As he sets about celebrating two career highlights from two
decades apart, Bob Mould is musing on a couple of years which have raised his
already respected standing to new levels. “It has got kind of crazy,” he
admits, before getting a little more philosophical. “Just the fact I've
survived might be a big part of it – and the book certainly galvanised people
to delve back into what's gone before.”
Said book, See A Little Light, has become almost as revered
as his musical history, as it unblinkingly covers not only Mould's music and
the messy and drug-wracked implosion of Hüsker Dü, but also his struggle and
eventual acceptance of his sexuality, among other things.
Did the book set out to be as candid and revealing? The
answer is quick and emphatic: “No!”
Then elaborates: “I absolutely did not expect it to go that way. I thought 'Yeah, biography – tell some funny stories, look back, rewrite the bad times a little bit to make yourself look good'. But [co-writer] Michael Azerrad was a great coach, great editor. He saw a different picture, and encouraged and dragged a whole other perspective out of me.” Azerrad, the author also responsible for the definitive Nirvana book, Come As You Are, gave Mould a layer of trust.
Then elaborates: “I absolutely did not expect it to go that way. I thought 'Yeah, biography – tell some funny stories, look back, rewrite the bad times a little bit to make yourself look good'. But [co-writer] Michael Azerrad was a great coach, great editor. He saw a different picture, and encouraged and dragged a whole other perspective out of me.” Azerrad, the author also responsible for the definitive Nirvana book, Come As You Are, gave Mould a layer of trust.
The honesty of the book saw it reach beyond his musical
audience, and reignited a wider interest through his latest album, Silver Age
(an album now often compared with Sugar's classic Copper Blue of the early
'90s; itself name-checked by both grunge and rock enthusiasts). These two
albums centred his then-current touring. “I love playing those records – they're fun,
easy to play.” He adds a kicker, “Then we go deeper into the back catalogue –
and it will be loud.”
Mould's answer is less definite and more self-effacing when
questioned on whether he recognises his own standing and reputation: “Umm,
yeah. Okay, maybe. I'm still a big music fan – so I know that bands like
Japandroids and The Men mention me,” he says, sounding genuinely pleased that
they know who he is. “But I only really think about it when I have to talk
about it. I don't often sit in my yard and look up at my place among the
stars,” he chuckles.
“I'm grateful, surprised. A level of recognition always
amazes me. Maybe even more that I can be sitting in my neighbourhood having a
coffee, someone walks by, does a double take, then comes up to show me they
have 20 or 30 of my songs in their iPod. Like, how that does happen? You have
to love that – unless you're Morrissey, of course.”
Some other friends were happy to back Bob up when Los
Angeles' Disney Concert Hall organised a tribute to the man and his music. He
even downplays that a bit. “I'd played a handful of tribute shows at [legendary
New York venue] Carnegie Hall – Dylan, REM, The Who. I think the Disney wants
to be that for the West Coast. It's a Frank Gehry-designed, perfectly tuned
orchestral venue. They gave me gravity, I gave them some credibility. Maybe.”
“They asked, and I just like getting people
together to play. Okay, it got a bit bigger than I thought.” Among those at the
'get-together': Dave Grohl, Ryan Adams, and Craig Finn of The Hold Steady. Mr
Mould is matter-of-fact: “Well, Dave I've known forever, way back to last
century. Craig and I share a guitar teacher. Ryan? We've just run into each
other. It probably just comes down to being around long enough to have met
about everybody.” May he meet quite a few more.
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