The minutemen sound like jazz players. D. Boon with those chords, George with those chops, and mike with that eccentric thumping. They had perfect cohesion, and they have a one of a kind sound. Impossible not to be recognized or mistaken for someone else. Yet still standing out as a product of all that came before them.
They took me from jazz and and free inprov to a powerful, deep, new kind of rock. My band opened for them at Bard College on their next to last gig before they were driving back to Cali. And then that horrible accident. They were super friendly, put clearly tired a bit, being the end of their tour. They were really great. Full on tightness and energy. Definitely one of life's greatest hits. Really grateful for this clear footage and great sound. Way to go algorithm.
Yeah man, both extremely unique, Husker Du is probably my favourite of all time, but i've started to appreciate the Minutemen more over time. Back in the day i think they were a bit too artsy for me, ha,ha.
@@cjparrott Sure. I was just saying that they were all great musicians back then as a group. I haven't followed what George is doing, but have followed Mike Watt's adventures.
@@sabbracadabra8367 Green Day was influenced a lot by Hüsker Dü, listen to thier first 2 albums. It's not 1:1 the same as Hüsker Dü ofc, but defintly not bad imo. Maybe listen to Sugar and Bob Mould's solo albums, they are all great!
@@ITheNightmare I concur!Bob Mould is still goíng really strong.It's not just nostalgia, he really still has it! He doesn't quite play guitar the same revolutionary way he used to, but, of course, he's still a virtuoso. Other than that the magical world of Guided By Voices may be worth checking out, they have that same legendary, cultish feel as the Huskers though their music is definitely not similar.
Hüsker Dü Performance: Diane 54:26 Hate Papper Doll 58:19 Green Eyes 59:56 Divide & Conquer 1:02:37 Pink Turns To Blue 1:06:09 Eight Miles High 1:08:28 Makes No Sense At All 1:12:11
Oh man ...How did I miss this ??? THANK YOU Minutemen are the greatest rock band ever .... Theres a great video on here of a show in Philly ... I watch my 14 year old self slamming around the crowd in that one
Amazing set. I can't believe they played Beacon and Minority, my two favorites from What Makes a Man Start Fires. If they had played Mutiny in Jonestown it would have been a trifecta!
Bob and Grant were on such a workaholic creative streak in '84 that large chunks of both New Day Rising AND Flip Your Wig were composed during the Zen Arcade sessions. They had enough material after Zen Arcade to do another double LP, but SST advised against it as being too cost-prohibitive, I believe. Instead, they released New Day Rising a mere 6 months after Zen Arcade, and Flip Your Wig just 8 months after that.
So did they go from SST to tiwn/tone or something? Cuz weren't both husker du and soul asylum on twintone / A&M by like 88 ?? Idk that is cool tho. All thse bands put out a lot of albums!. Meat puppets released like 3-4 albums in 2 years around this time.. so did husker and so did soul asylum actually.. what a great era in alt rock music
@@phillythrowbackrapchannel1149 To the best of my knowledge, they were never on Twintone. Husker Du finished out on Warner Bros, then Bob put out his first two solo LPs on Virgin. But Twintone may have released a single of theirs at some point, or they could have been featured on a compilation. Absolutely agree that the scene at that time has never been equalled. The trinity of Husker Du/Mould/Sugar alone set a benchmark.
@@thetriumphofthethrill2457 Were the minutemen truly slated to play roughly 12 mins? That's nuts. The other bands are legends in own rights but I would have been there for minutemen and then pretty disappointed when talking to friends after the show. I know they'd say the same thing. "What happened??"
DanPat121 is absolutely right. "New Day Rising" and "Flip Your Wig" were released literally months after each other, both in 1985. I saw Husker Du from the "New Day Rising Tour" through "Candy Apple Grey". About 5 times during that period. They were one of the biggest influences on me and my own music. Still love them.
@@thePanOfPans crazy we had such state of the art, innovative punk bands all in one label doing one tour together. I can't even imagine being in such a tour myself considering how young I am
The Brothers Meat were quite heavy on the ol' cover tunes...but thats half their charm. Thrash Allman Bros was really a trip. Derrick Bosstrom was such an underated drummer.
@@rocofresi I was replying to a commenter that didn't know who was signing with the minutemen during that song, so yes! thank you for also stating the obvious. Lol
you prolly dont care but if you are stoned like me atm then you can watch pretty much all the new movies and series on Instaflixxer. Have been watching with my brother for the last months xD
Neal Pert gets tons of well-deserved accolades, but if I was starting a band back in the day, I would have picked George...no doubt about it. He is everything Derrick Bostrum never was.
