Between July 1984 and September 1985 Husker Du released three albums, the first of which (Zen Arcade) was a double (and preceded by a non- album single, their scorching cover of Eight Miles High), followed by New Day Rising and then Flip Your Wig. Fifty two songs. Each album raised the bar, both songwriters, Bob Mould and Grant Hart, in a million miles an hour race to keep moving, keep writing and playing.
Zen Arcade is a punk concept album of sorts, Bob Mould telling the story of a young boy leaving home and finding the world is a difficult and tough place to live in. It is a blur of riffs, melodies and rhythms, high octane punk rock filtered through psychedelia opening with Mould's killer Something I Learned Today and Grant Hart contributing a pair of huge songs- Pink Turns To Grey and Turn On The News. On the last song, Reoccurring Dreams, they play a hardcore jazz- punk instrumental, fourteen minutes long and not a moment wasted.
New Day Rising, released six months later, is even better. Grant Hart was a songwriting, singing drummer whose long hair, love beads and bare feet marked him out as a non- conformist in US punk's sometimes fairly orthodox world. On New Day Rising he throws in The Girl Who Lived On Heaven Hill, Terms Of Psychic Warfare and Books About UFOs. Mould, struggling with alcohol and sexuality, countered with the title track, Celebrated Summer (where Husker Du slow down and Mould plays an acoustic guitar) and I Apologise among the album's songs, an embarrassment of riches. It sounds tinny and scratchy to modern ears, the guitars at times like a jetwash being sprayed on a metal fence, the bottom end hardly there at all.
The Girl Who Lives On Heaven Hill
Six months after that they put out their last album for SST, Flip Your Wig, the band producing themselves for the first time and the sound bigger and fuller, the songs even better, everything slightly clearer (that's not to say Mould had turned the distortion down, he really hadn't)- Every Everything, Green Eyes, Hate Paper Doll, the single Makes No Sense At All, Divide And Conquer, Keep Hanging On (Grant's Husker Du peak for me), Find Me and Private Plane. Mould says Flip Your Wig is their best album and I can go with that. The fact it came within fourteen months of Zen Arcade is incredible.
I don't think you'll hear a better song that that today. Please let me know if you do.
Husker Du also toured incessantly, the three men playing across the USA and Europe, scorching a trail of melodic, emotional, hair raising live performances, playing as if Armageddon were upon them and they had just thirty minutes left and everything depended on Husker Du giving their all. Bassist Greg Norton has recently been working on a box set of live performances from 1985, an album called 1985: The Miracle Year. The first disc (single CD or double vinyl) is a full show from First Avenue in their home town Minneapolis, 30th January 1985, kicking off with the three word blast of New Day Rising and then powering their way through a set that takes in It's Not Funny Any more (from 1983's Metal Circus) and then cherry picks from the Zen Arcade and New Day Rising. The sound is rough, it is like being there, the guitars are buzzsaws and hornet's nests, the drums are frenetic, the bass is big and muscular (more so than on some of recorded versions), and Mould and Hart sing their throats raw. They do the covers, searing versions of Eight Miles High, Ticket To Ride and Love Is All Around
The second CD/ pair of records is taken from a variety of gigs- Boulder, Long Beach, Newport, Washington, Hoboken, Cleveland, Frankfurt, Lausanne and Seattle- including songs form their at that point unreleased major label debut Candy Apple Grey (Don't Want To Know If You Are Lonely, Hardly Getting Over It and Sorry Somehow). It's thrilling stuff, life affirming and exhilarating to listen to to forty years later, transcendent even. You can hear it all at Bandcamp. Husker Du can never reform- poor Grant died in 2017 aged fifty six. But we can remember them through these recordings, a band full of life. Bob Mould has recently reformed Sugar for some live shows next year. But that's another story.
* This version of Something I Learned Today is one I found on the internet years ago, remastered and with the bottom end boosted. I can't remember who did this and its entirely unofficial- it does demonstrate that if Greg Ginn ever allowed someone to remaster the Husker Du SST back catalogue it would be a very worthwhile exercise.

1 comment:
I saw them in Leeds and they were astonishing. Deliberately never pausing between songs - there was always someone keeping the noise going - Grant, Bob or Greg thrashing away until they broke into the next song.
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