Hüsker Dü was an American
rock band formed in Saint Paul,
Minnesota
in 1979. The band's continual members were
guitarist Bob Mould,
bassist Greg
Norton, and
drummer Grant Hart. Hüsker Dü never achieved mainstream
success, but attained an influence far larger than their modest
sales figures would indicate. Following a series of successful
albums, including
Zen Arcade
(1984) and
New Day Rising
(1985), the band signed to
Warner
Bros. Records in 1986,
becoming one of the first American
underground rock bands to sign with a
major record label.
Hüsker Dü first gained notice as a
hardcore punk band with thrashing tempos and
screamed vocals. The band developed a more melodic musical style as
they drifted away from their early sound, helping to develop the
early
alternative rock sound in the
process. Mould and Hart split the songwriting and singing duties;
Mould's lyrics were known for being more soul-searching and intense
than the often whimsical and cryptic ones of Hart.
Hüsker Dü broke up in 1987 without having achieved a popular
breakthrough. Mould formed another band,
Sugar, in the early 1990s and has embarked on a
sporadic solo career; Hart and Norton have been less active since
Hüsker Dü's demise. Although never experiencing commercial success,
Hüsker Dü influenced a number of later
pop
punk and
alternative rock
bands, such as
The Pixies,
Dinosaur Jr.,
Superchunk,
Green Day,
Nirvana, and
Foo Fighters.
Justin Broadrick of
Godflesh cites them as "one of the most important
bands of all time."
History
Formation and early years
The group that became Hüsker Dü formed when Bob Mould, Grant Hart,
Greg Norton and keyboardist Charlie Pine began playing together in
1979.
At
the time, Mould was a freshman at Macalester College
, and frequented Cheapo Discs, a St Paul record
store where Hart was a sales clerk. Hart and Norton had
originally met while applying for the same job, which Norton
eventually got. Hart and Mould bonded over a shared love of
the Ramones, and soon after enlisted
Norton and Pine to form a band. They were soon gigging, playing
mostly
cover songs, some
classic rock, and frequent Ramones tunes.
Unbeknownst to Pine, the remaining bandmembers disliked the sound
of the band with Pine's keyboards and began practicing without him,
writing a few originals.
They owed their new name to a rather sloppy rehearsal of the
Talking Heads' "
Psycho Killer". Unable to recall the
French portions sung in the original
("qu'est-ce que c'est"), they began shouting any foreign-language
terms they could remember, when someone said "
Hūsker Dū?", a
board game that had been popular in the 1970s.
The term, without the umlauts, means "Do you remember?" in
Danish and
Norwegian. The group added
Heavy metal umlauts to complete the name.
Mould reports that they liked "Hüsker Dü"'s somewhat mysterious
qualities, which set them apart from other hardcore punk groups
with names like "Social Red Youth Dynasty Brigade Distortion".
Mould also reported that while Hüsker Dü enjoyed much hardcore punk
in general, they never thought of themselves as exclusively a
hardcore group, and that their name was an attempt to avoid being
pigeonholed. Hart, Mould, and Norton fired Pine during their first
official performance, on March 30, 1979, and continued as a
trio.
By 1980 the band was performing regularly in Minneapolis, and their
music evolved into a fast, ferocious, primal sound, making them one
of the original hardcore punk bands. Through heavy touring they
soon caught the attention of punk trailblazers like
Black Flag and the
Dead Kennedys'
Jello
Biafra, which helped introduce Hüsker Dü to new fans. Black
Flag guitarist/songwriter
Greg Ginn later
signed the band to his label,
SST
Records.
Early releases
The band started releasing singles on
Terry Katzman's
Reflex Records in 1981. Their first two
albums,
Land Speed
Record (a live recording) and
Everything Falls Apart, brought
much critical praise. Determined touring brought them to the
attention of
The Minutemen, who
released their debut and the "In A Free Land" single on their
label,
New Alliance Records.
This, in turn, led to the band signing with SST.
The intense, but varied
Metal
Circus EP/mini-album was released in 1983. Hüsker Dü's
more melodic take on hardcore struck a chord with college students,
and various tracks from
Metal Circus, particularly Hart's
"Diane," were put into rotation by dozens of
campus radio stations across the US. In
addition, on
Metal Circus the band showed more invention,
skill, and melody than it did over the course of their previous
full album
Everything Falls Apart.
