Bob Mould: Classic or Dud?

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Sorry Tom but you'd best add another name to your list, everything Bob Mould has come into contact with *band-wise* has 'classic' stamped all over it. Can't say I've ever given his solo stuff much of a chance, but it sounded like a pale imitation of his earlier bombastic style, but still pisses over most of the so-called rock bands at the moment. 'Beaster' in particular rocks most viciously.

Add, Thursday, 5 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Aww, but Tom...we're still nice people. *sniffle*

Sean Carruthers, Thursday, 5 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Damn, Tom. Those who live in glass houses with pre-fab teen idols shouldn't throw stones lest they get dirty pop all over their chinos.

David Raposa, Thursday, 5 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

In the early '90s, Sugar (and Throwing Muses -- hah!) were THE antidote to American indie rock for me. They had ZERO of that smug posturing attitude, none of that lazy "Oh we can PLAY our instruments, we just refuse to" mentality. They wrote pop songs with standard pop song structures, threw some noise in for good measure, and played it louder and with more conviction than most around them.

The only thing they really had in common with an indie band was that they loaded their own gear. All three members had been involved with music for ages and never showed much bitterness about their stature. They made some records, played a ton of shows, were professional and smart about what they did and got the fuck out.

Okay -- so they were on Creation in the UK and Ryko (hardly a Touch & Go or Merge) in the US. Technically they were an indie band. However, Sugar never possessed any of the negative connotations I associate with the word 'indie'. I don't care about how many people have regarded Bob Mould too highly. It's not as if he ever whored himself out for the attention. Besides, he was too busy watching wrestling.

Andy, Thursday, 5 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Everything he did from Huskers to Beaster IS classic. The turning point is the Sugar album F.U.E.L., that album and everything after is a fucking dud.

Cash Lone, Sunday, 8 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I never really got Sugar/Husker Du/Mould either. I can see how influential their sound was but that's about it. And my did the fruits of their roots go bad. NME naming 'Copper Blue' the best album of 1992 was almost as weird as them picking Queens Of The Stone Age last year.

Nick, Monday, 9 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

ten months pass...
Thank you David Raposa, I think you understadn what Ive been trying to do with my work better than thouse some people who only have negative things to say about anothers person love +work. If you dont like it, DO SOMETHING BETTER!!!!!

Bob Mould, Saturday, 25 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I want to believe...

Ned Raggett, Saturday, 25 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I bailed out after finding 'Workbook's' acoustic melancholy tepic but still rever the man. Mould's contributed more in many a Hüsker Dü solo than some decent bands do in 5 albums. Joe Carducci (plausibly) suggested Mould forming Sugar after seeing Nirvana's sales figures, and 'Copper Blue' is desperately drab, but 'wasted potential?' is way off the mark imho.

stevo, Saturday, 25 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

tepic = tepid

stevo, Saturday, 25 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Has anyone seen Hedwig and the Angry Inch yet? Bob Mould is playing on the soundtrack. i hate all his bands and his solo career so this is the best things hes done (except for the wrestling script writing of course).

hamish, Saturday, 25 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Husker du were one of the great bands. There is a tendancy to blame these guys (w/ pixies) for grunge but don't OK.

Solo= don't like it. The songwriting isn't on that great level.

Sugar= got copper blue and beaster. I love it! I can't undestand Tom's hatred of them. The NME (for once) got it right!

Julio Desouza, Monday, 27 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

There's two discrete solo periods for Bob, and I think in both cases the first album outshone the second. I liked Workbook just fine, but Black Sheets I found a bit dreary. I liked the self-titled one just fine, but the Last Dog and Pony Show had less sparkling moments...still, thought they were tons better than much of the other stuff I heard on the radio, so.

Sean Carruthers, Monday, 27 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

sean- got workbook and found it really disappointing. Didn't get anything else (another example of me getting one thing and not trying another if I'm disappointed).

Julio Desouza, Monday, 27 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Workbook is certainly disappointing if you are expecting full-out sonic assault ala Hüsker Dü, but it was actually quite a pleasure at the time, I remember. If I also remember correctly, the production on the album hasn't particularly aged well. I think there are still a number of songs on Workbook that are top notch, though: introspective yet angry, and still very melodic.

