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Authors: Scott Tennent

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I followed another road down to the lake itself, quietly secluded on all sides by the bluffs. More houses lined the water, small docks built into their backyards so the families could take leisurely boat rides — maybe the kids could go for a swim. It was the perfect place to create memories.

1
Though no recordings of the original Squirrel Bait trio exist, Grubbs’s vocal delivery in his later band, Bastro — short shouts
à la
the Minutemen’s D. Boon — likely gives a good hint at what the original formation sounded like. Hearing the
Nearest Door
demos, it’s easy to imagine Grubbs’s monotone, shouty delivery over many of the tracks.

2
It’s impossible to draw a sonic line from Squirrel Bait to Slint, but one can do it with Grubbs’s output.
Skag Heaven
is an obvious maturation from
Squirrel Bait
; the mathy sound of “Kick the Cat,” which appears on
Skag Heaven
and is one of the last songs the band wrote, anticipates the more complicated style of playing Grubbs would stake out with Bastro; “Recidivist,” which appears twice on Bastro’s third album,
Sing the Troubled Beast
— once as a rocker, once as an instrumental solo piano piece — seems to point toward the more deconstructed nature of music he would create in Gastr del Sol; which in turn led to the avant-garde music he makes today.

3
The Detroit show was put on by none other than Tesco Vee and Corey Rusk, the once and future impresarios (respectively) of Touch and Go. According to Pajo, they did not actually meet Rusk at the show.

4
Maurice was hardly the last Louisville would hear of Garrison and Bucayu. Within a couple of years they would form Kinghorse — arguably the most legendary Louisville band of its era, as far as locals are concerned. Their local following was positively huge, and they were soon signed to Caroline Records. Their debut album was produced by none other than Glenn Danzig. Due to trouble with their label, the record never really got its due, and Kinghorse broke up by the mid ’90s. Still, they loom large in Louisville’s collective memory — larger than Slint.

1
The story inevitably raises the question, where did Walford get the name for his fish? But Pajo insists there is no deeper meaning. “Sometime in the ’80s I was at Guitar Emporium in Louisville and an employee asked me the name of my band. When I said Slint he didn’t bat an eye and replied ‘Oh, I get it: slut, bitch, and cunt all in one word.’ I thought it was hilarious but it wasn’t our intention!”

2
Ironically, much of “Kent” was written by Buckler.

1
“. . . I think I indulged a selfish part of my personality during the making of [
Surfer Rosa
]. I don’t think that I regarded the band as significantly as I should have. And I felt at the time like I was making a better record for the band. I recognize now that what I was doing was actually warping their record to suit myself. And I think that having gone through that experience and recognize that impulse in myself I’ve been able to weed it out a little better. Which means that I’ve gotten better over time at doing things in the band’s best interest rather than doing things to amuse myself. And being perfectly frank, there were things that I did while making that record that I did to amuse myself and I don’t think it speaks well of me. I think that portrays a weak part of my personality at the time.” (Frank and Ganz, p. 107)

1
Bitch Magnet is a band that has never really gotten its proper share of credit for its influence on the early 1990s scene that developed in the Midwest. Sooyoung Park, the band’s primary songwriter, would later go on to form the better-known (and quieter) Seam, but Bitch Magnet was experimenting with dynamics, atmosphere, and complex time signatures concurrent with Slint. 1989’s
Umber
featured a couple of forays into quieter territory, while their 1990 swan song,
Ben Hur
— featuring David Grubbs on second guitar, as well as a guest appearance by Britt Walford on guitar for one track — in some ways feels like a missing link between the metal-inclined
Tweez
and the epic dynamics of
Spiderland
.

2
Astute ears may notice that McMahan speaks a couple of lines in two verses; Pajo told me McMahan took those lines because he wrote those lyrics.

1
According to Pajo the band received a number of letters, most of which they did not bother to open since Slint had broken up. Well after the fact, however, someone in the band realized that one letter came from none other than Polly Jean Harvey.

2
It might be worth noting that Tortoise, which became a kind of clearing house for so many post-rock projects, had more ties to Louisville than Pajo’s brief tenure. The group was born in part from a collaboration between John McEntire and Bundy K. Brown, both previously two-thirds of David Grubbs’s Gastr del Sol and Bastro.

Sources

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3, (Summer 1987). Available at
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“Crunch Gods from Kentucky Call it a Day: The Saga of Squirrel Bait.”
Pope
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(accessed August 11, 2010).

DeRosa, Jon. “Unholy Passion.”
Pitchfork
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Frank, Josh and Ganz, Caryn.
Fool the World: The Oral History of a Band Called Pixies
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Frere-Jones, Sasha. “Slow Fade.”
New Yorker
, April 11, (2005).

Guntzel, Jeff. “Invisible Histories: Slint (Part 1). “Originally published in
Punk Planet
66, (2005). Available at
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(accessed August 11, 2010).

Jefferson County Public Schools. Brown School Profile. Available at
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(accessed August 11, 2010).

LaGambina, Gregg. “Finding Spiderland.”
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14, (February 2005).

Leland, John. “Squirrel Bait:
Squirrel Bait
.”
SPIN
1, no. 10, (February 1986): 31.

———. “White Dopes on Punk.”
SPIN
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Louisville Hardcore. “Louisville Punk/Hardcore/Indie History.” Available at
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Louisville Punk. “Louisville Punk: An Incomplete Archive 1978–84.” Available at
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Miller, Jamie. Interview with Kinghorse.
Highlands Lowlife
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(accessed August 11, 2010).

Noise Pollution
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(accessed August 11, 2010).

Ortenzi, Rob. “The Oral History of Slint.”
Alternative Press
201, (April 2005).

Pajo, David. “The Day of the Rat.”
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Puckett, Jeffrey Lee. “Night Life.”
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Rowland, Mark. “David Pajo: Interview.”
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Velluci, Justin. “Louisville Born, Brooklyn Based.”
PopMatters
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SPIN
1, no. 8, (December 1985): 22–5.

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