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Diva (My Sister's Machine album)

Diva
My Sisters Machine Diva.jpg
Studio album by My Sister's Machine
Released January 24, 1992
Recorded 1992
Genre Grunge, alternative metal, heavy metal
Length 38:47
Label Caroline
Producer My Sister's Machine, Ronnie S. Champagne
My Sister's Machine chronology
Diva
(1992)
Wallflower
(1993)Wallflower1993
Music video
I'm Sorry on YouTube
Music video
I Hate You on YouTube
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4.5/5 stars

Diva is the debut studio album by the American grunge band My Sister's Machine.

Before the formation of My Sister's Machine, singer and lyricist Nick Pollock had played guitar in an early incarnation of Alice in Chains with vocalist Layne Staley; they called themselves Alice N' Chains. When that band broke up on friendly terms in 1987, Pollock played for a year with older musicians in a funk band. In 1989, he formed MSM along with guitarist Owen Wright, bassist Chris Ivanovich, and drummer Chris Gohde; Wright and Gohde previously played in a band called Mistrust, which also included former Culprit singer Jeff L’Heureux.

Since none of the other band members had ever been a singer before, Pollock got the job by default being the band's primary lyricist. In order to have more artistic control over their debut album, the band initially decided to sign a deal with a small independent record company called Caroline Records. "The band's standpoint is that it's not time," Pollock said. "We consciously decided to go with an independent, so we could (have the freedom to) say, 'This is the way I want the cover to look,' and 'I want to be part of producing the album, even though I am not a record producer, because it's a learning experience for me.' We have a really good relationship with the label. When the time comes when we're ready to move on, they're more than willing to sell the contract to a major label with the resources to put on a bigger marketing push." The album was recorded at Robert Lang Studios in Shoreline, Washington.

Pollock is credited for writing or co-writing all music and lyrics off Diva. Mike Boehm of the Los Angeles Times wrote that while there are "some clear Alice in Chains echoes in My Sister's Machine...one can also detect similarities to sources beyond one scene--you can hear some of the Cult's catchy hard-riffing, and some of Axl Rose's contorted, word-bending phrasing." Boehm also observed that MSM differed most from their Seattle contemporaries in lyrical content, writing, "Typically, the Seattle bands are a markedly angry, doom-laden bunch, sticking to the dark side and giving shape to feelings that come with being part of a generation that faces the likelihood of being materially worse off than its parents. My Sister's Machine is far more even-handed." From there, Boehm contrasts the aggression of "I Hate You" with the stricken apology of "I'm Sorry". He also highlights another track "Monster Box" where he writes, "MSM takes a radical departure from standard heavy-metal ideology by condemning libertinism and sex without emotional bonds." Pollock said of the song, "'Monster Box' isn't about AIDS, but about morality. It's just me going off about my beliefs, and how life should be."


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