When the members of Sick of Sarah went looking for a fifth member to help fill out their sound last winter, they never even considered adding a guy instead of a woman. But it wasn't because they're all about girl power or anything meaningful like that.
"One of them probably would've wound up dating him," drummer Brooke Svanes said, pointing to her (laughing) bandmates. "We don't want any fornication going on in this band."
It certainly would've been difficult to spark up any romance in Sick of Sarah's rehearsal space last week, a sweltering and cramped room on the third floor of an old warehouse overlooking University Avenue in St. Paul, where the quintet has spent much of their summer. In addition to a battle of the bands contest they won at Milwaukee's Summerfest last month, the women have been getting ready for next week's release of their self-titled, radio-friendly debut, which they're promoting with a CD party tonight at the Cabooze.
Sitting beneath posters of the Flaming Lips, Ratt, Van Halen and the Cows, the women of Sick of Sarah made it clear in an interview last week that their all-female DNA is not a thing, per se. It just is. But that doesn't mean they're not proud of it.
"We all love the Go-Go's, Bangles, Sleater-Kinney, Tegan and Sara," said singer/guitarist Abisha Uhl, 26. "We like it being an all-girl thing. We want to be a band that represents, for sure."
Added Svanes, to more laughs, "It can be a double-edged sword. My favorite is when people come up to me after a show and say, 'You're really good for a girl drummer.'"
Guitarist Jessie Farmer, who switched from bass when Jamie Holm joined the band earlier this year, cut her teeth with one of the most revolutionary all-female rock bands of all time, Babes in Toyland. She played bass on the trio's last tour in 2000 -- or "last official tour," as Farmer carefully put it.
"I was a 20-year-old living the dream," she said. "I got to play with my favorite band ever."