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Beginning in Philadelphia in late 2007, U.S. Girls was the name Meghan Remy gave her then-abrasive solo project.
Armed with a gigantic reel-to-reel tape machine, Remy's earliest performances included tape recordings of primitive percussion and vocal performances both aggressive and darkly moody. This early phase resulted in two albums released on the Siltbreeze label, 2008's Introducing and 2010's Go Grey, as well as numerous 7" singles, cassettes, and CD-Rs on small labels. In this time Remy toured the U.S. and Europe extensively, lugging her only sometimes functional reel-to-reel around and sometimes traveling via Greyhound bus. Though her harsh tape experiments remained at the core of the U.S. Girls sound, 2011's U.S. Girls on Kraak hinted at a change in direction with sample-based songs and a more vivid vocal presence. Released by FatCat in 2012, Gem delivered on the change suggested in earlier releases as well as in ever-reaching live performances. Produced by Slim Twig, the album was the highest fidelity of any U.S. Girls release, doing away with harsh drum machines and distorted vocals in favor of a more traditional live band-style recording as well as faithful covers of glam rock and '60s AM radio pop. The band's live performances at this time went from solo to full-band experiences as well. In 2013, U.S. Girls released Free Advice Column, a four-song EP co-produced by frequent collaborator Onakabazien (Louis Percival), on Bad Actors Inc. Revered indie label 4AD signed U.S. Girls in 2015, releasing a dubby single called "Damn That Valley." The full-length Half Free arrived in September, continuing the project's increase in accessibility while retaining the dark moods and offbeat tape loops of earlier recordings. ~ Fred Thomas
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