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At age 64, former Hüsker Dü/Sugar leader Bob Mould is still rocking out on his first solo album in nearly five years, Here We Go Crazy, which is due March 7 from Granary Music/BMG.The 11-track ...
On November 21, 2011, musicians such as Dave Grohl, Britt Daniel and Jessica Dobson of Spoon, Craig Finn and Tad Kubler of The Hold Steady, Randy Randall and Dean Allen Spunt of No Age, Margaret Cho, Jason Narducy, Jon Wurster of Superchunk, and Ryan Adams came together at the Walt Disney Concert Hall and played songs from Bob Mould's career ...
Bob Mould and Fred Armisen performed the Hüsker Dü hit "I Apologize" at this year’s Hardly Strictly Business festival. The rocker and comedian duo blasted right into their performance, alone ...
The performance included songs from Mould's earlier bands Hüsker Dü and Sugar, as well as his solo work. This particular show was part of the Body of Song tour, Mould's first non-solo tour for over a decade and the first one in which Hüsker Dü material was played in a band format since the band broke up in 1988.
The title refers to the fact that Mould planned to cease touring with a full electric band after supporting the album (a plan he stuck to until hitting the road to support his 2005 release, Body of Song). "I'm 37 years old now," he said at the time. "I've been doing it for almost 20 years.
Modulate is an electronic [8] and power pop album, [9] which evoked the sound of New Order; [10] it takes its name from a lyric in "Comeonstrong". [2] Chris Larry of CMJ New Music Report compared it to the work of Erasure with the 1980s-esque keyboards, "elements of house music and an overall, industrialized sci-fi sound". [11]
"Makes No Sense at All" is a song by Hüsker Dü from the album Flip Your Wig. Written by Bob Mould, the song was released as a single from the album reaching number 2 on the UK indie charts. The song has since seen positive critical reception and has been performed live by both Hüsker Dü and Mould at his solo shows.
Mould had accumulated quite a backlog of material to this point. High Fidelity debuted during live solo acoustic performances back in 1997. [6] The project was initially recorded in Athens, GA with former Sugar bassist David Barbe playing bass and engineering, and Mould's 1998 tour band drummer Matt Hammon, at Barbe's Chase Park Transduction ...