FemBots are a Canadianindie rock band from Toronto formed in 1998. FemBots are known for their unique sound of combining instrumental everyday items, junk instruments, and traditional instruments in their music.
The band's core members, Dave MacKinnon and Brian Poirier, were members of the early 1990s alternative rock band Dig Circus alongside Mark Hansen, James Julien and Dave Dreveny.[1] That band released three albums independently, but broke up in the mid-1990s before achieving any mainstream success. They subsequently joined with Ron HawkinsofThe Lowest of the Low to form the band Hummer for a one-album project in 1997 before launching Fembots.
For The City, their third album recorded in the spring of 2005, Mackinnon and Poirier collaborated with Krista Muir, Lawrence Nichols and drummers Mark Hansen and Nathan Lawr, frontman for the Minotaurs (who would join Fembots for their next album).[11]The City moved the FemBots sound in a new direction, as they used more traditional instruments, while maintaining the distinctive emotion and creativity found in their previous albums. The City signifies their experiences in their hometown, Toronto, the good and the bad--"Demolition Waltz", for example, is about the loss of neighborhoods. The City was extremely well received by critics.[12][13]
Calling Out signified a big change for the band, as they moved from Paper Bag Records, their record label for their first three studio albums,[16]toweewerk records.[17] The initial idea for the album was to make it using solely junkstruments, aided by the expertise of their new member, Iner Souster. However, junkstruments could not sustain an entire album and they were used as rhythm tracks. Souster and Lawr also contributed to the songwriting process, a first for Mackinnon and Poirier. The album was released on September 16, 2008, and they toured Canada to promote it.[18]
Although never formally breaking up, FemBots became inactive following that album; members spent the next several years as touring session musicians with The Weakerthans.[19] On February 11, 2010, they played a "reunion" show at the Wavelength 500 Festival. (Wavelength Music Arts Projects) [20] Iner Souster joined the band Detroit Time Machine and opened an art gallery in Toronto.[21] Nathan Lawr remains with the Minotaurs.[22]
The Fembots music is used in the 2009 film Jackpot,[23] and is the soundtrack for the true-crime documentary series Farm Crime (2018-).[24]