Posted By Dan Nailen on Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 9:45 AM

click to enlarge Dan Nailen

click to enlarge Dan Nailen

The only real signs that Sunday night's show at Spokane's Knitting Factory was Sleater-Kinney's first together in nearly a decade were a misfired start on their first encore song, and Carrie Brownstein's admission that she was having a hard time trying tosmile.She wasn't alone. Bandmates Corin Tucker and Janet Weiss had wide grins across their faces at various points, too, and the crowd at the sold-out venue was downright ecstatic at seeing the trio on stage again. The band delivered a joyfully raucous set that leaned heavily on their new album,, while including plenty of material for long-time fans.Still in place were all the thrilling aspects that made Sleater-Kinney a beloved indie/punk band two decades ago. Brownstein and Tucker traded intricate vocal and guitar lines all night; Brownstein is the more demonstrative player on stage, striking the classic Guitar God poses, while Tucker stays on her side and tears into churning riffs when they lock into a particularly intense groove. Weiss remains a powerhouse on the drum kit, and her ability to play and deliver harmony vocals were vital to the show's success.Some things have changed, though. Tucker's vocals remain powerful, but the paint-peeling wails of early songs are largely absent onand in concert. Brownstein, never a wilting flower in the spotlight before, has perhaps become even more comfortable on stage since becoming a familiar face to many through her TV show. It was certainly a joy to see her back at her "real job" as a rock star. The band also has a fourth musician in tow on this tour in Katie Larkin, who fleshed out various songs with keyboards, drums and a third guitar. Still no bass player needed in Sleater-Kinney, thank you very much.After fun warm-up set by Minnesota hip-hop force Lizzo, Sleater-Kinney launched directly into two new songs in "Price Tag" and "Fangless," both excellent additions to the band's catalog. "Start Together" and "Oh!" followed, nods to older fans through songs from 1999'sand 2002'sFrom there, the band swung back and forth between material old and new. Thecuts fit right in, the short bursts of hook-filled punk sitting nicely alongside fan favorites. Highlights from the new album included powerful takes on the anthemic "Bury Our Friends" and the attitude-filled "A New Wave."The diehards on hand naturally reacted most strongly to familiar songs like the spoken-word exploration "Get Up," the muscular "Ironclad," a swaggering "One Beat" and emphatic "Words and Guitar." The main set ended with a couple of songs from Sleater-Kinney's last release before the hiatus, 2005's, and both "Entertain" and "Jumpers" were on point.The encore started with the fumbled intro to "Little Babies" before the band locked in for that song, "Turn It On," the beautifully delivered "Modern Girl," complete with Weiss blowing on a harmonica, and the fiery finale, "Dig Me Out." All told, the show was long on excellent modern rock, short on any first-tour-gig jitters for the most part, and marked a welcome return from a band still worth listening to 20 years into their career.1. Price Tag2. Fangless3. Start Together4. Oh!5. No Anthems6. Get Up7. Ironclad8. One Beat9. Bury Your Friends10. What's Mine Is Yours11. One More Hour12. No Cities to Love13. Surface Envy14. Words and Guitar15. Sympathy16. A New Wave17. Entertain18. JumpersEncore19. Little Babies20. Turn It On21. Modern Girl22. Dig Me Out