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Kim Gordon and Kim Deal Have for their first live appearance in the latest episode of the Netflix talk show Everybody’s live Trew together.
Kim Gordon was the first to enter the stage and sang her song “Bye Bye”, While Kim Deal followed with her own title “Nobody Loves You More”. Then the two sang “Little Trouble Girl” together, a song by Sonic Youth, to the deal on the 1995 album Washing Machine the band had sung. Moderator John Mulaney emphasized that the atmospheric performance was “the first time ever that the couple appeared together”. The full episode you can here view.
“Little Trouble Girl” is the only time that deal and Gordon have worked together so far. Deal appeared in the music video of the song. But she apparently never played the title live with Sonic Youth before the band dissolved in 2011.
Kim Deal and Kim Gordon in a joint interview
Kim Deal published her debut solo album in November Nobody Loves You Morewhile Gordon last March her second solo album The Collective presented. In December the two brought in Conversation for the magazine interviewin which they spoke about their parallel careers and their approaches when writing and recording songs.
In the interview, Deal explained that there is no difference on how to see a solo track compared to one for Breeders. “That never comes to mind,” she said to Gordon. ‘The only thing that comes to mind is:’ I haven’t played keyboard for a while. I will chase it through the Marshall and see if anything sounds cool. ‘”
Gordon said Rolling Stone Meanwhile, their solo albums are a different way of expressing themselves than Sonic Youth. “I’m not a born singer,” she said. “I know what works for me when it comes to using rhythm and space. And I really like to work with rhythms. I just wanted to do more.
No reunion of Sonic Youth
She added that there was currently no interest in reunification of Sonic Youth. “It would never be as good as before.”
Everybody’s live debuted last week with his second season. The 12-week season will contain a new episode every Wednesday evening. She follows Everybody’s in LAa Mulaney live series with six episodes that ran last spring and were guests in Sarah Silverman, David Letterman and Bill Hader.
Mulaney told Rolling Stone From the development of the series. “It was this pop-up show on six evenings that were connected to a festival. It was really fun to try. I felt that many instinctive things worked. I am very committed to immersing it in the irrelevance. It is never relevant. It is related to a few things. Ryentine, over-planning and calls.