I was fortunate enough to see this in 1985. At the Rock Palace in San Diego, USA . The Minute men really stood out . The Meat Puppets killed it . Husker Du headlined and were too loud. Quite an eccletic group of people making music, In light of current events and my willingness to get off my ass and GO THERE . I am thankful for the memory. But you can’t put your arms...😂🤔
@@iltourcinico I hear similarities in Joe Baiza's and D. Boon's playing. I'm not saying either copied the other, just that I suspect they had similar ideas about music and expression.
What a treat. I just finished reading "Corporate Rock Sucks" by Jim Ruland and he touches down on this tour in the book. Meat Puppets and Ginn/Black Flag were bickering at the time and that is the reason why Curt says "I guess we are The Meat Puppets and we are supposed to play here".
They are becoming a big influence on me. Just started listening to them this year in the summer. The first album I heard, from them, was Zen Arcade and it blew me away!
Man im going over 30 years strong Husker Du is a whole life story to me, the cover of land speed record means a whole different thing to me since I was 10, and had later served
One of the best shows I ever saw was Minutemen/Huskers at Danceteria in New York. They were trying to blow each other off the stage. Sadly only time I saw Minutemen once but I saw Huskers several times and this was the best
I was reading this interview with SST's producer, Spot. It says that Husker Du were also famous for touring for the next record they were going to release not the one they just released. I don't think I can post the link on here though. But it's called Hüsker Dü: The Story of the Noise-pop Pioneers who Launched Modern Rock. It's on Google Books.
Saw this tour at UCLA 1984. Life changing. So bummed I lost the Pettibon T-shirt sometime over the years. Naked dude holding a sign that said “Free grass and acid for a trip to the tour!”
Amazing to see this footage of the original Meat Puppets before things went South. The interplay between these 3 is just interstellar. And Man, hearing Up On The Sun brings back some great memories.
fIREHOSE is one of my favorite bands . It's hard to accept that if D.Boon would not have died fIREHOSE would probably not exist :( I just imagine what it would be like if Ed and D. Boon joined forces . Both are great songwriters . This music is so real . No smoke and mirrors . This was the mid 80's and bands were over using digital effects especially in the recording studio . The cannon snare was on everything popular . Don't get me wrong , I love the snare cannon but that sound got played out , There is something cool about a band showing up , setting up in a corner of a small dive bar . Simple PA with 2 wedges . Like how Bernies was in Columbus , Ohio . Anybody remember Bernies ?!
I do not think it was this tour, but I saw Huskers and Minute men at Danceteria, a big NYC club They were determined not to get smoked by the other. Way best Huskers show I saw. Too bad only time seeing Minutemen. Thinking bout D Boon makes me sad. At the time it broke me little black heart.
Man, so awesome. I play bass and I’m very fond of Chuck Dukowski. He’s so cool. Aside from his time in Wurm, Black Flag, the October Faction and others, SWA is awesome. Chuck Dukowski is an awesome bass player. He is so awesome. Other than that, cool:).
I met him during the "flag" tour most down to earth dude, hung out with my brother and me and shot the shit for a while told us stories of the past black flag shows and visiting Cleveland.
FUGO I’m a DC boy so I got to see the Bad Brains numerous timmes, nothing like watching HR do a standing back flip 2 feet away👌haha, I remwmember DI, man that was some “ destroy all of it “ type stuff.
Saw the Minutemen open for REM in Tallahassee shortly before D. Boon's death. They were en fuego!! Saw Meat Puppets and Husker Du several times. Always 'Mosh' Potatoes with gravy!
If anyone has the soundboard from this show, I will gladly start a funding page for the restoration of it. This was the peak for all the bands, or close to it. We didn't get shows like this in NH. I would have gladly given a nut to have been there.
Great tour video,great performances from the huskers and the minutemen (love the the evolution of the husker's sound that is taking place here) could of done with the band-aid -esque 'jam' at the end.
Damn I would have loved to be there. Still a senior in high school during this and didn't have the freedom to go to as many shows as I did a few months later.
I saw this lineup on this tour, in San Diego. I loved it all but I was mainly there for The Minutemen. I actually can't remember for certain but I want to say the place was on El Cajon Boulevard and that the venue was called The Rock Palace?
