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Bob Mould

Workbook

  • AMG Review of Workbook

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    Arriving after years of sonic bombast in Hüsker Dü, the reflective, acoustic nature of Bob Mould's first solo album, Workbook, was a bold statement of renewal. Like all of Mould's work, it's an intensely introspective record, finding him purging demons left over from the dissolution of Hüsker Dü. Instead of relying on raging guitars, Mould explores a wide variety of styles, from pure pop ("See a Little Light") to reflective folk laced with cellos. It's an astonishing array of styles, and the songs are among Mould's finest. For many observers, the record established him as a major songwriter, but it also established a way for underground post-punk artists to mature -- echoes of Workbook could be heard throughout the '90s, from R.E.M.'s elegiac Automatic for the People to Nirvana's use of cellos on In Utero and Unplugged. But Workbook remains a stunning work of individuality, marrying a distinctive body of songs with an original musical vision. Occasionally, the production is a little too pristine, but the power of the songs cannot be diminished.

zarpex
zarpex of The Virgin-Whore Complex
True Love in a Large Room, OR, Why Use One Word Where Six Will Do?
about 1 year ago

The singer for a recently-formed rock band in San Francisco, with whom I have developed a relationship of mutual friendliness and respect over the last several months, sent me an electronic verbal message of some sort - on AOL they used to be called "instant messages"; I don't know if facebook uses the same terminology - a few weeks ago, asking if I could suggest a good band name. I let fly f...

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