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Mama Clortho wrote:Yesterday, it occurred to me that I had never knowingly heard Husker Du. Which is strange, as I know all about them, I'm not 16 and I'm very familiar with all related bands. I went to the store and picked up Zen Arcade and New Day Rising, knowing that these were their best albums.
Husker Du were a great band! So nice to discover them 'later' in life.


Gantry wrote:I didn't want to take up any more space in the sacred cows thread discussing Husker Du, so...
Husker Du live in 1981 at the 7th Street Entry:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=J9UZFV47


Rick Reuben wrote:None of us is the person we were supposed to be.





a leg plaster wrote:Fucking 'Terms of Psychic Warfare'! I cannot get you out of my head.


OrthodoxEaster wrote: Are umlauts really that difficult to type?
new-huevo wuss

OrthodoxEaster wrote:First single's kinda ho-hum post-punk. The debut LP is an inhuman, exhilarating semi-hardcore blur (almost as good as the Meat Puppets debut). Everything Falls Apart, In a Free Land, and Metal Circus are just fucking great rock records. Zen Arcade is uneven but ok. The other albums each have a handful of excellent, roughed-up pop tunes but they start getting a little formulaic. Except for Warehouse, which is mostly nonsense.
OrthodoxEaster wrote:Mould was a total master of the overfried distortion-plus-chorus guitar sound. [...] It's tough to rock this much-misunderstood and terribly abused pedal and not sound like some new-huevo wuss or '80s jazz-fusion dweeb (or hey, you could combine the two and join the Police). These men somehow overcame the odds.

flyinghouses wrote:So many ways to have a good time with Rock and sauce.

Snowblinder wrote:Girl Who Lives on Heaven Hill

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