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  • Bob Mould

    District Line

    02/05/2008 | Anti 

    Review

    Despite being a part of Husker Du, one of the most influential speed-punk bands of the ‘80s, and Sugar, one of the most beloved college rock bands of the ‘90s, Bob Mould's solo work has been a mixed bag of successes and failures. Mould's solo albums have run the gamut from acoustic compositions to dance and electronica and back to the aggressive sound of his first band. District Line tries to find a common ground by blending elements of all three.

    The strongest experiment in this cadre of songs is "Old Highs New Lows," which opens with a sweeping synth that sounds destined for dance club horror. Instead, Mould injects the track with live drums and somber lyrics that ground the song nicely, proving he can combine his strengths into an even-keeled, exciting and cohesive piece. "Return to Dust" is among the crunchiest songs on the album, reminiscent of his earliest work, and is follwed by "The Silence Between Us," which harkens back to his college-rock aesthetic with its signature bass-heavy mixing.

    Mould covers a lot of ground on District Line, but unfortunately most of it is ground he's already covered. Instead of combining his myriad talents for a brave, new album, we get a history of his past achievements. There isn't a lot of forward-thinking music to be found here, but from a musician as talented as Mould, it is far better than being relegated to pure nostalgia.

    —Nathan Atnikov
    02.12.08

    All Music Guide Review

    It's tempting to call District Line a return to form for Bob Mould -- tempting, but not quite accurate. Mould might have started to wander into the electronic wilderness after his 1998's The Last Dog and Pony Show, a self-conscious farewell to rock & roll, but he revived his roaring guitars on 2005's Body of Song, so calling District Line a return to rock isn't right, even if its release on the maverick label Anti- suggests that this album may hearken back to his Hüsker Dü years. Quite the contrary, actually: while there are plenty of guitars and molten pop hooks, Mould has yet to shake his inexplicable fixation on vocoders, and "Shelter Me" is a straight-up disco track, elements that he picked up in the years since Sugar's disbandment. Such exploration is at the heart of Mould's restless artistic spirit, a restlessness he's possessed since Hüsker -- never forget that Zen Arcade was a concept album -- but what's striking about District Line is that Mould sounds calmer here, even relaxed. That's not to say that he sounds complacent or that the passion has drained from his music, but for the first time he's able to mesh all his disparate musical interests into one cohesive album, one that sounds diverse yet unified. For as many different styles and moods as there are here -- "Stupid Now" surges upon coiled emotions, "Who Needs to Dream" and "The Silence Between Us" recall Sugar's sweet pop, "Return to Dust" is a cavalcade of sound, "Old Highs New Lows" is the closest he's ever gotten to a full-on adult alternative ballad -- District Line never sounds showy. It's a consolidation of Mould's considerable strengths, an album that showcases his gifts as a writer and record-maker, one that touches upon almost every phase of his career, yet it's filtered through a maturity that feels vital because of its unadorned honesty. Bob Mould isn't forcing himself to make music like he did when he was in his twenties, nor is he working through a series of ideas as he did in the early 2000s; on District Line, he's pulling all these strands together, and it makes for his strongest and best album in years. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

    Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • 1
  • Stupid Now
  • 4:05

  • 7
  • Shelter Me
  • 3:52

  • 10
  • Walls in Time
  • 6:13

  • Credits

    • Bob Mould
    • Bass, Mixing, Keyboards, Vocals, Producer, Programming, Guitar, Percussion

    Notes

    Guitarist/singer/songwriter Mould returns to form as a solo artist on his Anti debut. "District Line" combines the fire of his earliest work in Husker Du, the accessibility of his alternative rock, genre-defining trio Sugar, and the introspection found in his solo releases. He describes it as "stories of my simple life in a complicated town", that being his adopted city of Washington, DC. Working with Fugazi drummer Brendan Canty, Mould has returned to the live band sound of Husker Du and Sugar to kick out ten songs that sound as youthful, energized, and immediate as anything he has ever recorded. This is a full on rock 'n' roll record, featuring members of Fugazi, and will appeal to fans of that band, as well as new fans raised on Alkaline Trio and Against Me.



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