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Warehouse: Songs and Stories

Hüsker Dü

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Album Review

It's cleaner and more produced than any of their records, which is one reason why many Hüsker Dü fans have never fully embraced their second double album, Warehouse: Songs and Stories. Granted, Warehouse boasts a fuller production — complete with multi-tracked guitars and vocal, various percussion techniques, and endless studio effects — that would have seemed out of place a mere two years before its release. However, Flip Your Wig and Candy Apple Grey both suggested this full-fledged pop production, and it's to Hüsker Dü's credit that they never sound like they are selling out with Warehouse. What they do sound like is breaking up. Although there was a schism apparent between Bob Mould and Grant Hart on Candy Apple Grey, they don't even sound like they are writing for the same band on Warehouse. But the individual songs on the album are powerhouses in their own right, as both songwriters exhibit a continuing sense of experimentation — Hart writes a sea shanty with "She Floated Away" and uses bubbling percussion on "Charity, Chastity, Prudence, and Hope," while Mould nearly arrives at power pop with "Could You Be the One?" and touches on singer/songwriter-styled folk-rock with "No Reservations." Warehouse doesn't have the single-minded sense of purpose or eccentric sprawl of Zen Arcade, but as a collection of songs, it's of the first order. Furthermore, its stylish production — which makes pop concessions without abandoning a punk ethos — pointed the way to the kind of "alternative" rock that dominated the mainstream in the early '90s. In all, it was a fine way for one of the most important bands of the '80s to call it a day.

Customer Reviews

Husker Du!!

Would be nice if we could also get New Day Rising and Zen Arcade but its a start!

It's A Start...

I won't get into the whole politics of SST, so I am happy iTunes is finally carrying these releases. More so, I am very pleased they include the snippet from "Back From Somewhere" which contains what I think is the highlight of this album - Grant's soaring line "I remember you". A fine swansong by the only band that mattered at that time: Polished, yes, but never running the risk of what some would want to call "selling out." The final, "You Can Live at Home", brings them recalls the sonic attack of Zen Arcade, a fine end to the greatest band there was.

The best way to access the Husker Du catalog is to work backwards

Husker Du is a life changing band. I know there sound isn't for everyone, but I pity those who cannot appreciate how awesome this band was. I first heard this album at debate camp in 1987 (maybe 1988). The stuttering on "It's Not Peculiar" is what hooked me in. It did not sound like anything else on the radio, and wouldn't until the 1990s. Neither did their SST catalog, but for those who are not ready for DIY recording techniques, the sound of Husker Du's Warner Bros. catalog is a great place to become acquainted with their sound. This dense double album is a better place to start than the lesser Candy Apple Grey. "These Important Years", "Could You Be The One?". and "You Can Live At Home" are the standout tracks. However, I believe that this album is best treated like a novel or movie where you should listen to it in one full sitting.

Biography

Formed: 1979 in Minneapolis, MN

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '70s, '80s

Hüsker Dü and R.E.M. were the two American post-punk bands of the '80s that changed the direction of rock & roll. R.E.M. became a superstar band; Hüsker Dü never was more than a cult favorite. Nevertheless, their albums between 1981 and 1987 have proven remarkably influential; they provided the sonic blueprint for the roaring punk-pop hybrid that crossed over into the mainstream in the early '90s. Not only did they shape the sound of the music, they shaped the way independent bands made the transition...
Full Bio

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