Zen Arcade, New Day Rising and Flip Your
Wig
The members of Hüsker Dü desired to escape the restrictions of the
hardcore genre. In an interview with
Steve
Albini for his
Matter column in 1983, singer and
guitarist
Bob Mould told Albini: "We're
going to try to do something bigger than anything like rock &
roll and the whole puny touring band idea. I don't know what it's
going to be, we have to work that out, but it's going to go beyond
the whole idea of 'punk rock' or whatever." The following year,
Hüsker Dü recorded the double album
Zen
Arcade in 45 hours for the cost of
$3,200.
Zen Arcade is a
concept album following a boy who leaves home
to face a harsh and unforgiving world. Its artistic and conceptual
ambitions were a great stretch, given the purist sentiment then
prevalent in U.S. punk rock.
Zen Arcade received critical
praise and significant mainstream music press attention, ending up
on several year end best-of lists; it also helped expand the band's
audience beyond the punk community. In his review for
Rolling
Stone, David Fricke described
Zen Arcade as "the closest hardcore will ever get to an
opera ... a kind of
thrash Quadrophenia." SST erred on the side of
caution and initially pressed between 3,500 and 5,000 copies of the
album, but the record sold out a few weeks into the band's tour to
support the record. The album remained out of stock for months
afterward, which affected sales and frustrated the band.
Hüsker Dü started recording its follow-up album
New Day Rising just as
Zen
Arcade was released.
New Day Rising was released six
months later in early 1985. Another album,
Flip Your Wig, followed later that year.
Flip Your Wig became the first album released on an
independent record label to top the
CMJ
album chart, and at year's end, both
New Day Rising and
Flip Your Wig ranked in the top ten of the
Village Voice annual
Pazz & Jop critics' poll.
Major label era
During the recordings sessions for
Flip Your Wig major
label
Warner Bros. Records approached Hüsker Dü and
offered the group a recording contract. The band felt it had hit a
sales ceiling that it could break through only with the help of a
major label. The promise of retaining complete creative control
over its music convinced the band to sign with the label. Mould
also cites the distribution problems with SST as a reason for the
move, mentioning that there would sometimes be no records to sign
when the band would show up for promotional events. Hüsker Dü was
not expected to sell a large amount of records. Rather, Warner
Bros. valued the group for its grassroots fanbase and its "hip"
status, and by keeping the overhead low the label anticipated the
band would turn a profit.
Hüsker Dü released its debut on Warner Bros.,
Candy Apple Grey, in 1986. A double
album,
Warehouse: Songs
and Stories, followed in 1987.
Breakup
Creative and personal tensions between Mould and Hart had become
unresolvable by the release of
Warehouse, and they
intensified when Mould began overseeing most of the band's
managerial duties following the suicide of manager David Savoy on
the eve of the tour in support of the album. In September 2006,
Hart told Britain's
Q
magazine, "I take full responsibility for [David's] suicide. It was
a direct result of the pressure of working for Bob and me, because
he was being forced into a two-faced situation." Mould also called
the suicide "the beginning of the end".
The band dissolved
after a show in Columbia, Missouri
in support of the band's 1987 double album
Warehouse: Songs and
Stories. Hart was trying to quit heroin using a
supply of
methadone, but the bottle had
leaked. Hart played the show, but Mould and Norton were concerned
Hart would soon be suffering from withdrawal and thus would be
unable to play the next few shows. While Hart insisted he could
perform, Mould had already cancelled the dates. Hart quit the band
four days later.
The Living
End, a live collection taken from the band's final tour,
was released after the band's demise.

Mould performing solo in July
2007.
Mould and Hart have continued making music separately. Both have
produced solo albums and formed alternative rock bands,
Sugar and
Nova Mob,
respectively. Mould has also joined
Richard Morel in the band
Blowoff. Mould has returned to touring regularly
with his solo albums
Body of Song and
District
Line and is playing Hüsker Dü (as well as Sugar) songs live
again. His backup band features several notable musicians,
including
Brendan Canty.
