upper waypoint

Bob Mould On Hüsker Dü's Cover Of 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show' Theme

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

“It was freezing cold,” Mary Tyler Moore, who died yesterday at the age of 80, once told WHYY’s Fresh Air of filming the iconic opening sequence to her beloved Mary Tyler Moore Show. “It was in Minneapolis in January, I think.”

Harrowing words to those who know the feeling, the frozen skin, of Minneapolis in January — those like Bob Mould, guitarist and singer of the seminal and equally (to some) looming Hüsker Dü.

Mould, drummer Grant Hart and bassist Greg Norton covered “Love Is All Around,” the The Mary Tyler Moore Show‘s opening song — originally written and recorded by former Buddy Holly collaborator Sonny Curtis — in their singular, serrated and foundationally “alternative” sound.

“The original version was recorded in earnest,” Bob Mould wrote to NPR Music in the wake of Moore’s death. “It’s a great song, and it was a nice tribute to the band’s home town.” Mould says the song now serves him well as an “uplifting” encore during solo sets. “People always respond well when I play it.”

Hüsker Dü also spoofed the opening sequence itself, trying “to mimic the shots as best we could,” vamping along the Nicollet Mall, where a statue of Moore throwing her cap in the air, with liberating abandon — the sequence’s closing shot — was placed for many years. (It was removed, temporarily, in 2015.)

Sponsored

The band formed in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area in 1979; Mould, who’s helmed Sugar and issued plenty of solo work since the band’s breakup a decade later, has lived in San Francisco since 2009.

A rep for Merge Records, Mould’s current label home, says he performed the song this past November in North Carolina just after the presidential election — and immediately following an expletive-filled, Reagan-themed lament of significant emotional verve.

Hüsker Dü’s clip, much like Moore’s character in her show and the population of Minneapolis more generally, is scrappy, charming and progressive.

“All good art is political. Great art is political and entertaining,” writes Mould. “Let’s hope her legacy will live on, especially in these oppressive days.”

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

lower waypoint
next waypoint
The Bay Area’s Great American Diner Is a 24-Hour Filipino Casino RestaurantHow a Dumpling Chef Brought Dim Sum to Bay Area Farmers MarketsNetflix’s ‘Baby Reindeer’: A Dark, Haunting Story Bungles its Depiction of QueernessSFMOMA Workers Urge the Museum to Support Palestinians in an Open Letter5 New Mysteries and Thrillers for Your Nightstand This SpringThe Stud, SF's Oldest Queer Bar, Gears Up for a Grand ReopeningEast Bay Street Photographers Want You to Take ‘Notice’A New Bay Area Food Festival Celebrates Chefs of Color and Diasporic UnityOn Weinstein, Cosby, OJ Simpson and America’s Systemic Misogyny Problemnic feliciano Is Blessed With The ‘Curse of an Overactive Creative Mind’