![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
In the summer of 1980, the Mpls. group Hüsker Dü had just released their first single, "Statues". That 7" remains one of the most powerful anti-"scene" statements ever to be recorded by an indie band whose very survival hinged upon the same mentality they so vehemently attacked. Whether or not the band followed the arbitrary instructions relayed from one of Brian Eno's Oblique Strategies cards would be a matter of varied opinion over the next eight years, as Hüsker Dü would go on to forge their own path to independent success, from their self managed Reflex label, and finally as a major label "alternative/college" crossover shortly before the band's awkward breakup in 1988.
[close]
It was during the "Statues" sessions that one of the band members randomly selected the Strategies card instructing them to "minimalize" - the extended outcome of which would not be realized until eleven years later, when founding member Bob Mould would embark on a solo acoustic tour, following two modestly acclaimed solo LPs and a year-long hiatus from the very scene his energy once helped to spark. Drawing mainly from those two albums, Workbook and Black Sheets of Rain, as well as a number of old Hüsker Dü favorites, Bob played two capacity-filled rooms at Mpls.' 7th St. Entry in March 1990, where it was quite clear that his local following is as strong and dedicated as ever. You've certainly run the musical gamut over the last decade. Are you searching for your roots at this point or sifting through your own creative process? Where do you think the appeal lies in acoustic performance? You've had the opportunity to play that way even before going solo. Do you feel that your audience has accepted the change of direction, or is there still a tendency to wax nostalgic? When the band tours, I think I made a real strong point from the get-go not to be doing those songs with any other band. Doing them acoustic is fine—it's my song, ultimately—but I think asking other musicians to play them is sort of pointless. I think people have been pretty good about it. There's always a small fraction of the audience that wants to stay in the past. For them, that's good but that's not where I'm at. A couple of those songs stand the test of time real well. In your dealings with the record companies, has it been difficult to leave the past behind? "...former member of..." Both of these records are done better than Hüsker Dü records. Sales, production... they've been more fun for me to make. Commercially, they've done better. All the way around, I think they've been better. It's not just like the old stuff, it's a step forward. I look at the audience now, and about half of it's people that were there before, but at least half is new people. I can tell, because when I play old stuff on the acoustic tours only a certain amount of people recognize it. It's sort of weird, it's really nice. There seems to be a revolving door policy with the backing musicians you've employed. Is there an actual Bob Mould band, or is it just a matter of working with the right people for each project? People get ideas, you know. People want me to be a tyrant, so they paint me as one. I'll be whatever you want me to be. If I come to Minneapolis and people want me to be a tyrant, I will be. If I go to Des Moines, and people think that I'm something else, I can be that too. Why try to argue, because then it just looks like an effort to cover something up. I didn't do it in 1988 when I left Hüsker Dü , and I don't do it now. Whatever you want to think - ultimately, if you don't like the music, then none of it matters. If you like the music, then maybe it's interesting. If you really like the music, then it doesn't matter either. People who are marginally interested might find that intriguing, what my agenda is as far as people I work with. Between the demise of Hüsker Dü and the release of Workbook, you remained for the most part out of sight. What was that like, being removed from the public eye for the first time in nine years, and learning how to re-approach the whole music scene? Workbook really dealt with a lot of things from the past; not neccesarily about the break-up, but things before that, my childhood, and whatever. That record was real therapeutic for me just to find out who I was and try to figure out what my priorities were. There was themes on that record, sort of a divorce theme. Not so much divorce in a technical sense, but divorcing from anything - familar surroundings, divorcing yourself from time and space. Those kind of themes I stick with because I find them interesting. I think it's something everybody feels, and something I certainly feel a lot of the time. Ideally, in my world, each record is a continuation of the last one; adding new characters, adding new elements. Just sort of absorbing different surroundings and trying to bring that into what you're doing. The move to the farm was great, and when that had run its' course I moved out to New York; I've lived in three different places out there. I can't seem to get settled, no matter what I do. Is it difficult for you to constantly adapt in so many different situations? Your material has suggested that you would like to move beyond the realm of standard rock instrumentation. What influences the decisions you make concerning what is played, or by whom? This year I went right in the studio and made Black Sheets... on the heels of all that, and that record was really aggressive and reflected that. Tony and Anton and I went out last summer and did about a month's worth of dates in July as a three-piece, just to see if that would fly. I thought, "well, we made the record but I want to see what happens". It's not as lush, it doesn't need as much detail. Black Sheets... was a lot more immediate of a record, a lot more up front - not quite as introspective or whatever. It was real bitter, but it was real outgoing. Not very forgiving. Workbook was a very forgiving.record. Black Sheets... was a real low tolerance for everything. Now that you're touring without a band, have you given any thought to recording a purely acoustic album?
It depends, every day I have a different idea of what I'm gonna do next. Every single day when I'm driving on this trip, I'm just sitting in the car listening to talk radio, thinking about what I'm gonna do next, and every day it's something different. It's like, "now I'm gonna make a record at home by myself...now I'm gonna go into the studio with different people...now I'm gonna not make a record...now I'm gonna do this and that". Hopefully one idea will stick with me for a certain amount of time. What will finally force you into making a decision? Are you curently working on a new project? Are there any ways in which you would like to aproach your writing that you haven't done yet? Could you actually see yourself working with a synthesizer? Most musicians who are primarily guitarists tend to be so critical of that technology. Looking back over your past accomplishments, how do you perceive the direction you've moved in, and the response from your fans and critics? Sometimes I have to straighten people out when they think certain things. It's sort of like, "well, that's your thoughts. I certainly wouldn't agree, but you're entitled to that opinion." Misinformation, when I read articles sometimes - that's always a little confusing. That's the beauty of music - it's open to interpretation. Sometimes that's why I don't talk much about what the songs mean. I get frustrated talking about what they mean, because what it means to me has nothing to do with what it means to the listener. Hopefully it conveys an emotional state of mind. It just reflects things. Music, like art, reflects life; and hopefully shapes it in some way, and that's all it should be. I just found as I get older, the work becomes more pure. I have very little time for explanation. Let the music do the talking. Whatever you think is what it is. © J. Free / New Puritan ReView; 1990; 2007 Photographs of Bob Mould from the 7th St. Entry in March 1990 © J. Free 1990; 2007 |
|||||
Back to the interviews page |
|||||
|
©2006 SONIC ARCHIVES; all rights reserved. |
|||||