I was going to say. This, and, oddly enough, Land Speed Record, are about the only recordings where you can really hear his great playing front and center.
In fact, I think New Day Rising was still a week or two away from release at the time of this concert (that's assuming the date of this concert is written in US format and not European, which I believe it is).
Pick up "Everything Falls Apart"(Their 1st studio Ep), I say EP because it was released as a 12" 45 with about 10 songs on it, and the "Metal Circus" Ep. They were a bit more hardcore back then, but their signature sound was developing on those records.
the Minutemen are so fucking awesome.
The minutemen sound like jazz players. D. Boon with those chords, George with those chops, and mike with that eccentric thumping. They had perfect cohesion, and they have a one of a kind sound. Impossible not to be recognized or mistaken for someone else. Yet still standing out as a product of all that came before them.
They were a sortof jazz-band you could say before they formed minutemen. It was the same lineup but they had a lead singer.
Compare The Only Minority to, say, James Blood Ulmer's Night Lover..
They took me from jazz and and free inprov to a powerful, deep, new kind of rock. My band opened for them at Bard College on their next to last gig before they were driving back to Cali. And then that horrible accident.
They were super friendly, put clearly tired a bit, being the end of their tour. They were really great. Full on tightness and energy. Definitely one of life's greatest hits. Really grateful for this clear footage and great sound. Way to go algorithm.
Husker Du and the Minutemen are literally my two favorite bands of all time. They are both so unique
Minutemen are good. Watt is a Bass virtuoso.
Classic
Yeah man, both extremely unique, Husker Du is probably my favourite of all time, but i've started to appreciate the Minutemen more over time.
Back in the day i think they were a bit too artsy for me, ha,ha.
D. Boon was amazing, as were Mike Watt and George Hurley. They were all very gifted musicians.
Truly a one-of-a-kind band
mike and george still are!
@@cjparrott Sure. I was just saying that they were all great musicians back then as a group. I haven't followed what George is doing, but have followed Mike Watt's adventures.
@@hooskerdu1 yeah me too… I’ll be listening to some mike today!
@@dukeofthedance8062 Pretty sure they all played longer sets at the actual gig, this tape edited down the performances.
Saccharine trust is really damn good all these bands were insane
D. Boon truly is a fantastic guitarist
And he was getting better and better
Husker Du's music just gives me chills
Do you know anything else like that? They are so amazing.
@@sabbracadabra8367 Green Day was influenced a lot by Hüsker Dü, listen to thier first 2 albums. It's not 1:1 the same as Hüsker Dü ofc, but defintly not bad imo. Maybe listen to Sugar and Bob Mould's solo albums, they are all great!
@@ITheNightmare I concur!Bob Mould is still goíng really strong.It's not just nostalgia, he really still has it!
He doesn't quite play guitar the same revolutionary way he used to, but, of course, he's still a virtuoso.
Other than that the magical world of Guided By Voices may be worth checking out, they have that same legendary, cultish feel as the Huskers though their music is definitely not similar.
The Meat Puppets set is hilarious and amazing for so many reasons... starts at 26:39, watch the whole set
The bill:
SWA - 00:45
Saccharine Trust - 11:59
Meat Puppets - 26:39
Minutemen - 42:50
Hüsker Dü - 54:26
Hüsker Dü Performance:
Diane 54:26
Hate Papper Doll 58:19
Green Eyes 59:56
Divide & Conquer 1:02:37
Pink Turns To Blue 1:06:09
Eight Miles High 1:08:28
Makes No Sense At All 1:12:11
My favorite band, love them all,but i like HÜSKER DÜ a bit more then the others
Oh man ...How did I miss this ??? THANK YOU Minutemen are the greatest rock band ever .... Theres a great video on here of a show in Philly ... I watch my 14 year old self slamming around the crowd in that one
The Minutemen played just as many Meat Puppets songs as the Meat Puppets did!
Back when music mattered. RIP Grant, RIP d.boon
Minutemen at 42:50
43:06 - Corona
45:28 - Beacon Sighted Through Fog
46:18 - The Only Minority
47:19 - Badges
48:10 - The Cheerleaders
51:39 - Lost
Amazing set. I can't believe they played Beacon and Minority, my two favorites from What Makes a Man Start Fires. If they had played Mutiny in Jonestown it would have been a trifecta!
You've done a great service here. God bless.
Bob and Grant were on such a workaholic creative streak in '84 that large chunks of both New Day Rising AND Flip Your Wig were composed during the Zen Arcade sessions. They had enough material after Zen Arcade to do another double LP, but SST advised against it as being too cost-prohibitive, I believe. Instead, they released New Day Rising a mere 6 months after Zen Arcade, and Flip Your Wig just 8 months after that.
DanPat121 it’s called methamphetamine... but they were also awesome
Legendary
So did they go from SST to tiwn/tone or something? Cuz weren't both husker du and soul asylum on twintone / A&M by like 88 ?? Idk that is cool tho. All thse bands put out a lot of albums!. Meat puppets released like 3-4 albums in 2 years around this time.. so did husker and so did soul asylum actually.. what a great era in alt rock music
@@phillythrowbackrapchannel1149 To the best of my knowledge, they were never on Twintone. Husker Du finished out on Warner Bros, then Bob put out his first two solo LPs on Virgin. But Twintone may have released a single of theirs at some point, or they could have been featured on a compilation.
Absolutely agree that the scene at that time has never been equalled. The trinity of Husker Du/Mould/Sugar alone set a benchmark.
@@DanPat121 They were rejected by Twin/Tone! They formed Reflex Records as a reflex to the experience.
Meat Puppets performaning Sea of Love to a punk crowd is the most punk thing I've ever seen.
Fucking guys threw their instruments in the air and ran away from them lmao.
Is this an all-covers set?
Too punk for punk
@@BlackRoomProductions no they played up on the sun
@@rocketsauce420 nice I need to rewatch since I know better now
@@BlackRoomProductions hell yeah i just found it
Good musical document on the American underground during one of its great eras. This needs to be remastered and released in DVD NOW.
Yes! With interviews and commentary and stuff!
@@mitchclark1532 Indeed. ☺️
@@thetriumphofthethrill2457 Were the minutemen truly slated to play roughly 12 mins? That's nuts. The other bands are legends in own rights but I would have been there for minutemen and then pretty disappointed when talking to friends after the show. I know they'd say the same thing. "What happened??"
Whenever I see D. Boon dance, my face hurts from smiling.
♥
RIP d boon
The greatest
DanPat121 is absolutely right. "New Day Rising" and "Flip Your Wig" were released literally months after each other, both in 1985. I saw Husker Du from the "New Day Rising Tour" through "Candy Apple Grey". About 5 times during that period. They were one of the biggest influences on me and my own music. Still love them.
This has to be one awesome concert to see. Hüsker Dü, Minutemen, and Meat Puppets all in one night. Plus two more bands.
Not very familiar with SWA, but Saccharine Trust are legends in their own right. They were like Nomeansno before Nomeansno got heavy.
2 more bands? Saccharine Trust is also worth their own weight sir
@@thePanOfPans crazy we had such state of the art, innovative punk bands all in one label doing one tour together. I can't even imagine being in such a tour myself considering how young I am
@@usualdosage7287 It was only three shows on the West Coast.
The Brothers Meat were quite heavy on the ol' cover tunes...but thats half their charm. Thrash Allman Bros was really a trip. Derrick Bosstrom was such an underated drummer.
Divide and Conquer at 1:02:38 is fukcing amazing!
That "drunk" guy on the Mic during the minutemen's set was none other than Kurt kirkwood from the meat puppets..
Well, they were playing a Meat Puppets cover.
@@rocofresi I was replying to a commenter that didn't know who was signing with the minutemen during that song, so yes! thank you for also stating the obvious. Lol
you prolly dont care but if you are stoned like me atm then you can watch pretty much all the new movies and series on Instaflixxer. Have been watching with my brother for the last months xD
@Clay Jairo Yup, I have been using InstaFlixxer for since november myself :D
my freshman year of h.s. had all these bands on heavy rotation,plus all the sweet,sweet Black Flag SST had in their catolog
Best show I ever saw. I'm on stage w d boon and then stagediving during lost!
George Hurley, the best drummer ever. Or one of the best, period.
agreed .... and unfortunately overlooked
Neal Pert gets tons of well-deserved accolades, but if I was starting a band back in the day, I would have picked George...no doubt about it. He is everything Derrick Bostrum never was.
I agree wholeheartedly.
Precision, speed and those snare drum rolls 👍👍
Grant Hart was no slouch either but very contrasting style.
I was fortunate enough to see this in 1985. At the Rock Palace in San Diego, USA . The Minute men really stood out . The Meat Puppets killed it . Husker Du headlined and were too loud. Quite an eccletic group of people making music, In light of current events and my willingness to get off my ass and GO THERE . I am thankful for the memory. But you can’t put your arms...😂🤔
My band opened for all three of these bands in Providence and Boston in 85-86. What a great time in underground music .
D Boon, Mike Watt, Kirkwood Brothers, Chuck Dukowski, Bob Mould, Grant Hart too much talent in one room
Baiza.
@@iltourcinico I hear similarities in Joe Baiza's and D. Boon's playing. I'm not saying either copied the other, just that I suspect they had similar ideas about music and expression.
@@EastCoastDave that groovy nervous Andy Gill 's guitar sound.
What a treat. I just finished reading "Corporate Rock Sucks" by Jim Ruland and he touches down on this tour in the book. Meat Puppets and Ginn/Black Flag were bickering at the time and that is the reason why Curt says "I guess we are The Meat Puppets and we are supposed to play here".
Just a bunch of influential bands playing in one venue. That's so cool man! I wish I was there
The Minutemen=Love
They are becoming a big influence on me. Just started listening to them this year in the summer. The first album I heard, from them, was Zen Arcade and it blew me away!
Its their best album by far, so I'm not surprised!
Man im going over 30 years strong Husker Du is a whole life story to me, the cover of land speed record means a whole different thing to me since I was 10, and had later served
44:20 "what a hell is the United States doing to central America I don't fucking know!!".
the guy was so on earth.
Gawddayum. Both the Meat Puppets and the Minutemen? What a memorable that night must’ve been for all those people. Lucky af.
One of the best shows I ever saw was Minutemen/Huskers at Danceteria in New York. They were trying to blow each other off the stage. Sadly only time I saw Minutemen once but I saw Huskers several times and this was the best
42:54 is Minutemen
The Meat Puppets set is awesome
Ya never knew what yad get w the pups live. Drugs are unpredictable
I was reading this interview with SST's producer, Spot.
It says that Husker Du were also famous for touring for the next record they were going to release not the one they just released. I don't think I can post the link on here though. But it's called Hüsker Dü: The Story of the Noise-pop Pioneers who Launched Modern Rock. It's on Google Books.
Husker Du do it for me everytime.
love the ending where everybody's singing louie louie; greg norton and d boon right next to eachother. classic.
great bands.......history never fades....
Saw this tour at UCLA 1984. Life changing. So bummed I lost the Pettibon T-shirt sometime over the years. Naked dude holding a sign that said “Free grass and acid for a trip to the tour!”
Amazing to see this footage of the original Meat Puppets before things went South. The interplay between these 3 is just interstellar. And Man, hearing Up On The Sun brings back some great memories.
d. boon, man.
fIREHOSE is one of my favorite bands . It's hard to accept that if D.Boon would not have died fIREHOSE would probably not exist :( I just imagine what it would be like if Ed and D. Boon joined forces . Both are great songwriters . This music is so real . No smoke and mirrors . This was the mid 80's and bands were over using digital effects especially in the recording studio . The cannon snare was on everything popular . Don't get me wrong , I love the snare cannon but that sound got played out , There is something cool about a band showing up , setting up in a corner of a small dive bar . Simple PA with 2 wedges . Like how Bernies was in Columbus , Ohio . Anybody remember Bernies ?!
I caught this tour in San Diego. Great show....
Unbelievable, I saw all of these bands back then, great music. thanks for finding and posting this.
Hüsker-Fuckin'-Du !!
this was a good time to be alive .... 🙏
Well some of us were aware it was a golden age of Rock....
Aww man D Boone was fucking awesome.
Yes, this video is overflowing with awesomeness.
I used to have this on VHS...used to watch it all the time.
I do not think it was this tour, but I saw Huskers and Minute men at Danceteria, a big NYC club They were determined not to get smoked by the other. Way best Huskers show I saw. Too bad only time seeing Minutemen. Thinking bout D Boon makes me sad. At the time it broke me little black heart.
Irving Plaza, October 25 1985 I believe is the NYC show you are referring too? Awesome show.
Man, so awesome. I play bass and I’m very fond of Chuck Dukowski. He’s so cool. Aside from his time in Wurm, Black Flag, the October Faction and others, SWA is awesome. Chuck Dukowski is an awesome bass player. He is so awesome. Other than that, cool:).
