Tag Archives: bob mould

twi-ny talk: JAMES MASTRO / DAWN OF A NEW ERROR

James Mastro will launch his debut solo album February 21 at Bowery Electric (photo by Dennis DiBrizzi)

JAMES MASTRO ALBUM RELEASE PARTY
The Bowery Electric
327 Bowery
Wednesday, February 21, $18.76, 6:30
www.theboweryelectric.com
www.jamesmastro.net

I first met James Mastro in the late 1980s, when he had a side gig as a freelance proofreader and I worked at a small publisher and used to assign him work. I already knew who he was from his time in the iconic Hoboken band the Bongos; he would go on to form Strange Cave and the Health & Happiness Show before joining Ian Hunter’s Rant Band in 2001.

Mastro started playing in New York City when he was teenager in the late 1970s, eventually performing with Patti Smith, John Cale, the Jayhawks, Alejandro Escovedo, Richard Lloyd, Garland Jeffreys, the Feelies, Jesse Malin, Amy Speace, Jill Sobule, and Robert Plant, among so many others throughout his career. He opened Guitar Bar in Hoboken in 1996 as a place where musicians could not only shop but play live and hang out. He has now followed that up with 503 Social Club, an art gallery that hosts live events, including recent concerts by Sobule, Freedy Johnston, and Bobby Bare Jr.; Jon Langford performed there with friends amid his paintings on the walls.

At long last Mastro has made his debut solo album, Dawn of a New Error, out from MPress Records on February 21. The title has multiple meanings, referring to the state of the world, Mastro’s shift to being the main man, and, at least to me, those old days when I was hiring him to find mistakes in kids books. Longtime Smith bassist and New Jersey native Tony Shanahan produced and plays bass and keyboards on the LP, which ranges from jangly pop, acoustic folk, and romantic ballads to gospel and country, celebrating such influences as the Beatles, the Ramones, T-Rex, Roxy Music, Bob Dylan, and David Bowie. Reilly and Hunter each appear on three tracks, with Hunter as “the voice of god” on “The Face of the Sun.” Mastro takes on faith and religion in “My God,” death and loss in “Never Die,” true love in “Gangster Baby” and “Three Words,” and fake news in “Right Words, Wrong Song.” “Trouble” was inspired by Dr. Seuss and Levon Helm.

Mastro will have album release parties on February 21 at Bowery Electric and February 24 at Transparent Clinch Gallery in Asbury Park. We recently spoke over Zoom, discussing music, art, family, hats, and stepping out into the spotlight.

James Mastro plays with Ian Hunter and R.E.M’s Peter Buck and Scott McCaughey of the Baseball Project at the 2011 Hoboken Music & Art Festival (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

twi-ny: We’ve known each other for thirty-five years. Back in the late 1980s and early ’90s, I would send you freelance work while you were out on the road. What was that like to be playing in bands and proofreading children’s nonfiction books?

james mastro: I had a family to feed, by any means necessary. And luckily, I was doing two things that I love to do: playing music and reading books. So it was a good marriage.

For us too; you did both exceptionally well. How has the road changed for you since then?

jm: With Ian Hunter, it definitely got a little bit more comfortable. The things I love about it I still love, always trying to take the dirt road as opposed to the highway. Touring can be a drag, but you can also make it incredibly great and fun. We would plan out an agenda every time. It’s worth it to get up an hour or two earlier to take a little trip and go see a museum or something crazy that a friend told you about.

twi-ny: Back in 2011, you very generously played at twi-ny’s tenth anniversary party with Megan Reilly at Fontana’s, which is gone. New York City has had such a turnover of music venues. Are there specific clubs that you miss from the old days? Obviously, I think we’re going to mention Maxwell’s.

jm: CBGBs especially will always hold a place in my heart, just playing there as a teenager and getting to see some of the bands that inspired me to play and getting to play with some of them. So CBs and Maxwell’s, yes; huge holes that were left. I miss Fez under Time Cafe a lot; it was just a really special place. Usually what makes a place special — I was thinking about Maxwell’s this morning and CBs — are the people that ran it. Maxwell’s, I remember, was one of the first clubs that would feed you, no matter who you were; if you were playing there, they would feed you, which for a musician is huge. You may not get paid, but at least you knew you were getting fed. [Maxwell’s owner] Steve Fallon always treated musicians well, Hilly Kristal at CBGB. It starts at the top if you have great people running a space.

twi-ny: Maxwell’s was such a fan-friendly venue. I saw your bands, Robyn Hitchcock, the Mekons, Bob Mould. So you played that tenth anniversary show with Megan, who sings backup on several songs on your new record. What is it about you and Megan that gels so well over the years?

jm: I think she’s one of the finest singers out there right now. I mean, her voice just kills me. It’s kinda like beauty and the beast. I’m not crazy about my voice, so anything that will complement it, like a voice like Megan’s, I love singing with. And just musically, she’ll show me a song of hers and right away I don’t even have to think about it; these parts come out because the way she writes is so dreamy and from a special place. I connect with that so well. The other day she and I just did a rehearsal together, the two of us playing and singing for my show coming up. And I was just thrilled. I’d be happy just doing that too. She’s a very special person musically, and as a person. Just very talented.

twi-ny: On “Three Words” she really just takes it and builds to that finale.

jm: It’s like from the purr of a lion . . . She starts off so subtle and by the end of that song, she takes it to a place I never would’ve thought of going. I don’t think that that song would’ve made it on the record if she didn’t sing on it. I really think she sells it.

twi-ny: You’re very self-deprecating about your voice. On the record you say a couple of things that really lends insight to you. I’ve been listening to you play for decades. I’ve seen you in bands that you lead and bands that you’re the guitarist, the backup vocalist. So to hear you front and center on an entire record and writing songs that sound very intimate and personal, I’m learning things about you that I never knew.

jm: Therapy begins. [laughs]

twi-ny: On “Right Words,” you sing, “The lead singer at the mic wants so badly to be liked.” And on “Three Words,” you claim, “I’m not a singer and I can’t write songs.”

jm: Mm-hmm.

twi-ny: But clearly you can sing and you can write songs.

jm: Mm-hmm.

twi-ny: Humble as ever. What’s it like to finally have a solo album under your own name? Songs you wrote, songs you’re singing lead on. Why now?

jm: Good question, Why now? Well, I’ve really enjoyed being a side guy all these years, and especially when you’re working with someone like Ian Hunter, or Patti or John, anyone I’ve worked with, Megan. So it’s been nice to go in and try to contribute and watch how other people work. It takes a lot of pressure off. Running a band is a pain in the ass; you gotta make sure the drummer doesn’t get arrested —

twi-ny: Is that a Steve Holley problem?

jm: No, no, not at all. [laughs] At that time in my life, it was very nice to just take some of the responsibility off. Even though I started recording these songs before Covid just kind of as fun, with no pressure or no idea of making a record, when Covid hit, that really made me realize, Well, I’ve got time on my hands. Everything is kind of slowed down. Let’s take a look at these songs and see if we have an album here.

twi-ny: So the songs were already written?

jm: Yes, they were. Most of them were either recorded or just about finished. Tony Shanahan had just opened a studio in Hoboken. He called me up and says, Hey, I wanna just check out the room and the gear and see how things go in here. Do you have any songs? We’ll record. I was like, great. So we went in and it was just me, him, and, for the first few, Louie Appel on drums. Three friends just playing some songs.

I’d show them the songs right then and there. There was a great spontaneity and contribution from them. And it was really fun, so we just did that over a course of a few years, on and off, whenever the studio was open.

twi-ny: No pressure.

jm: No pressure.

twi-ny: So now, not only are you front and center, on lead vocals, you’re turning to people like Ian Hunter to participate. Ian hasn’t been performing because he’s got tinnitus?

jm: Tinnitus, yeah.

twi-ny: What was his reaction when you asked him to be on the album?

jm: He did one track, “Right Words, Wrong Song,” and it was perfect. It’s exactly what I wanted. He sounded just like Ian Hunter, you know? And then he finished that and he’s like, What else you got? And so he sat and I locked the door right away.

twi-ny: Oh, so he was with you in Tony’s studio?

jm: Yeah. He came down to do that. So we played him songs. He is like, “Oh, I hear a part on this. Let me try this. This is great.” He’s a very musical guy, a very giving guy. And so for me, having the guy that inspired me to pick up a guitar sing on my record after I worshiped his, it was a nice little payback.

twi-ny: And then you get to direct him in a video. You directed it, you star in it, you’ve got Tammy Faye Starlite, you’ve got Ian, you put on these great wigs. To me it’s a throwback to the early days of MTV. Is that what you were going for?

jm: Definitely. I think it was a mix of early MTV and the Colbert show and The Daily Show. I guess you could say it could be a serious song, but I think sometimes you can get a point across better by being a little irreverent about it.

twi-ny: It looks like it was fun to shoot.

jm: It was a riot. I usually backpedal at things like this. I’ve been asked to be in other videos, and I’m just like, Oh, no, I can’t. So I went into this with a little trepidation, but we had a great time.

twi-ny: How often before have you gotten to act without a guitar in your hand? Has that happened a lot?

jm: You know, since high school.

twi-ny: So you have a little acting bug inside you?

jm: It’s a good career to have to fall back on if music doesn’t work out. It’s a good safety net. Do some acting.

twi-ny: It looks to me like you’re sitting right now in 503 Social.

jm: I am. Yeah.

twi-ny: In 1996, you started Guitar Bar, which revolutionized the music scene in Hoboken. And now you’ve expanded it with 503 Social Club. How did that get going?

jm: Well, all these projects are done for selfish reasons. Guitar Bar was because I just got tired of going into New York to buy strings, and Social Club, it just popped up. A friend of mine told me about this space that became available for rent, and he’s like, You gotta go see it. The last thing I need is something that takes more sleep away from me. But it was just crying to be something. There are so many talented people in this area and there’s a lack of venues, be it for artists or musicians. So I just felt, let’s give it a shot. It’s selfish because I get to see my friends’ artwork up close and see my friends play. So it’s a labor of love, but it’s been really fun, and the feedback’s been great.

twi-ny: You had a big night there with the great and mighty Jon Langford.

jm: He’s a dynamo in every way. I love his artwork, and so he had a great show. I thought he was just gonna come in solo, but he brought half the Mekons with them, Sally [Timms] and some of the others. And they just tore this place apart.

twi-ny: I’m mad that I missed that.

jm: I understand. Well, he’s coming back. So the fact that I can get people like that here . . . it’s very fun and special for me and inspiring.

twi-ny: Speaking of inspiring, you’ve been married for thirty-one years, you’ve got two daughters, and at least one of them is a musician.

jm: Yeah, Lily is in Long Neck, her professional name and band. [Daughter Ruby, a London-based sound designer and filmmaker, edited the “Right Words, Wrong Song” video.]

twi-ny: So is music just in the Mastrodimos blood?

jm: Neither of my parents were musical. Both my brother and I were, and, my kids by default. There were always guitars in the house, music playing.

twi-ny: Is your wife musical?

jm: She is; she doesn’t play, but she sings great. She has no desire to do that. I truly think the kids get their talent from her, not me.

twi-ny: On February 21, you’ll be at Bowery Electric for the album release party. You’ve told us that you’re gonna be playing with Megan; who else will be joining you?

jm: It’s a great band and people. I’m really happy to be playing with Tony, who produced the record and has been with Patti Smith for years.

twi-ny: He’s doing a special Lunar New Year show with Patti at Bowery Ballroom on February 10.

jm: Yes, I will be there.

twi-ny: Awesome. I will be there too. So you’ve got Tony.

jm: He and I have been playing together for thirty-something years. So that’s easy. Dennis Diken from the Smithereens will be on drums. Megan will be singing, playing some guitar, and I got her playing some keyboards. She’s excited about that. The other guitar player, Chris Robertson, he’s in a band now called Elk City; he was in the Psychedelic Furs side project Feed and played with Richard Butler, just great, another friend. If I’m gonna do this, I want it to be fun for me, and if it’s fun for me, hopefully it’ll be for everybody else. These are good mates to be in a room with.

twi-ny: Okay, so one last question, something I’ve always wanted to ask you. You have always worn hats onstage; how many do you have, and how did the hat thing get started?

jm: I always wore boleros or something. I just I love that era. My dad used to wear hats, and I love that era when you look at old photos of Yankee Stadium, and men are in suits and in hats, like the whole crowd is at a baseball game but they’re dressed to the nines. So I just always have loved hats. How many do I have? Not as many as you would think. Not as many as Alejandro Escovedo — talk about a snappy dresser. I aspire to be him when I grow up. He and I are always going out hat shopping when we’re on the road.

twi-ny: Oh, speaking of which, you’re about to go out on the road with him again.

jm: I am. Yeah.

twi-ny: He previously played with the Rant Band when Ian couldn’t tour.

jm: Right. Alejandro’s got a new album coming out too [Echo Dancing], and it’s really a great, interesting record. He’s kind of revisited some of his old songs but totally deconstructed them. I don’t want to say it’s techno, but it’s unique and great. So it’s gonna be a little different from what people might expect from him. It’s kind of what John — he’s worked with John Cale also — it’s what John would do. Nothing was sacred to Cale. We’d go onstage and he’d be like, You know what, let’s change this song (that we had done the night before). But he would just totally revamp it. And I love that. Nothing should be set in stone. So that’s kind of what Alejandro’s done. I’ll be playing with him in that, but I’m also opening the shows acoustically and, depending on what town we’re in, if I have some friends there, I’ll ask them to come up and join me.

So I’m looking forward to it. Traveling with good friends and playing music, what could be better, you know?

twi-ny: You’re just having a ball, right? Just loving life?

jm: It may sound like a cliché, but if I wake up in the morning, it’s a good day. Anything after that is icing on the cake.

[Mark Rifkin is a Brooklyn-born, Manhattan-based writer and editor; you can follow him on Substack here.]

NUGGETS FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY CONCERTS

GOLDEN JUBILEE ANNIVERSARY
City Winery New York
25 Eleventh Ave. at Fifteenth St.
Friday, July 28, and Saturday, July 29, $35-$125, 8:00
646-751-6033
citywinery.com

The greatest rock compilation in the history of pop music, Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1964-1968 was released in October 1972 and led to the creation of generations of rock fans and garage bands. Assembled by Elektra Records founder Jac Holzman and record store employee and music critic Lenny Kaye, the double album consisted of seventy-eight minutes of twenty-seven gems, most under three minutes.

The collection was impeccable, beginning with the Electric Prunes’ “I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)” and the Standells’ “Dirty Water” and continuing with the Seeds’ “Pushin’ Too Hard,” the 13th Floor Elevators’ “You’re Gonna Miss Me,” Count Five’s “Psychotic Reaction,” the Leaves’ “Hey Joe,” the Amboy Dukes’ “Baby Please Don’t Go,” Blues Magoos’ “Tobacco Road,” and the Chocolate Watchband’s “Let’s Talk About Girls” before concluding with the Nazz’s “Open My Eyes,” the Premiers’ “Farmer John,” and the Magic Mushrooms’ “It’s-a-Happening.” I have never heard anything like it before or since.

On July 28 and 29, an all-star roster will be at City Winery performing songs from the original double album, the follow-up that was initially shelved, and “Also Dug-Its,” which have been released in a five-LP anniversary edition from Rhino. The additional tunes are from such groups as Love, the Swingin’ Medallions, the Beau Brummels, Syndicate of Sound, and ? & the Mysterians.

The outrageously cool lineup of musicians includes Patti Smith, Ivan Julian, Peter Buck, James Mastro, Marshall Crenshaw, Joan as Police Woman, Juliana Hatfield, Bob Mould, Steve Wynn, Ed Rogers, Eric Ambel, Mary Lee Kortes, Tom Clark, Vicki Peterson, Richard Lloyd, Link Cromwell, and Tammy Faye playing with the Jubilee house band: Tony Shanahan, Jack Petruzzelli, Glen Burtnik, Dennis Dike, and Kaye himself. A different set of songs will be performed each night.

“Oh Yeah” (the Shadows of Knight), there’s “No Time Like the Right Time” (the Blues Project) to “Run, Run, Run” (the Third Rail) to City Winery and show your “Respect” (the Vagrants), ’cause this ain’t just a bunch of “Talk Talk” (Music Machine); “It’s-a-Happening.”

THE MUSIC OF PAUL SIMON AT CARNEGIE HALL

the music of paul simon

Carnegie Hall
Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage
881 Seventh Ave. at West 57th St.
Monday, March 31, $48-$160, 8:00
www.carnegiepaulsimon.com

Still going strong after all these years, Newark-born singer-songwriter Paul Simon is currently on tour with Sting, singing their own tunes as well as each other’s, alone and together. The show will stop in New York City — where they both lived in the same building for an extended period of time — for a pair of hotly anticipated concerts at Madison Square Garden on March 4 & 6. But on March 31, even more people will be performing songs from throughout Rhymin’ Simon’s fifty-plus-year career at Michael Dorf’s annual benefit at Carnegie Hall, this year celebrating the music of one Paul Frederic Simon. In past years, Dorf, the owner of City Winery (and, previously, the Knitting Factory), has gathered together a vast array of talent to raise funds for music education and pay tribute to such all-time greats as Neil Young, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John & Bernie Taupin, Prince, the Rolling Stones, Joni Mitchell, R.E.M., the Who, and others, with the guest(s) of honor sometimes making a surprise appearance. (In addition, the Music of Simon & Garfunkel commemorated the twenty-fifth anniversary of SummerStage with a special show in Central Park in 2010.) The roster honoring Simon on March 31 so far includes Josh Ritter, Joe Henry, Bob Mould, Ben Sollee, Dan Wilson, Bettye LaVette, Joy Williams, Madeleine Peyroux & Jon Herington, Allen Toussaint, Judy Collins, Isobel Campbell & Andy Cabic, and house band Antibalas. The benefit will raise money and awareness for the American Symphony Orchestra’s Music Notes, Church Street School for Music & Art, Young Audiences New York, Fixing Instruments for Kids in Schools, Little Kids Rock, and the Center for Arts Education. Regular tickets are $48 to $160, while various VIP passes range from $325 to $10,000 — the latter earns you a trip onstage during soundchecks and the encore. And be on the lookout for news about the live rehearsal, which takes place at City Winery the night before the big event and is open to the public.

BOB MOULD PLAYS COPPER BLUE & SILVER AGE

Bob Mould will revisit COPPER BLUE and highlight new SILVER AGE at free show Friday night in Williamsburg (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The Lacoste Live Concert Series
Williamsburg Park
50 Kent Ave. at North 12th St.
Friday, September 7, free, 6:00
www.bobmould.com

Twenty years ago, in a small club in New York City, we saw the loudest show we’ve ever experienced, a blistering attack on body, mind, and soul by three dudes making awesomely beautiful music together. Sugar, consisting of singer-guitarist Bob Mould, bassist David Barbe, and drummer Malcolm Travis, were behind this sonic tsunami, powering through songs from their debut record, the instant classic Copper Blue. “I want something like I remember / And I want something that lasts forever,” Mould declared on “Changes,” seeming to look back at the recent arc of his career, which included the brutal breakup of Hüsker Dü in 1988, followed by his acoustic solo debut, Workbook, as well as at his future. Over the last few years, Mould has once again been looking back, particularly on 2009’s almost painfully honest Life and Times and his intimate and revealing 2011 memoir, See a Little Light: The Trail of Rage and Melody, bringin along his acoustic guitar on the book tour. But after bonding with Dave Grohl and Foo Fighters on record and onstage, Mould tossed away the acoustic in favor of more electric madness, going into the studio with live bandmates Jason Narducy on bass and Jon Wurster on drums and coming out with the explosive Silver Age (Merge, September 4, 2012, stream available here), the twentieth anniversary of Copper Blue very much on his mind. “I’m never too old to contain my rage,” he announces on the title song, and he indeed lets his rage soar on such searing tracks as “Star Machine,” “The Descent,” “Steam of Hercules,” and “Angels Rearrange” (which echoes the earlier “Changes”), only slowing down just a bit for the finale, “First Time Joy.” Mould, who will turn fifty-two next month, is on the road right now, celebrating the newly remastered reissue of Copper Blue by performing the album in its entirety, featuring such Mould standards as “The Act We Act,” “A Good Idea,” “Hoover Dam,” and “If I Can’t Change Your Mind.” He’ll then play a second set of songs focusing on Silver Age while also reaching back to the Hüsker Dü and solo years. Mould will be at Williamsburg Park in Brooklyn on Friday night, giving a free show as part of the Lacoste Live Concert Series, with Cymbals Eat Guitars opening up. And be prepared; it should be LOUD. (Mould will also be spinning tracks later that night at his regular Blowoff gig with Richard Morel at the Highline Ballroom.)

SEE A LITTLE LIGHT WITH BOB MOULD

Bob Mould will shed a lot of light on his life and times June 23 at 92YTribeca (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

AN EVENING OF READING AND MUSIC
92YTribeca
200 Hudson St. at Canal St.
Thursday, June 23, $25, 9:00
212-415-5500
www.92YTribeca.org
www.bobmould.com

On his most recent record, 2009’s Life and Times, Bob Mould sang, “What the fuck, what kicked up all this dust / taking me back to the places I left behind / the old life and times.” The postpunk icon, who went from the seminal Hüsker Dü in the 1980s to the fierce Sugar in the ’90s to a solo career and nightclub DJ this past decade, further examines his life and times in his just-released memoir, See a Little Light: The Trail of Rage and Melody (Little, Brown, June 15, $24.99). In the book, Mould discusses childhood abuse, his homosexuality, drug and alcohol addiction, and his deep love of championship wrestling and music; he began writing songs when he was nine and has, thankfully, never stopped. He’ll be at 92YTribeca on June 23, reading from his book, playing songs, and talking about his life in an intimate gathering that should be simply fascinating and extremely entertaining. Whether blasting loud music till black stuff oozes out his ears or revealing unique aspects of his life, Mould never disappoints.

BOB MOULD & LENNY KAYE / MARSHALL CRENSHAW

Bob Mould should have plenty of sly tricks up his sleeve at City Winery shows with Lenny Kaye and Marshall Crenshaw (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

City Winery
155 Varick St. between Spring & Vandam Sts.
Lenny Kaye: Thursday, November 4, $30-$40, 9:30
Marshall Crenshaw: Friday, November 5, $30-$40, 9:00
212-608-0555
www.citywinery.com
www.myspace.com/bobmould

Back in January, former Hüsker Dü guitarist Bob Mould played a pair of solo gigs at City Winery, offering up a mix of favorites and lesser-known gems while musing about Conan O’Brien, the Highline, and Peter Criss’s “Beth.” He was as engaging, relaxed, and funny as we’ve ever seen him, and we’ve seen him a lot over the last twenty-five years. But turning fifty and releasing a deeply personal album, LIFE AND TIMES, has not slowed down the punk icon, who still knows how to turn up the volume and thrash that six-string. Mould will be back at City Winery for two very special shows this week, teaming up first with legendary producer and guitarist Lenny Kaye, who has worked extensively with Patti Smith and is responsible for putting together one of the all-time great compilations, the Nuggets collections of classic garage rock. The next night, November 5, Mould will be joined by singer-songwriter Marshall Crenshaw, who has been crafting beautifully infectious pure pop since his highly acclaimed 1982 debut, which included “Someday, Someway,” up to his most recent album, 2009’s JAGGEDLAND. There’s no telling where these two pairings will go, as the potential setlists are as exciting as they are unpredictable. (Mould will also be at the Rock Shop on Fourth Ave. in Brooklyn on November 6, with Chris Brokaw opening.)

