Los Angeles Times

Drummer, vocalist for Hüsker Dü

- news.obits@latimes.com

Grant Hart, the drummer and vocalist for pioneering indie rock band Hüsker Dü, which was seen as a major influence for Nirvana, the Pixies and other bands, has died after battling cancer. He was 56.

Hart died Wednesday in St. Paul, Minn., said Ken Shipley, who runs the band’s record label, Numero Group.

Hart formed Hüsker Dü with bassist Greg Norton and guitarist Bob Mould, with whom he shared singing duties, in St. Paul in 1978. The band began as a punk outfit before moving into alternativ­e rock. The trio broke up in 1987, and Hart launched his solo career.

Though Hüsker Dü was never a huge commercial success, it was seen as a major influence on bands such as Nirvana, Green Day, the Pixies, the Foo Fighters and more.

Singer-songwriter Ryan Adams was among the artists tweeting condolence­s, writing Thursday: “Your music saved my life. It was with me the day I left home. It’s with me now. Travel safely to the summerland­s.”

Mould wrote on his Facebook page Thursday that Hart “was a gifted visual artist, a wonderful story teller, and a frightenin­gly talented musician.”

He recalled how they met in the fall of 1978, at a nearly empty St. Paul record store, where Hart was clerking and the PA system was blaring punk rock.

“The next nine years of my life was spent side-byside with Grant,” Mould wrote. “We made amazing music together. We (almost) always agreed on how to present our collective work to the world.

“When we fought about the details, it was because we both cared. The band was our life. It was an amazing decade.”

Hart’s friends had known for months that he was ill with kidney cancer. His last public performanc­e was July 1 in Minneapoli­s, at the Hook and Ladder, where Hart thought he was just going to play with his friends, the Rank Strangers.

Instead, he arrived to a surprise show being held as a tribute to him, featuring several longtime collaborat­ors and friends including Norton, Dave Pirner of Soul Asylum and Lori Barbero of Babes in Toyland.

“I called it Grant’s Love Fest,” said Barbero, who organized the event.

She said she asked Hart’s fellow musicians to play his songs and wasn’t concerned about repeats because everyone made the songs their own.

“It was an honor for everybody to be under the same roof and spend time with each other — and especially him. It was a very wonderful night,” she said.

 ?? Elizabeth Flores Minneapoli­s Star Tribune ?? AN INFLUENTIA­L MUSICIAN Grant Hart’s band, Hüsker Dü, was a major inf luence on groups from Nirvana to the Pixies.
Elizabeth Flores Minneapoli­s Star Tribune AN INFLUENTIA­L MUSICIAN Grant Hart’s band, Hüsker Dü, was a major inf luence on groups from Nirvana to the Pixies.

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