Nashville Pussy are led by the husband-and-wife duo of singer/guitarist Blaine Cartwright (formerly of Nine Pound Hammer) and guitarist Ruyter Suys. Joined by bassist Corey Parks (the sister of NBA star Cherokee Parks) and drummer Jeremy Thompson, the group (named in reference to a line from Ted Nugent's Double Live Gonzo! LP) debuted in 1998 with the album Let Them Eat Pussy, originally issued on Amphetamine Reptile. An underground favorite, the record was reissued on major-label Mercury later that same year, and the song "Fried Chicken and Coffee" was nominated for a Grammy for Best Heavy Metal Performance. Parks left the group in early 2000 and was replaced by Tracy Almazan for High as Hell, which followed in the middle of the year. The album came out on TVT and helped maintain their cult following, but further progress was blocked by a lack of label support.
A successful tour and several soundtrack and compilation appearances kept Nashville Pussy busy in the interim before they moved to Artemis for 2002's Say Something Nasty. The live DVD Keep on F*ckin' in Paris! appeared in 2003. The band returned two years later with the Get Some! LP, which marked the debut of bassist Karen Cuda. It was followed in 2009 by From Hell to Texas, the band's first album for SPV/Steamhammer Records. In 2014, Nashville Pussy returned with their sixth studio album, Up the Dosage, which introduced yet another new bassist, Bonnie Buitrago. Miraculously, the band held on to the rhythm section of Bonnie Buitrago and drummer Ben Thomas long enough to record a second studio album with them; the typically sex-obsessed Pleased to Eat You arrived in September 2018. The band toured heavily in support of the album, including a run of dates covering the United Kingdom. Several shows from the U.K. tour were recorded, and the highlights were cherry-picked for the album Eaten Alive, a live document released in December of 2021. ~ Jason Ankeny & Mark Deming, Rovi