0
Pansy Division
Pansy Division
American rock band
1
Team Dresch
Team Dresch
American punk band
2
Cypher in the Snow
Cypher in the Snow
3
Best Revenge
Best Revenge
4
Sta-Prest
Sta-Prest
5
Rachel Carns
Rachel Carns
American musician
6
Leslie Mah
Leslie Mah
American musician
7
Limp Wrist
Limp Wrist
American Queercore Band
8
Linus
Linus
English indie band
9
Huggy Bear
Huggy Bear
early 1990s riot grrrl band
10
Fifth Column
Fifth Column
distillation column
11
Anti-Scrunti Faction
Anti-Scrunti Faction
queercore punk rock band from Boulder, Colorado, US
12
The Queers
The Queers
American punk band
13
Lynn Breedlove
Lynn Breedlove
American musician
14
Disappear Fear
Disappear Fear
15
Sister Hazel
Sister Hazel
American band
16
Scissor Sisters
Scissor Sisters
American pop/rock band
17
’Til Tuesday
’Til Tuesday
American New Wave band
18
The Third Sex
The Third Sex
American queercore band
19
The Lemonheads
The Lemonheads
American musical group; alternative rock band
20
The Aces
The Aces
american band
21
Strawberry Alarm Clock
Strawberry Alarm Clock
band
22
She Devils
She Devils
Argentine punk group
23
Daryl Hall & John Oates
Daryl Hall & John Oates
American musical duo composed of Daryl Hall and John Oates
24
The Crickets
The Crickets
American rock and roll band
25
IQ
IQ
British neo-progressive rock band
26
Imperial Teen
Imperial Teen
indie pop/indie rock band
27
Annuals
Annuals
American indie-pop band
28
Lynch Mob
Lynch Mob
band
29
Movietone
Movietone
English post-rock group
30
Neon Trees
Neon Trees
band
31
Bonehead
Bonehead
musical artist
32
Angry Samoans
Angry Samoans
American punk rock band
33
Company of Thieves
Company of Thieves
American rock band
34
Cornershop
Cornershop
British indie rock band
35
Robby Krieger
Robby Krieger
American rock guitarist and songwriter
36
Letters to Cleo
Letters to Cleo
American alternative rock band

Sister George was an English queercore band from London that was formed in 1994. The group's name was inspired by the 1968 film The Killing of Sister George, which was an adaptation of the play of the same name.

Although queercore bands had existed in the UK in the 1980s, such as The Apostles/Academy 23, and No Brain Cells and in the early 1990s, such as Tongue Man, Sister George brought queercore into the spotlight there. The members were Lisa Cook on bass, Daryl Stanislaw on drums, Lyndon Holmes on guitar and vocals, and Ellyott on lead vocals and guitar; Ellyott was the main singer and song writer of Israeli band Pollyanna Frank, one of Israel's most important alternative bands; she was also drummer of The Darlings, a band which included Lesley Woods, formerly of the post punk band Au Pairs, and Debbie Smith, later in Curve and Echobelly.

Their album, Drag King, came out on Catcall Records, which was run by Liz Naylor. The band found themselves heralded in the pages of British music magazines such as the NME. They toured with acts like Huggy Bear and Hissyfit at first, but soon they were joined by other queer bands such as Mouthfull and Children's Hour, and it was these groups that pioneered queercore in the UK. Their album was rereleased in the U.S. by Outpunk Records, and a music video for the song "Handle Bar" was made. This song also appeared on the Outpunk Records compilation, Outpunk Dance Party. Also featured on Drag King was a hardcore style cover of the Tom Robinson song "Glad to Be Gay". The Sister George version featured the voice of serial killer Aileen Wuornos, and the band chanting, "We kill in self defence". In a gig in London's club v, the alternative queer club, in the mid '90s, Robinson introduced his song by saying, "I'm now going to sing a Sister George cover".

Label owner Naylor said of the band's relation to mainstream gay culture, "To me, the gay lifestyle is getting to be like just another alternative lifestyle. You go down Old Compton Street in Soho and see them sitting there in nice coffee bars with their pink pounds - and these (Sister George) are 20-year-old kids who are angry and on the dole."

The band broke up in the midst of recording their second album. Afterwards, Ellyott went on to form Nightnurse which featured then 16-year-old Charlotte Hatherley on guitar, who would later have success with the band Ash. Daryl drummed for The Element Of Crime with Chris and Jo from Huggy Bear, Layla from Skinned Teen, Dale from Blood Sausage and Andy from Linus, releasing the single "The things we do for love...".

Sister George performed in and are interviewed in the film She's Real, Worse Than Queer by Lucy Thane. Ellyott was interviewed for the book Never Mind the Bollocks: Women Rewrite Rock by Amy Raphael (Virago Press, 1995).