Sean Carruthers, Monday, 27 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

one year passes...
Reviving because ol' Bob apparently has a blog

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Monday, 19 January 2004 23:56 (twenty-two years ago)

holy shit! That's awesome. I remember this old SPIN cartoon where the author finds himself wondering what David Byrne is doing that very second and imagines Byrne playing a pair of congas. Soon, if we're curious, we won't have to wonder.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 00:03 (twenty-two years ago)

His take on the whole 'Bush=Hitler' thing and the place of nuance (implicitly) in political discussion makes me happy.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 00:08 (twenty-two years ago)

first i find out he's gay. then i find out he's got a blog. now i find out he djs electronica????
i obviously haven't been paying attention since beaster.

mullygrubber (gaz), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 00:14 (twenty-two years ago)

The Huskers stuff is more or less all classic. Up through Flip Yr Wig, Mould's songs were typically stronger than Hart's. Then for some reason on Candy Apple Grey, Bob's 'rock' songs are boring and his acoustic ones are amazing.

I like Sugar, and like nobody else I liked File Under more than Copper Blue. "Gee Angel" and "Explode & Make Up" and "Your Favorite Thing" are fucking brilliant. The live disc that came with Besides is also absolutely amazing. I really wish I had seen Sugar live; a bit too young.

His only solo stuff I've heard is the s/t one, and it's great, especially the quieter stuff. The harder/louder stuff sounds a little bizarre without a real band.

Ian Johnson (orion), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 04:00 (twenty-two years ago)

"Black Sheets of Rain" is better than you might expect and it was even better live. That band was a pretty good one: Tony Maimone on bass and Anton Fier on drums. It is really dark and angry. You can usually pick this one up for a buck or two.

After Sugar, I just can't get with what Bob has been doing. It started going wrong with that record where he did all of the instruments and the little I have heard after that one wasn't my thing.

Husker Du, parts of his first two solo records and Sugar are great.

It would be nice if Bob Mound could get over it and come to terms with Grant Hart. Even 15 years down the line, it seems like there is some really bad blood between them. Mould seems to want to write Grant Hart out of the history of the band or something. What a grudge or power trip. Mind you this is all based on reading bunches of interviews with both of them. Considering how Sugar ended up, a pattern seems somewhat evident.

Sugar was really good and much more intense live. It was a pretty brave move on Mould's part to tour a few times with that band before they had a record out. I saw them a couple of times, once at Bogarts in Cinci before anything had come out and once later on in Chicago. They were a blinding wall of sound live.

Never saw Husker Du. They were my favorite band when I was 17-18 years old and broke up my senior year in high school. A friend of mine used to have a tape of Husker Du playing on the Joan Rivers show, they did two songs and the set that looked like the cover of Warehouse: Songs and Stories. Joan also had them over briefly to be interviewed. My friend's Mom taped over it a couple of years later...what a loss. (This is the kind of thing that would be great on some deluxe Husker Du reissue, but Bob and Grant haven't been able to work things out to make something like this happen.)

earlnash, Tuesday, 20 January 2004 04:19 (twenty-two years ago)

Mound = Mould

Sorty...sorry.

earlnash, Tuesday, 20 January 2004 04:25 (twenty-two years ago)

I saw the "Black Sheets of Rain" here in NYC and, I mean, I had no opinion about the guy, a total feh reaction, but the show made my head explode. Especially, as noted by others, the guitar tone, and how purely pissed off he seemed.

Ian Grey (Ian_G), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 05:04 (twenty-two years ago)

four months pass...
My introduction was Copper Blue, which I still love to this day. I have the entire Huskers, Sugar and solo catalogue and can honestly say I have a genuine love for every record, with the exception of Modulate, which I just can't seem to connect with. The Loudbomb album I liked a lot better, but Modulate seemed too stuck between two worlds for me, and I found some of it made me cringe in the same way 'Megamanic' on Dog & Pony Show did.

It would be nice if Bob and Grant buried the hatchet, it would be great to hear the older albums remastered, particularly as they have never really been done justice on CD. But that seems unlikely, even as recently as Modulate the Grant-bashing persists (I thought the line "Some deadbeat Dad who lives at home" in The Receipt was particularly hurtful, Grant also claims that Bob cryptically reveals Grant's address in the lyrics to that song.)

