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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 ...
The album was named as such because Mould decided that the tour that followed would be his "last electric band tour." [23] After the tour, Mould took a break from the music world to get involved with another passion of his, professional wrestling, when he joined WCW as a scriptwriter in 1999 for a brief period. [24]
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 band played their final show in Japan in 1995, [6] Mould broke the band up in spring 1996. [2] Barbe wished to spend more time with his growing family and expand his solo career. Travis took over the drumming slot in Kustomized. Bob Mould spent the summer of 2012 touring and playing Copper Blue in its entirety. [7]
The members of Hüsker Dü first performed together when Grant Hart, Bob Mould, Greg Norton, and keyboardist Charlie Pine began playing in January 1979 [2].At the time, Mould was a freshman at Macalester College in Saint Paul and frequented nearby Cheapo Records, a Saint Paul record store where Hart was a sales clerk.
During the 1980s, Bob Mould was the guitarist and a lead vocalist of the rock band Hüsker Dü. Initially rooted in hardcore punk, Hüsker Dü eventually developed a sound based around alternative rock, with an emphasis on melody. When Hüsker Dü disbanded in 1987, Mould continued as a solo artist, and released two albums in 1989 and 1991.
Bob Mould (sometimes referred to as Hubcap) is the third solo album by former Hüsker Dü and Sugar guitarist and singer Bob Mould. It was recorded and mixed between September & November 1995 and released in April 1996. Mould played all of the instruments on the album himself, and the sleeve notes declare, "This one is for me."
Music videos for both "Makes No Sense at All" and "Love Is All Around" were produced. These featured clips of the band and shots of Minneapolis . [ 6 ] For the "Love is All Around" sequence the video has the band copying iconic scenes from the Minneapolis-based Mary Tyler Moore Show opening credit sequence, such as leaving Dayton's and riding ...