Blending indie subversiveness and nagging pop hooks with plenty of shouty attitude, Shampoo was a dazzling flash in the pan with a remarkably long-lasting impact. South London teens Carrie Askew and Jacqui Blake loved Sex Pistols and Manic Street Preachers as much as boy bands like East 17, cutting and pasting punk, pop, rap, glam-rock, and dance-pop together with zine-like flair. Whether on their lo-fi 1993 debut "Blisters & Bruises" or with the slick anarchy of 1994's signature hit "Trouble" -- which also appeared on their debut album We Are Shampoo -- they made boredom and ...