Norton formed the
short-lived band Grey Area, played
with Shotgun Rationale, and became a chef; he
and his wife Sarah own a restaurant in Red Wing,
Minnesota
called The Nortons'. In addition to his
restaurant duties, in 2006 Norton returned to music as bassist for
the Minnesota based band The Gang Font, feat. Interloper. The group
released an eponymous album in 2007.
Surprise reunion and future
Mould and Hart did a brief, unannounced reunion in 2004 at a
benefit concert for ailing
Soul Asylum bassist
Karl
Mueller (who had been receiving treatment for cancer, and has
since died). At the end of what had been scheduled as a Bob Mould
solo set, he brought Hart out and the duo played two
specially-selected Hüsker Dü songs, "Hardly Getting Over It" and
"Never Talking To You Again". Mould wrote on his blog that the
performance was an impromptu, last-minute suggestion by Hart and
shouldn't kindle any "false hope" for a reunion.
In June 2005, Mould told
Billboard magazine in an
interview that SST had not given the band an accounting of their
record and CD sales in several years, and that plans to regain the
master tapes from SST and reissue them elsewhere were being held up
by business disputes between the former band members.
Musical style

The band's logo symbolized the
creative commonality between Hart, Mould, and Norton, despite their
differing personalities.
According to Mould: "The circle is the band, the three lines
across are the members, and the intersection is the common train of
thought."
üsker Dü started as a hardcore punk band known for its speed and
intensity. While the band included some slower material earlier in
its career, Hüsker Dü developed a fast repertoire as a result of
having little time to play as an opening act, and to antagonize its
audience when it headlined shows. "[T]here was a point where we
were like, 'Let's see how fast we can play,'" Norton recalled. "I
guess we were just trying to blow people away." Hüsker Dü was
particularly influenced by punk bands like
D.O.A.,
Dead
Kennedys, and
The Fartz after having
seen them play.
NME journalist Andy Gill contended that
Hüsker Dü's characteristic sound crystalized on the
Metal
Circus EP, incorporating "thunderbuck, hiccup" drums, a
melodic yet solid bass, and "carillions [sic] of distorted guitar,
with shouted vocals rasping hoarsely from deep in the mix". He
argued that what set them apart from other punk bands was "the way
they mix those same structural devices in ways that shouldn't work,
combining elements of several genres in one song."
As the band's career progressed, Hüsker Dü emphasized melody in its
songs. Unlike other hardcore bands, Hüsker Dü did not disavow
classic rock. "You know the whole deal
with tearing down the old to make room for the new?", Hart posited.
"Well, music isn't city planning." The band covered 1960s hits like
Donovan's "
Sunshine Superman" and
The Byrds' "
Eight
Miles High" early in its career. As the band members progressed
as musicians, they discovered they were able to play at slower
tempos while still maintaining the rhythm, which allowed for
extended melodies.
Hart and Mould were the band's songwriters. Both wrote their songs
separately and at a prodigious pace; in later years Hart accused
Mould of making sure his songs comprised no more than 45 percent of
the material on an album. Despite the creative friction and their
differing individual personalities, the members accommodated each
other so that the band could continue to exist. They designed their
logo to represent their common train of thought: a circle enclosing
three parallel horizontal lines with a vertical line connecting
them. The circle symbolized the band, the three lines the
individual members, and the intersecting line the common thread of
creativity which connected them.
Legacy
Hüsker Dü is widely regarded as one of the key bands to emerge from
the 1980s American indie scene. Music writer
Michael Azerrad asserted in his book
Our Band Could Be Your
Life (2001) that Hüsker Dü was the key link between
hardcore punk and the more melodic, diverse music of
college rock that emerged. Azerrad wrote,
"Hüsker Dü played a huge role in convincing the underground that
melody and punk rock weren't antithetical." The band also set an
example by being the first band from the American indie scene to
sign to a major record label, which helped establish college rock
as "a viable commercial enterprise."
Green Day frontman
Billie Joe Armstrong has said,
"
The Replacements and Hüsker
Dü are probably the bands that influenced me the most",
particularly in his approach to creating chord progressions.
Discography
Studio albums
Notes
- Mould, Bob. Bob Mould in conversation with Michael
Azerrad. City Arts and Lectures. 16 October 2007, San
Francisco California.
- Q, October 2006
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References
External links