the massive hit "Firestarter" while they were inactive.

The Breeders came out of their Ten Minute Retirement around 1998, initially just with the Deal sisters. They returned to the studio with a new rhythm section (bassist Mando Lopez and drummer Jose Medeles) and guitarist to record Title TK, released in 2002. TK shied away from the catchy accessibility of Splash and instead returned to the raw garage rock of Pod. The band has since released another album and an EP with the same lineup.

Members:
 * Kim Deal - vocals, guitar (1990-present)
 * Kelley Deal - vocals, guitar (1992-present)
 * Tanya Donelly - vocals, guitar (1990-1992)
 * Josephine Wiggs - bass (1990-1996)
 * Mando Lopez - bass (2002-present)
 * Britt Walford - drums (1990-1992)
 * Jim MacPherson - drums (1992-1996)
 * Jose Medeles - drums (2002-present)

Discography:
 * Pod (1990)
 * Safari EP (1992)
 * Last Splash (1993)
 * Head to Toe EP (1994)
 * Title TK (2002)
 * Mountain Battles (2008)
 * Fate to Fatal EP (2009)

Tropes

 * Album Title Drop: Last Splash's title comes from a line in "Cannonball".
 * Break Up Song: "Do You Love Me Now?", with a chorus that goes Come on, come on, come back to me right now no less.
 * Cover Version: "Happiness Is a Warm Gun" by The Beatles on Pod, "So Sad About Us" by The Who on Safari, "Drivin' on 9" by Ed's Redeeming Qualities on Last Splash, "Shocker in Gloomtown" by Guided By Voices and "The Freed Pig" by Sebadoh on Head to Toe.
 * And a non-Gender Flip cover of Aerosmith's "Lord Of The Thighs" on the "Cannonball" B-side.
 * In the Style Of: The "Drivin' on 9" cover is performed as a folk-country sort of thing.
 * Gender Blender Name: Britt Walford.
 * Gratuitous German: "German Studies".
 * Gratuitous Spanish: Probably inherited from The Pixies. See: "Regalame Esta Noche".
 * Looped Lyrics: "Bang On".
 * One Hit Wonder: Quick, name a song of theirs that isn't "Cannonball". Thought so.
 * Performance Video: "Cannonball".
 * The One Guy: During The Nineties, Walford and MacPherson.
 * Sampled Up: "S.O.S." --> "Firestarter" by The Prodigy.
 * Start My Own: How the band began.
 * Studio Chatter: Appears a bit on Pod, such as on "Metal Man" and the end of "Happiness Is a Warm Gun" (where Walford asks "Josephine, do you think you're going bald?" to the rather exasperated reply, "No, you've asked me before, and the answer is still no.").
 * Surreal Music Video: "Cannonball", which alternates between footage of the band playing the song and shots of a cannonball rolling down some street.
 * Word Salad Lyrics