I only saw Sugar once, in 1994 shortly after FU:EL came out - it was one of the biggest disapointments of my life. You just couldn't hear the guitar or vocals at ALL. Several audience members were trying to alert the band to this fact but to no avail.

Perhaps because Sugar were my favourite band when I was fifteen I still feel a very powerful emotional connection with Bob's songs, particularly those on Copper Blue and Warehouse. But I also believe he does the vulnerable lyrics/loud guitars thing better than anybody else. To this day, I tend to put a Bob record on to listen to loud, through headphones, late at night when I'm drunk!

All time favourites would be Zen Arcade, New Day Rising, Warehouse:Songs and Stories, Beaster.

Weaker moments: Candy Apple Grey (in term's of Bob's songs), Modulate.

Pretty much everything else, classic!

wombatX (wombatX), Monday, 31 May 2004 11:14 (twenty-two years ago)

Love Husker Du with a vengence, one of my favourite bands ever.

Haven't heard Sugar. Bought 'Modulate' the other day. It's okay, not outstanding, but something I'll listen to again, even though he sounds disturbingly like Dave Grohl, which a friend pointed out to me. Haven't heard anything else of his solo stuff, but apparently it's better. So, I'll have to get it.

Can I just say though, Grant Hart's 'Intolerence' is definitely worth getting.

Sasha (sgh), Monday, 31 May 2004 13:48 (twenty-two years ago)

Back in 2001, I wrote...

Husker Du - Classic

Bob Mould solo - Dud

Sugar - Classic

-- alex in nyc (vassife...), July 4th, 2001.

Looking back, that seems a bit harsh. While I still prefer Husker Du and Sugar, there have been moments in Bob's solo work that have been quite good.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 31 May 2004 13:54 (twenty-two years ago)

I really like Black Sheets. I remember getting the album, playing it a lot, and seeing a great Mould show at Bogart's in Cincinatti that same week. He was definitely on that night and the songs sounded terrific, and I was able to get even more into the album after that. I quite like "Stop Your Crying."

shookout (shookout), Monday, 31 May 2004 14:39 (twenty-two years ago)

I just don't get it. With Husker Du Bob wrote & sang fantastic noisy-but-melodic songs and played guitar to match...then the band breaks up and it all goes to hell. Virtually nothing from his first two solo recs was memorable to me, so I hesitated buying Sugar until overwhelming universal praise won me over. And again...almost nothing. Two, maybe three memorable songs and zero guitar heroics. This guy used to SHRED: the best hardcore-derived guitarist in my opinion (including Greg Ginn), and now...who knows? It's like he's embarrassed or can't stand the noise or something. Where have his gifts gone? I don't understand it and I don't like it. And now I understand that he's turned to electronics like his hero Pete Shelley - wonder what that sounds like?

Myonga Von Bontee (Myonga Von Bontee), Monday, 31 May 2004 16:32 (twenty-two years ago)

I agree the quality isn't consistent on Bob Mould and Last Dog & Pony Show, however I find Workbook an enormously comforting and warm record. I kind of see Black Sheets as it's darker companion in the same way as Copper Blue/Beaster.

Sasha otm re: Intolerance - we need a Grant Hart thread..

wombatX (wombatX), Monday, 31 May 2004 23:36 (twenty-two years ago)

And again. "Intolerance" is prob my single fav record connected to Husker Du, incredibly fragile/sloppy and beautiful.

Mr Mime (Andrew Thames), Monday, 31 May 2004 23:39 (twenty-two years ago)

Sugar is bargain bin classic.

Be sure to Loop! Loop, Loop, Loop. (ex machina), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 12:00 (twenty-two years ago)

he sounds disturbingly like Dave Grohl

don't blame bob for that; he came first. although i always thought grohl was a bit closer to grant hart.

love love love husker du, although they started sliping on the last couple albums. i find sugar a tad bit less interesting than, say, jimmy eat world. not a huge waste of talent, just the usual steady decline.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 13:26 (twenty-two years ago)

"See A Little Light" is faboo. Much of the rest of his solo output flies by me in a blur, tho there are songs here and there that stick out. I haven't paid attention to him since Sugar broke up (and even then I wasn't paying much attention to Sugar).

