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Pioneering punk songwriter Bob Mould plays new music at the Fillmore

An iconic musician and songwriter who exerted a huge influence on '80s punk and '90s alternative-rock bands, Bob Mould and his trio play songs from his latest album Here We Go Crazy at the Fillmore Saturday night.

A founding member of pioneering Minneapolis punk trio Hüsker Dü, Mould started the band with drummer Grant Hart and bassist Bob Norton in 1979. Matching hardcore ferocity and speed with a gift for melodic songwriting no other punk band came close to, Hüsker Dü built a rabidly loyal following with its early tours and initial output on SST Records, including such indelible classics as the frenetic live album Land Speed Record, their studio debut Everything Falls Apart and their landmark double LP Zen Arcade in 1984, a sprawling, ambitious effort which showed the band pushing the boundaries of punk.

Hüsker Dü - Zen Arcade [1984, FULL ALBUM] by Gilpow on YouTube

The group moved to Warner Bros. Records after releasing Flip Your Wig in 1985, its final recording for SST that showed the band in full power-pop mode, having largely left it's early punk sound behind. The two albums released for the major label -- Candy Apple Gray and Warehouse: Songs and Stories -- had minimal commercial impact, but are often credited with laying the groundwork for many of the alt-rock and noise-pop bands that would emerge after the group split in 1988.

Husker Du - Don't Want to Know If you are Lonely by jat13 on YouTube

Following the split, Mould would quit drinking and doing drugs before focusing on his first solo effort, Workbook, that took his music in a lighter, more singer/songwriter direction. However, the musician would return to working in band setting (as well as his gift for mixing buzz-saw guitars and pop melodies) in 1992 with the power trio Sugar, which put out two acclaimed albums and an EP during its brief three years in existence.

A Good Idea by Sugar - Topic on YouTube

In the decades since, Mould has continued to explore confessional solo acoustic songwriting and loud, tuneful rock with equal success, as well as detouring into electronic dance music both on recordings and as a DJ. Mould has also something of a fixture in San Francisco, taking up part-time residence in a Castro District apartment and appearing at multiple editions of Hardly Strictly Bluegrass in Golden Gate Park over the years.

Mould performed as part of 2021's virtual Hardly Strictly Everywhere, appearing on the festival's livestream in a duo with veteran Saturday Night Live comic and accomplished musician Fred Armisen (who played drums with Devo during the band's Burger Boogaloo set in Oakland several years ago). Mould also delivered a blistering set at August Hall with his current band featuring bassist Jason Narducy and drummer John Wurster.

Bob Mould Band: Distortion and Blue Hearts! 4K {Full Show} by Matt Dilg on YouTube

Mould's album Blue Hearts came out on Merge Records in September of 2020, but the tour a year later marked the first time he was able to take to the road to promote it since the beginning of the pandemic. A fiery collection of songs ruminating on everything from climate change and political/social turmoil in the U.S. to more internal self-reflection, the album stands as another powerful statement from one of the most vital artists of his generation.

Last year, Mould released the follow-up solo acoustic EP The Ocean, which features two songs from Blue Hearts and a version the Hüsker Dü classic "Divide and Conquer" that were recorded in San Francisco for the NPR show World Cafe. He last performed in SF for a sold-out solo electric show for the 30th anniversary edition of the Noise Pop Festival in 2023. 

Bob Mould: When Your Heart Is Broken | The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on YouTube

The celebrated musician is returning to the road in April with his trio featuring Narducy and John Wurster to promote his latest effort, Here We Go Crazy. Produced by Mould at Chicago, IL's famed Electrical Audio early last year prior to the untimely passing of iconic studio owner and engineer Steve Albini, the album was finished and mixed at Oakland, CA's Tiny Telephone with Mould's longtime engineer Beau Sorenson. Hailed as a return to the anthemic sound and huge guitars that were on display during the Sugar era, the recording channels the guitarist's angst over current political and social circumstances into another powerful collection of tunes. For this show at the Fillmore in San Francisco, Mould and his trio will be joined by songwriter Craig Finn, who is best known as the frontman of the American indie rock band the Hold Steady. 

Bob Mould Band
Saturday, April 5, 8 p.m. $44
The Fillmore

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