BOB MOULD: SOLO

Bob Mould goes solo at City Winery for two shows (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Bob Mould goes solo at City Winery for two shows (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

City Winery
155 Varick St.
January 22-23, $30-$45, 9:00
212-608-0555
http://www.citywinery.com
http://www.bobmould.com

Twenty years ago, Bob Mould left seminal postpunk band Hüsker Dü and recorded his first solo record, the intimate, acoustic-based WORKBOOK followed by the gruffer BLACK SHEETS OF RAIN. Mould then formed the power trio Sugar, which released such impressive discs as COPPER BLUE and BEASTER, before continuing his solo work. Currently working on his memoirs – which will detail, among other things, his drug abuse and homosexuality – Mould also turned back the clock on his most recent album, the unflinchingly honest and personal LIFE AND TIMES (Anti-, April 2009). “What the fuck, what kicked up all this dust / taking me back to the places I left behind / the old life and times,” he sings on the title track, preparing the listener for both a trip down memory lane as well as a peek into the future. “I rewind the interstate in my distant memory,” he sings to his signature guitar sound on “City Lights (Days Go By),” adding, “I hope you understand I need to find my city lights.”

Recalling the sound of WORKBOOK, Mould, who recorded LIFE AND TIMES in his current hometown, Washington, DC, with just a drummer and himself, opens up about anonymous, casual sex (the hard-driving “Argos,” the smooth, melodic “Bad Blood Better”) and the end of love (“I’m Sorry, Baby, But You Can’t Stand in My Light Any More”) while also bringing up memory and the past on “Wasted World” and “MM 17.” At forty-eight, perhaps Mould is a little young to be looking back so much, but as he says on the album’s final track, “What a lifetime we have.” He’ll be celebrating that life at City Winery with two special acoustic shows at City Winery, playing songs from throughout his career. We’ve seen him several times over the years, and he always sweats out everything he can, whether blasting away with an unbelievably loud band or just by himself with an acoustic guitar. Trust us: This will be no mild folk concert; you can expect Mould to still slash across the stage to such possible songs as “See a Little Light,” “Poison Years,” and “If I Can’t Change Your Mind” as well as several Hüsker Dü classics (look for “I Apologize,” “Celebrated Summer,” and the simply amazing “Hardly Getting Over It,” among others). Jon Auer of Big Star and the Posies opens the show.

An amiable Bob Mould had a great time at City Winery gig (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

An amiable Bob Mould had a great time at City Winery gig (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Update: Just prior to Auer’s taking the stage on January 23, we had a chance to speak with Mould for a few minutes as he sat in the back of City Winery by himself, discussing, among other things, the difference between playing as a three-piece at Irving Plaza and doing a solo gig here. Mould showed that he is equally adept at both when later that evening he performed a wicked set that was one of the loudest solo shows we’ve ever seen. Starting off on the acoustic guitar, an amiable Mould offered up a mix of favorites and lesser-known gems, from “Wishing Well,” “Hoover Dam,” and “Needle Hits E” to the Hüsker Dü treasure “Hardly Getting Over It.” He chatted about Conan O’Brien, the new Highline Park, being gay and fifty and living in San Francisco, and even Peter Criss’s “Beth” as he turned up the volume. Things really took off when he switched to the electric guitar, filling the intimate space with a barrage of sound, highlighted by his absolutely shredding an extended version of “Brasilia Crossed with Trenton” before finishing up with such sonic blasts as “I Apologize,” “Something I Learned Today,” “Celebrated Summer,” and the finale, “Makes No Sense at All.” (For a slideshow and the setlist, go here.)