After a couple of hours of sitting with Kid Sistr’s guitarist-vocalist Sabel Englert, bassist Sara Keden, and drummer Becca Webster in the living room area of their producer Suzy Shinn ’s studio home in Los Angeles, I realize I never have high quality social get-togethers like the ones I’ve had with these women this evening. They are intelligent, open, thoughtful, kind, interesting, and layered. Instead of launching into a discussion about their debut five-song EP, American Teenage Prophecy (out May 13), we dissect how male musicians tend to draw audiences from all genders whereas women musicians’ audiences skew analogous to themselves. There are exceptions of course: Chrissie Hynde, PJ Harvey, Phoebe Bridgers, and Chvrches’ Lauren Mayberry, among others. “Guys go see those types of artists because they are cool girls,” says Becca, who arrived seconds ago after a full day of rehearsals with a pop artist. “Their music is so much less literal.…