Biography
Randi Russo fuses indie rock with New York garage rock and introspective singer/songwriter elements, prompting parallels to fellow New York artists Patti Smith, the Velvet Underground, and Sonic Youth on account of her turbulent yet contemplative compositions.
During her Long Island childhood she dabbled briefly with violin, piano, and rudimentary turntable scratching before reaching early adolescence. In her teenage years she shifted focus to visual arts and later pursued painting studies in St. Louis, where employment at a college radio station introduced her to the full spectrum of early-’90s indie rock, grunge, and punk. At age 19 she acquired an electric guitar; as a left-handed player she rejected conventional right-handed technique and instead adopted left-handed positioning while retaining right-handed stringing, a choice that yielded a singular approach to chording and riffing. Soon afterward she assembled her initial group—comprising a bassist and a percussionist—under the name Raizel. The trio issued a lone single before dissolving in 1996, after which Russo refined her material in comparative isolation until resurfacing as a solo performer upon her 1999 return to New York City.
Roughly a year into solo appearances she assembled a band and documented an intentionally unruly live EP drawn from only their second performance, issued as Live at CBGB’s 313 Gallery. When Olive Juice Records expressed interest, she entered the studio to cut her debut album, the sharply concentrated Solar Bipolar, released in 2001. Although the record appeared amid a resurgence of other New York garage-influenced acts, Russo and her ensemble distinguished themselves through the perspective of a resolute female singer/songwriter and sidestepped any perception of trend-following.
During her Long Island childhood she dabbled briefly with violin, piano, and rudimentary turntable scratching before reaching early adolescence. In her teenage years she shifted focus to visual arts and later pursued painting studies in St. Louis, where employment at a college radio station introduced her to the full spectrum of early-’90s indie rock, grunge, and punk. At age 19 she acquired an electric guitar; as a left-handed player she rejected conventional right-handed technique and instead adopted left-handed positioning while retaining right-handed stringing, a choice that yielded a singular approach to chording and riffing. Soon afterward she assembled her initial group—comprising a bassist and a percussionist—under the name Raizel. The trio issued a lone single before dissolving in 1996, after which Russo refined her material in comparative isolation until resurfacing as a solo performer upon her 1999 return to New York City.
Roughly a year into solo appearances she assembled a band and documented an intentionally unruly live EP drawn from only their second performance, issued as Live at CBGB’s 313 Gallery. When Olive Juice Records expressed interest, she entered the studio to cut her debut album, the sharply concentrated Solar Bipolar, released in 2001. Although the record appeared amid a resurgence of other New York garage-influenced acts, Russo and her ensemble distinguished themselves through the perspective of a resolute female singer/songwriter and sidestepped any perception of trend-following.
Albums
Live