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 1 June 2004 17:55 (twenty-two years ago)

i just had this dilemma while going through and purging my cd collection. I've spared workbook and black sheets for the last six or seven purges (s/t and dog and pony were not so lucky; I'll keep the husker du albums I have; no-one will take copper blue away from me). I haven't made up my mind. I think what will probably save them is that I can't really sell them anywhere for anything over a dollar. Workbook is very dated productionwise, and like a lot of music of the same time (REM, specifically), I just have a hard time listening to it. It doesn't really bring back bad memories, but it seems like something that's steeped in a part of my life (college) that I'm just not interested in. Black Sheets's last track shreds though.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 18:04 (twenty-two years ago)

yeah, there's stuff on both of those albums that sound really cold and clunky, production-wise. And Anton Fier's drums sound like cardboard boxes.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 1 June 2004 18:06 (twenty-two years ago)

his drums always sound like that. I don't really "get" anton fier.

kyle (akmonday), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 18:08 (twenty-two years ago)

Husker Du - dud
Sugar - dud
Bob solo - dud

He just seems so unimaginative, so lacking in spark. Sure, he had a good guitar sound. That doesn't give him license to make bog-standard indie fuzz songs for 20 years.

paulhw (paulhw), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 19:12 (twenty-two years ago)

Just listening to "Hoover Dam" for the first time in years; it sounds like Marillion! Not that there's anything wrong with that. Dick period anyway.

Keith Watson (kmw), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 21:02 (twenty-two years ago)

The moments in Bob Mould's solo career I think hold up to Husker Du and Sugar: "See A Little Light," "Whichever Way The Wind Blows," "Black Sheets Of Rain," "Anymore Time Between," "Next Time That You Leave," "Egoverride," "Hair Stew," "Roll Over And Die," "Trade."

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 21:55 (twenty-two years ago)

oh, and "New #1."

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 21:55 (twenty-two years ago)

plus "It's Too Late"

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 1 June 2004 21:56 (twenty-two years ago)

As for Mould's solo output, his track on the 'No Alternative' compilation from the early nineties is exceptional. Can't remember the name of the song.

Miss Lonelyhearts (Jaromil), Wednesday, 2 June 2004 02:17 (twenty-two years ago)

It's called 'Can't Fight It'. Funny you should mention that, I hadn't heard it for years until this morning when they played it on the radio.

wombatX (wombatX), Wednesday, 2 June 2004 02:58 (twenty-two years ago)

I listened to an old tape of stuff from 1996 and 'Egoveride' was on it! I really like the way the guitar is so trebly as to stand on the precipice of pain.

DJ Mencap (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 2 June 2004 08:28 (twenty-two years ago)

'anymore time between' and 'can't fight it' are astonishingly good.

stevie (stevie), Wednesday, 2 June 2004 08:46 (twenty-two years ago)

oh shit, I forgot about "Can't Fight It." That song is terrific!

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Wednesday, 2 June 2004 14:38 (twenty-two years ago)

two years pass...
My favorite Mould is Live Dog 98 : The Forum London Uk, he just kills on guitar.

Jim Reckling (Jim Reckling), Saturday, 3 February 2007 03:27 (nineteen years ago)

Conspicuously absent from this thread is "Dog On Fire," his rousing theme music for The Daily Show.

The Redd And The Blecch (Ken L), Sunday, 4 February 2007 01:40 (nineteen years ago)

I remember liking the original version better, before it was rerecorded by They Might Be Giants. I'm so used to the current TMBG version now though that I'd have to dig out an old tape of the show to hear what was different. I think it was slower?

Marmot (marmotwolof), Sunday, 4 February 2007 02:09 (nineteen years ago)

Husker Du: Q. Good, but the initial freshness of their sound has been diluted by imitation.

Sugar: Q. good.

Solo: Hard work.

Phil Knight (PhilK), Sunday, 4 February 2007 19:07 (nineteen years ago)

That was one of the solo electric shows?? So want to go.

dow, Saturday, 27 July 2024 17:11 (one year ago)

Yep. Would def recommend!!

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Saturday, 27 July 2024 17:13 (one year ago)

glad you had such a good time! what guitar does he play live now?

Bernard Quidbins (NickB), Saturday, 27 July 2024 21:53 (one year ago)

Workbook is so damn impressive.

Just mentioning it for the record.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 27 July 2024 21:58 (one year ago)

He played Sinners and their Repentances in addition to See a Little Light — fun to hear a deep cut!

