Carroll relocated to London in 1984, where she began writing for the weekly -New Musical Express, later editing their "T-Zers" gossip column; she also fronted the indie band Miaow, best remembered for their classic 1986 Factory single When It All Comes Down as well as their appearance on NME's seminal C-86 collection. She relocated to Chicago in 1990 to be with her future husband, ex-Big Black bassist Santiago Durango, and that same year issued her debut solo EP, Beast; the full-length England Made Me followed a year later, launching the single Moves Like You.
In 1993, the American indie band Unrest issued their final album, Perfect Teeth; not only did the album feature a Robert Mapplethorpe portrait of Carroll, but the first single was also called Cath Carroll, complete with lyrical references to Durango, Naylor, and even her -NME pseudonym Myrna Minkoff. Although Unrest frontman and Teen Beat Records honcho Mark Robinson invited her to open for one of the band's Chicago live dates, she declined; Robinson's persistence ultimately led Carroll to sign with Teen Beat, however, and in 1994 she made her label debut with My Cold Heart. The full-length, True Crime Motel, followed a year later. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi