When Kelley Deal joined her twin sister, Kim, as a member of The Breeders in 1992, she had to learn guitar on the fly, having never played one before. More than 30 years later, she has four albums and three EPs with The Breeders under her belt, as well as a pair of albums with The Kelley Deal 6000 and uncredited contributions to the lone album by The Amps (Pacer), a Breeders spin-off. Both Deal sisters have been recognized by Rolling Stone on their Top 250 guitarists list.
While Kelley Deal could have been plenty satisfied with just her contributions to The Breeders and her better-known side projects, thereโs even more to her body of work. (And this isn’t even a reference to her other life as a renowned knitter.) Deal has engaged in a number of collaborations, and the products of those efforts are as eclectic as the musicians she has worked with. Deal brings her inimitable styleโboth on guitar and on vocalsโto each of the following four collaborations, yet each has a remarkably different flavor.
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1. โAngel Flying Too Close to the Groundโ with Kris Kristofferson
This cover of the 1981 Willie Nelson song from the Honeysuckle Rose movie soundtrack was recorded for a 1996 Nelson tribute album called Twisted Willie. Deal fits right in with the bulk of the artists on this album, as most of the covers are performed by alternative rock acts from the โ80s and โ90s, including X, Mark Lanegan, L7, The Presidents of the United States, and Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains. Even with the presence of Kristofferson on the track, this version of the song is far less country than even The Breedersโ rootsy โDrivinโ on 9.โ Itโs a spare arrangement that puts Dealโs vocals in the center and uses a rhythmic sample of a sewing machine and a harmonica as accompaniment. (This is not the first time Deal has โplayedโ a sewing machine for a recording; she did the same for โS.O.S.โ on The Breedersโ Last Splash.)
Kristofferson does not make an appearance on the nearly four-minute track until the 3:11 mark, when he takes over from Deal to sing the outro lyrics. His vocals are soft and echoey, and, especially during the fadeout, they sound ghostly. Deal and Kristofferson are an unlikely pairing that works nevertheless. No one can accuse them of not creating a unique interpretation of Nelsonโs original.
2. The Last Hard Men
Deal recruited Skid Row frontman Sebastian Bach, The Frogsโ guitarist Jimmy Flemion, and Smashing Pumpkins drummer Jimmy Chamberlin for this late โ90s band supergroup of sorts. The Last Hard Men came out of a meeting between Deal and Bach, where they decided to form a band to record a cover of Alice Cooperโs โSchoolโs Outโ for Wes Cravenโs Scream. The band ultimately recorded an entire album, a self-titled release that came out in 1998.
The final result of the collaboration doesnโt sound much like any of the membersโ other bands. The sound actually varies from track to track, veering from acoustic to punk to metal to power pop, and the covers range from โSchoolโs Outโ to Rodgers and Hammersteinโs โI Enjoy Being a Girlโ to the Scorpionsโ โIn Search of the Peace of Mindโ to The Frogsโ โIf You Want to Rock, Go to the Quarry.โ Thereโs no math rock on the album, per se, but itโs fair to count this lyric Deal wrote for the title track as โstat rockโ:
You canโt do statistics on a sample of one
You canโt look in darkness for the sun
[RELATED: The Breeders Announce Reissue of โLast Splashโ on Top of North American Tour]
3. Protomartyr
Dealโs involvement with Detroit-based Protomartyr came in the wake of meeting them at the South by Southwest conference in Austin in 2014. She was a touring guitarist for the band on their tours for Ultimate Success Today (2020) and Formal Growth in the Desert (2023), but her only appearance on a Protomartyr recording came on their 2018 EP Consolation.
Deal sang backing vocals for โYou Always Winโ and โWheel of Fortune,โ and she co-wrote the latter with the bandโs members. On โWheel of Fortune,โ thereโs no mistaking her vocals in the refrain (I decide who lives and who dies); the bite in her voice contrasts perfectly with lead singer Joe Caseyโs spoken-word delivery.
4. R. Ring
This duo came to be in 2010 when Deal played an acoustic set with Mike Montgomery of the Cincinnati-based punk band Ampline so he wouldnโt have to be on stage alone. Montgomery is also the owner of and engineer for Candyland Recording Studio in Northern Kentucky, which has hosted recording sessions for Courtney Barnett, Nirvana touring cellist Lori Goldston, and The Breeders, among many others.
R. Ring released their first single, โMake It Vegan!,โ in 2012 (which included a hot pad crocheted by Deal and a recipe for vegan chili in addition to the CD). They have since followed that up with a pair of albumsโIgnite the Rest (2017) and War Poems, We Rested (2023)โplus an EP and three split-singles, including one with Protomartyr. While R. Ringโs albums arenโt as eclectic as The Last Hard Men, the compositions range from noisy alternative rock to stunning ambient acoustic pieces.
Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images
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30th January 1969: British rock group the Beatles performing their last live public concert on the rooftop of the Apple Organization building for director Michael Lindsey-Hogg's film documentary, 'Let It Be,' on Savile Row, London, England. Drummer Ringo Starr sits behind his kit. Singer/songwriters Paul McCartney and John Lennon perform at their microphones, and guitarist George Harrison (1943 – 2001) stands behind them. Lennon's wife Yoko Ono sits at right. (Photo by Express/Express/Getty Images)