No idea about the guitar. I’m not a guitar person.

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Saturday, 27 July 2024 22:32 (one year ago)

He mostly plays the silver Strat with the Lace Sensors live, I think? I remember him having some kind of custom DOD 250 variant, a TC Electronic Flashback delay, an EHX Freeze (mostly used for transitions between songs, it seemed), and a Wampler Ego at the end of the chain into a Deluxe Reverb the last time I saw him.

spastic heritage, Saturday, 27 July 2024 22:42 (one year ago)

thx!

Bernard Quidbins (NickB), Sunday, 28 July 2024 09:31 (one year ago)

three weeks pass...

Bob Mould is sitting in with the 8G Band on Late Night with Seth Meyers on Thursday August 22

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 20 August 2024 13:29 (one year ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwngl8api94

Maresn3st, Friday, 23 August 2024 16:28 (one year ago)

Nice . I think NBC is going ahead with their plans to make Seth Meyer’s show dump the studio band to save NBC money. I think that explains the song choice “Makes No sense at all”. A dc rooted musician Ely Janney is in the band

curmudgeon, Friday, 23 August 2024 19:13 (one year ago)

members of les savy fav as well

na (NA), Friday, 23 August 2024 19:44 (one year ago)

one month passes...

When he's 64. (I've got "Makes No Sense at All" cued up for a grade 3 class this morning. May make no sense at all.)

clemenza, Wednesday, 16 October 2024 12:30 (one year ago)

Hope they like it

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 16 October 2024 17:27 (one year ago)

They didn't walk out of class en masse, but I think they liked the Just Dance "I Gotta Feeling" they picked for DPA better.

clemenza, Wednesday, 16 October 2024 18:32 (one year ago)

two months pass...

New alb:
https://www.stereogum.com/2292316/bob-mould-here-we-go-crazy/music/

dow, Tuesday, 14 January 2025 21:01 (one year ago)

Album isn't available till March. Title track "Here We Go Crazy" is consistent with his recent songwriting style

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 15 January 2025 19:49 (one year ago)

I prefer Cooper Blue over his 84/85 albums.

LightUserSyndrome, Saturday, 18 January 2025 03:52 (one year ago)

I prefer Copper Blue over most music made by all humans.

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Saturday, 18 January 2025 07:01 (one year ago)

^ this

nxd, Saturday, 18 January 2025 09:17 (one year ago)

otm to both of you

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 18 January 2025 10:40 (one year ago)

Better than Husker Du? Insanity

The Whimsical Muse (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 18 January 2025 19:00 (one year ago)

This is Grant Hart erasure for which I will not stand

The Whimsical Muse (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 18 January 2025 19:00 (one year ago)

I love Sugar and like HD very much. No erasure.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 18 January 2025 19:14 (one year ago)

I love HD and like Sugar very much. Good thing we’ve got both!

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Saturday, 18 January 2025 19:19 (one year ago)

I’m glad to have both too!

The Whimsical Muse (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 18 January 2025 19:26 (one year ago)

2541111111111111111111

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 18 January 2025 19:52 (one year ago)

You can sing “for which I will not stand” to the tune of “what promise have I made” lol

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Saturday, 18 January 2025 20:01 (one year ago)

I love Husker Du but Copper Blue is like the best songwriting from them with production that's like a million times better.

I concede that I was not weaned on Du; they were never a watershed band for me and I got into them late. In fact, my favorite album of theirs is the swansong live document because I think the songs simply sound better than the studio albums. I mean, "Ice Cold Ice" off The Living End is so much more urgent and powerful than the studio version.

More though, Grant Hart fans seem to find this blasphemy far more than those who gravitated towards Mould. Which makes sense.

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Sunday, 19 January 2025 02:14 (one year ago)

Off Copper Blue
Best: The Act We Act
Runner up: Slick

LightUserSyndrome, Sunday, 19 January 2025 15:46 (one year ago)

Hard to choose from "Changes," "A Good Idea," and the keyboard break in "Hoover Dam."

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 19 January 2025 15:48 (one year ago)

one month passes...

"Here We Go Crazy" is very good.

