Bob Mould's Workbook
By (Author) Walter Biggins
By (author) Daniel Couch
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
7th September 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
Popular music
782.42166092
Paperback
160
Width 121mm, Height 165mm
157g
In 1989, Bob Mould took a left turn. Already legendary before his 30th birthday for his noise-and-nuance work in Hsker D, Mould had recently walked away from his old band. He re-emerged with his debut solo album: Workbook. Filled with chiming acoustic guitars, multitracked vocals, pristine production, and even a cello, Workbook was both admired and questioned for Moulds perceived departure from his post-punk roots. Three decades later, the album has emerged as a key for understanding the nascent alternative rock genre and the concerns Mould would explore for the duration of his career. Fusing post-punk sound and confessional lyrics with a richer emotional and musical range, Moulds Workbook merged worlds that seemed unbridgeable at the time. Alternative rock emerged from the wreckage of the 1980s, and Workbook was a model for the genres maturation. Workbook serves its title in two waysas a map for musicians to follow into a new mode, and as a journal of Moulds struggle toward adulthood. It opens conversations about rock, identity, spirituality, authenticity, and the perils and promises of mainstream culture. Walter Biggins and Daniel Couch, two critics who grew up with Workbook, extend these conversationsthrough letters and emails to each other, and through correspondence with Mould and Workbooks musicians and producers. That crosstalk leads to, through this seminal album, a deeper understanding of alternative rock at the moment of its inception, just before it took over the radio.
Being in a literary conversation style, between an editor and a professor that have known each other since childhood this 33 1/3 entry makes for interesting reading. * QRO Magazine *
Walter Biggins is an executive editor at the University of Georgia Press, USA, as well as a freelance writer, based in Atlanta, Georgia. His work has appeared in Glide Magazine, Bookslut, RogerEbert.com, The Comics Journal, Pop Matters, and The Baseball Chronicle, among other periodicals. Daniel Couch is a professor of English literature and composition at Chemeketa Community College, USA and the editor of What, Where, How: The Practical Handbook for College Writers. His work has appeared in Tape Op Magazine, One Week // One Band, and the Quietus, among others.