I met him during the "flag" tour most down to earth dude, hung out with my brother and me and shot the shit for a while told us stories of the past black flag shows and visiting Cleveland.
I agree. Chuck is awesome.
Wow, how’d I miss this? An incredible show with some of the punk rock greats! Glad I discovered punk in ‘82 & saw some awesome performances
FUGO I’m a DC boy so I got to see the Bad Brains numerous timmes, nothing like watching HR do a standing back flip 2 feet away👌haha, I remwmember DI, man that was some “ destroy all of it “ type stuff.
What a great show. Glad I was there to experience first hand. This brings back memories.
Damn, SWA is MUCH better than I remember-sleazetastic Thanks for posting!
Saw the Minutemen open for REM in Tallahassee shortly before D. Boon's death. They were en fuego!! Saw Meat Puppets and Husker Du several times. Always 'Mosh' Potatoes with gravy!
If anyone has the soundboard from this show, I will gladly start a funding page for the restoration of it. This was the peak for all the bands, or close to it. We didn't get shows like this in NH. I would have gladly given a nut to have been there.
Borrow the money from Peter and Bobby.
You're listening to it. It's great. It needs nothing.
@@carvinblack what about Marsha?
@@kryptichands968 She has a bad coke habit, so can't help out.
...love the ensemble collaborative jam (econo-style!!) on Louie-Louie at the end!!!
Solid gold. Thank you!
Adorava ver os Minutemen- este vou ver ao vivo os Meat Puppets
no primavera sound 2013, porto
Supported Firehose around the U.K, sober guys. They let us drink their rider.
Yeah I listened to Metal Circus and really liked it. Still gotta listen to their first EP though.
Greatest document on earth
Oh, what a shame to have not seen them on this great compilation. Thanks for the info.
Great tour video,great performances from the huskers and the minutemen (love the the evolution of the husker's sound that is taking place here) could of done with the band-aid -esque 'jam' at the end.
Saw this show two months later in San Diego…..found out last minute so unfortunately missed SWA and Saccharine Trust
I was there too. Man you must be old.
@@kingrat9250 😂😂yeah I am
thanks for posting this, this is a incredible video
"We don't need no stinking badges!" (Watt @48:00)
This is pretty good quality.
Fell the rock!
Transcendent. Just sync the sound and video and I can die happy.
Thanks dude, I'm just here for the Meat Puppets.
Damn I would have loved to be there. Still a senior in high school during this and didn't have the freedom to go to as many shows as I did a few months later.
@FrogAndToad Paganicons is indeed bitchen, but We Became Snakes blew my mind!
LOL @ the douche in the crowd at the end!!!
This show was fucking glorious. thanks for uploading and letting us take in some history.
Masterpiece!!!!
this was March 1st, 1985 not May.
Lucky you. I would have killed to have seen them once.
Cool show of some influential underground bands.
This is great, would be 10x better if it were in sync.
I realize I slept on Saccharine Trust the first time around. I must re-investigate
Thanks for uploading. Mind blowing. SWA !! Were The Chilli Peppers ever this cool?
I saw this lineup on this tour, in San Diego. I loved it all but I was mainly there for The Minutemen. I actually can't remember for certain but I want to say the place was on El Cajon Boulevard and that the venue was called The Rock Palace?
Meat Puppets at 26:40
cool thanks for the info!
Hope you stayed for huskers and minutmen too. Because... you should.
Because... you should. Was that a reference to Eddie Izzard's bit about John Major?
strange to hear Greg's bass so good 1:06:13
I was going to say. This, and, oddly enough, Land Speed Record, are about the only recordings where you can really hear his great playing front and center.
I saw this tour in San Diego somewhere....
SWA is straight up hilarious compared to all the other bands
They sound good
be SWA
@dirty30jr
Not yet. Flip Your Wig was released in September for SST.
In fact, I think New Day Rising was still a week or two away from release at the time of this concert (that's assuming the date of this concert is written in US format and not European, which I believe it is).
husker du is the best
Pick up "Everything Falls Apart"(Their 1st studio Ep), I say EP because it was released as a 12" 45 with about 10 songs on it, and the "Metal Circus" Ep. They were a bit more hardcore back then, but their signature sound was developing on those records.
Yes
Greg Norton enjoying the Kirkwood bros. deconstructing popular rock songs. I still want consume what they did that day😉🙃
D. Boone!