The Rooney Rule (dandydonweiner), Tuesday, 11 March 2025 01:18 (one year ago)

I agree. I went back to the other five he's done with this trio - I wouldn't recommend listening to them all in one sitting, but on their own, each one really holds up. Even though he's much younger than Dylan (and his music isn't similar at all), it brings to mind Dylan's latter day work in that it's one album after another performed, arranged and produced in roughly the same mold. Like Dylan, he's not trying to redefine his sound anymore, instead he's focusing on what his songs are trying to address or say.

birdistheword, Tuesday, 11 March 2025 03:37 (one year ago)

Interview in Rolling Stone is good. This part stood out:

At this point in your life, what does it take to physically rev up to that intensity?

Okay, so the dirty little secret in the business is: If you love a band and the singer or the drummer are over 60, take a look at their tour itinerary and see how many back to backs (shows) they’re doing. That tells you. I know I’m not as spry as I was in my 20s, and I know that I don’t have the raw power I did in my 30s, but I can still summon that every night, the closest I can get to it. I do not sit onstage. I run around and I am soaking wet after 10 minutes.

The hard part is the recovery. The voice is the hardest thing. It’s a lot of water, a lot of sleep, trying not to scream bloody murder every single night. Just little shortcuts. When I’m on tour, I do not talk. I go to soundcheck, and I do a half a song, and I shut up, and I do 90 minutes, and then I shut up. I might say “Starbucks” or “bathroom.” At the after-show, I’m not going to talk to everybody for an hour and a half. If I do that, the tour is over. I’m going to get a lanyard that says, “Can’t talk.”

birdistheword, Tuesday, 11 March 2025 05:30 (one year ago)

it's one album after another performed, arranged and produced in roughly the same mold

Don't you mean mould?

at your swervice (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 11 March 2025 06:22 (one year ago)

lol

birdistheword, Tuesday, 11 March 2025 07:06 (one year ago)

NY Times interview discusses what he likes to watch and do. Here's some of it

Morning Walks at Ocean Beach, San Francisco
I have really bad tinnitus from work — I mean, I will never have silence again. So one of my favorite things in life is to get up before the sun comes up, and just walk for two hours. It’s one of the few places where I can get my head right, because all I can hear is the sound of the ocean.

Games
This is so pandering, but no matter where I am, before I look at the news or start returning calls, I get on The New York Times Games app. Spelling Bee is addictive — if I don’t get Genius on it every day, I get really upset. And when I’m home with the husband, we play a lot of Catan, which is quite fun.

Coffee
Since I’m a dry alcoholic, much of my daily existence revolves around coffee — one of the few things I have left. When I get to a town, there’s always a couple of hours between soundcheck and show, so I’ll look on Yelp: “Oh, this one has some reclaimed wood — maybe that’s a third-wave coffee shop!”

New Japan Pro-Wrestling
This is a Japanese company that has their own app that contains the history of their company, which goes back more than 50 years. I enjoy their historical stuff, especially from the early ’90s, when Japanese wrestling was state of the art, and setting the stage for what in-ring American wrestling would look like.

Anne Lamott
I was raised Catholic, and I was able to connect with her on that level, because she’s very spiritual. She writes a lot about parenthood and children and addictions — the choices we make, and the places we end up.

‘Only Murders in the Building’
I love New York City so much, and “Only Murders” is probably my favorite TV show. My husband and I went to New York in April. We were going to go to this weird, like, bear-jockstrap party on Christopher Street, but Fred Armisen said, “You should come over to ‘S.N.L.’!” It was so packed on the floor, and my husband’s like, “Who’s this guy that keeps backing into me?” And it was Martin Short!

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/22/arts/music/bob-mould-favorites.html

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 11 March 2025 22:34 (one year ago)

a little surprised this is on a 'major label' but i suppose what that means now is very different from what it meant 40 years ago

mookieproof, Wednesday, 12 March 2025 01:09 (one year ago)

Yeah, this is great. I like that it's a tight half hour too.

His current run is the best era of his music since Sugar, imo.

better than ezra collective soul asylum (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 13 March 2025 14:30 (one year ago)

it was Martin Short

AKA lead singer of Hüsker Dü's punk progenitors the Queen Haters

Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 13 March 2025 14:34 (one year ago)

four months pass...

in front of me & my kid at the grocery store checkout line this afternoon:

kings hawaiian rolls
hershey syrup

imperial frfr (Steve Shasta), Sunday, 10 August 2025 00:41 (nine months ago)


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