eMusic Review 0
The Dinosaur Jr. tour stories captured in Michael Azzerad's Our Band Could Be Your Life are enough to leave you cringing as you turn the pages, and they climax with one of the ugliest passive-aggressive breakups in rock history, with Barlow leaving to both A.) form Sebadoh and B.) nurse a likely deserved grudge against J. Mascis that wouldn't heal for another decade-plus. Murph soldiered on for a while longer and, winnowed to a duo, Dino Jr. took two years to record and release 1991's Green Mind. It's an album that's either, depending on who you ask, the full-flowering of Mascis's gifts or the first sign of the smoothing out that would lead to greater success and diminishing aesthetic returns. When Green Mind was released, "indie" captured both a sound and a type, rather than just a socio-economic context in which bands operated: smart kids alienated by both pop hits and punk ugliness, instead taking bits they liked from both. Dinosaur Jr. was happy to oblige. Gone was the rusty nail-gun noise that made Mascis a deity to U.K. shoegazers, and his solos had yet to take on the epic, one-man-Skynyrd dimensions that would define Dino's major label days.… read more »
