Mudhoney Articles
Rolling Stone
23 September '98
Yesterday And Today
If Mudhoney is still around in twenty years, I just hope it hasn't become
a nostalgia act," says Mudhoney's lead singer Mark Arm in a conference room
on the twenty-first floor of the Time-Warner building in New York.
"Iron Butterfly probably says the same thing too," wisecracks guitarist Steve
Turner. Both men agree that a certain degree of denial might help if they do
indeed become retro-cool instead of just cool. "I think we already are in some
denial," adds Arm, only half jokingly.
Not every band morbidly ponders its future, but Mudhoney are finally following
up 1995's My Brother the Cow with their fifth full-length album, entitled
(appropriately enough) Tomorrow Hit Today -- a direct reference to a song off
their first album called "When Tomorrow Hits." It's been ten years since
Mudhoney formed in Seattle, signed to Sub Pop Records, and helped spawn a genre
many now describe with derision: grunge. Most of their friends from other Sub
Pop bands have quit the scene or moved on: Nirvana and Soundgarden are the
obvious casualties, but an army of lesser-knowns also sputtered to a stop years
ago.
But Mudhoney flow on, albeit with humility. They are the perpetual rock underdogs,
the boys who never made it real big. The band even played under the pseudonym
"Beneath the Valley of the Underdog" for a while, evoking both Russ Meyers films
(like Beneath the Valley of the Ultravixens) and the autobiography of Charles
Mingus (Beneath the Underdog). Look at the cover of their new CD and you'll see
a run-down, bleak hotel in Seattle. Why that cover? "It just evokes a feeling of
failure," Arm and Turner reply in unison. "The songs are kind of a downer on the
record."
Mudhoney songs have fiendishly focused on helplessness, sickness, deception, and
desperation since the band's inception. Arm admits that while the opening song of
the new CD, "A Thousand Forms of Mind," offers up "possibilities and potential,
by the time you get to the last tune, all possibilities have been exhausted."
In between these two songs, however, Mudhoney deliver new variations on their own
brand of punk blues. "Oblivion" and "Try to Be Kind" sound like excerpts from a
cowboy flick -- trademark distortion-pedal power chord meets Western shuffle and
twang. "Ghost" boasts a glam-rock chorus. And an unlisted bonus song ("Talking
Randy Tate Specter Blues") has Mudhoney experimenting with a psychotic piano-based,
blues tune. A diverse Mudhoney CD? You bet.
Some credit goes to producer Jim Dickinson, the man famous for his work with the
Rolling Stones, the Replacements, Big Star and Ry Cooder. Dickinson brought the
band down to Memphis to record, and contributed keyboards, but "he wouldn't play
until everything was done," says Arm. "He didn't want to influence too much. He's
not like an arranger/producer." Instead, Dickinson assumed the role of lunatic
producer, squeezing the most inspired music out of a band too often plagued by
musical ruts in the past.
Turner admits he needed the kick in the ass more than anyone: "I'm usually satisfied
pretty fast [with my guitar solos]" he explains. "If it's first take and I like it,
I won't do it again. [Dickinson] really liked it noisy; he liked it if I wasn't
actually playing the guitar. I was doing leads and kicking the guitar around the
floor of the studio and he was like, 'Yeah!' It was random noise. [But] he has this
theory about the solo: Imagine it's a painting where you can fit anything inside
the [frame]."
Arm can play it anyway you like. He's been busy in the last few years recording
with various bands: Bloodloss, Monkeywrench and an alternative rock supergroup
called the Wylde Ratttz who will provide the soundtrack to the upcoming
Seventies-glam-in-London movie, Velvet Goldmine. How'd Arm get so lucky? "I got
a phone call from Thurston Moore," says Arm. "He explained there's this movie
that's taking place in early Seventies London. There's a fake Iggy type of
character and they needed to write some fake Stooges type material for the movie.
I think they were originally trying to get the original music, but they
approached Bowie first and he denied them. I heard Ron Asheton was gonna be
involved, too. So I got sent a tape of two of Ron's songs and I put words to them.
And I came out for five days and had a blast. The band was Thurston, Steve Shelley
on drums, Mike Watt's playing bass, Ron Asheton's on guitars, and I'm the happy
monkey behind the mic."
So now Arm's Stooges salutes are helping usher in glam rock-instead of arena rock,
Zeppelin riffs, or Black Sabbath memories. "Glam is definitely going to come back,"
believe Arm and Turner. "Two interviews in a row just asked us about this."
Not exactly the future of rock that anyone envisioned. But Mudhoney never claimed
to predict the trends. Ask the band how they thought tomorrow would hit ten years
ago and Arm mockingly describes the Pearl Jam experience: "Eating the crab, the
prawns, flying through the air with our own private stewardesses. That's kinda what
we pictured."