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About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

See separate entries for the bands 'Hüsker Dü' and 'Sugar'

Works by Bob Mould

Workbook (1989) 13 copies
Silver Age (2012) 9 copies
The Last Dog & Pony Show (2000) 6 copies
Modulate 5 copies
Body of Song (2005) 5 copies
Bob Mould (1996) 5 copies
Blue Hearts (2004) 5 copies
Patch The Sky (2016) 5 copies
Life And Times (2009) 5 copies, 1 review
Beauty & Ruin (2014) 4 copies
Poison Years 3 copies
District Line (2008) 3 copies

Associated Works

Never Mind the Mainstream: The Best of MTV's 120 Minutes, Vol. 1 — Contributor, some editions — 2 copies
No Alternative [sound recording] — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

2011 (2) album (4) alcoholism (2) alternative (8) arts (2) autobiography (7) biography (5) Bob Mould (5) CD (11) CD Rock (3) CDs (6) Gay musicians (6) genre(rock(alt)) (9) Husker Du (3) Hüsker Dü (5) Jim (5) Malone (5) memoir (11) Minnesota (4) music (32) Music ♫ (Audio) (5) New York (6) non-fiction (13) punk (2) rock (3) rock music (12) sugar (7) to-read (12) USA (6) vinyl (3)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Mould, Robert Arthur
Birthdate
1960-10-16
Gender
male
Occupations
musician
music producer
singer-songwriter
Dramatist
disc jockey
Relationships
Hüsker Dü (member)
Sugar (member)
Nationality
USA
Disambiguation notice
See separate entries for the bands 'Hüsker Dü' and 'Sugar'
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
Anyone hoping for an unearthing of long lost yarns about Husker Dü, SST legal documents, or remembrances of blinding nights at the leather bar with Rollins, will be sorely disappointed with Bob Mould's foray into the world of rock autobiographies. See A Little Light focuses on two main areas: a checklist of Mould's successes in music, which were all carried out by Bob Mould and no one else. And a look at his lack of success in love. Admittedly, as a music fan, I came to the book wanting a show more copious amount of thoughts and insight into what it was like to write songs such "Celebrated Summer" or "Changes", and to play in a band such as Husker Du. Unfortunately Mould is more focused on patting himself on the back while also screaming, "Why doesn't anyone love me?" Someone should give him Billy Corgan's number. show less
Fascinating autobiography. The first half covered ground that I was familiar with, Husker Du, his solo stuff and Sugar, but I pretty much lost track of Mould after Sugar broke up, so the second half was very interesting and eye-opening. He mentioned touring with Sugar in 1992-93 and he specifically mentions playing at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago, so I dug my ticket sub out and sure enough, there it was, September 11, 1993! Good memories.

Mould's frank openness was great and I almost felt show more like his therapist as he rationally talks through his thoughts and feelings. Myself being a straight man, it was interesting to read about gay culture and I thought it was funny that Mould only learned about the different facets of the gay lifestyle in his later years! Overall, I think I was more shocked by the fact that he worked for World Championship Wrestling......!

A great read and well worth the time for any fan of Mould and his music.
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An amazing look at Bob Mould, the founder of Husker Du and Sugar. The musical journey this man has taken amazed me, just the range he has. Musically brilliant. I admit to not being familiar with Husker Du, well, not much. What I found fascinating was his personal journey. From an angry gay (but not really closeted and not really out or accepting of himself) punk rocker to the man who found himself in the bear community. Every gay man should read this, every pflag member should read this show more also. Just a great story of a musical genius' life.

Also, very interesting to see how tight knit the music community is. He talks about bands before they were big...just a compelling read.
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This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
An in-depth, chronological look into Bob's music and complicated (and often painful) life journey. Occasional clunky writing and it gets a bit list-oriented at times, especially during the Hüsker Dü portion (thanks to meticulously kept tour journals from the 1980s), but I enjoyed this touching, ultimately uplifting autobiography. Recommended to Bob fans.
½

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Awards

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
20
Also by
2
Members
241
Popularity
#94,247
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
11
ISBNs
14

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