Time Capsule: The Juliana Hatfield Three, Become What You Are
Hatfield’s first release with Dean Fisher and Todd Philips is a quintessential guitar album, with unpredictable chord changes and resolutions that scratch an itch you didn’t know you had.

Growing up with an older sister and a nineties-obsessed dad, the Juliana Hatfield Three’s “My Sister” was a household staple. With every petty fight we had over the TV remote, or something equally banal, I’d quietly sing to myself, “I hate my sister, she’s a bitch.” Sure, that’s coarse language to apply to tiffs I’d forget by the next day, but my dad really showed us the song so we’d pay attention to the end: a fervent repetition of “I miss my sister.” Now that she and I live hundreds of miles away, I find myself replaying the song with special attention to that post-chorus, and I wish I could be back in a car with her, singing along to it. I’ve always thought Juliana Hatfield was adept at capturing the messiness of femininity—the jealousy, pain, and insecurity that feels synonymous with teenage girlhood. Especially within the imposing social norms of the nineties, Hatfield has always felt like a fresh voice, playfully flipping off the mainstream.
When Hatfield and her collaborators Dean Fisher and Todd Philipps released Become What You Are in 1993, a new age of female-fronted rock had already gained some traction with the salient breakthroughs of groups like Sonic Youth and Hole. The idea of a female musician as the bubbly pop star archetype was being beaten down by women with electric guitars, and Hatfield threw her hat in the ring with her solo record, Hey Babe, in 1992. Become What You Are is a quintessential guitar album, with unpredictable chord changes and resolutions that scratch an itch you didn’t know you had. Hatfield plays with time and tempo masterfully—between the half-time introduction to “For the Birds” and the starting-and-stopping chorus of “This is the Sound,” she is the master of each song’s momentum. She literally yells out “bridge!” in the middle of the “This is the Sound” as a preface to a musical break. Behind the rougher edges of her rock influence, Hatfield successfully created a catalog of ear worms. Take the punchy melody of “Addicted” or the dizzying repetition of “I Got No Idols” in the track of the same name: Become What You Are is timeless—even after thirty years, it feels totally fresh.