Low at 20

In yesterday’s story in the DNT, Alan Sparhawk, sound engineer Eric Swanson, musicians Marc Gartman, Amy Abts and Tony Bennett, and Low’s former nanny Scott “Starfire” Lunt all weigh in on the band’s 20 years of music.

It’s a great conversation and it’s one I think is worth continuing here as Low commemorates its second decade in the business and its 10th studio album, which hits the shelves on Tuesday.

What are your favorite Low memories, whether you know the band or you’re just a fan of their music?

16 thoughts on “Low at 20”

  1. A coupe of good memories:

    Things We Lost in the Fire, played in its entirety, at Washington Studios
    – Alan playing Low songs solo in the gym at Emerson

  2. I still remember Matt Pinfield introducing the video for “Over the Ocean” on 120 Minutes. It was probably the first time the word “Duluth” was uttered on MTV.

  3. Things We Lost in the Fire in its entirety at old Washington Jr. was a highlight, along with every show that I saw at Sacred Heart.

    I can’t wait for their Denver show and to hear the new record.

  4. Concert to save the music program at Lowell Elementary School. Calmly playing “Belarus” and (Sarah you’re) “Lazy” in the gymnasium, before the children grabbed maracas and grooved in the snake pit with all the generous Duluthians.

  5. It was 1992, I believe. My best memories are accidentally hearing them practice at Emerson before they released their first album and also seeing them perform at RecyclaBell. I’d never heard music like that before and became an instant fan. It also changed the way I viewed my own music. The release of Things We Lost in the Fire at Sacred Heart is another fond memory, too.

  6. In this week’s City Pages:

    Low’s road to The Invisible Way

    Nice photo. Sparhawk must have picked something up from Baron Von Rashke when they met all those years ago.

    Everyone thinks Al is so nice and mild mannered, but let this serve as a warning: Do not cross him or you will feel the wrath of the claw.

    And that is all the people need to know!

  7. After two decades in production with director Philip Harder, the Low movie How to Quit Smoking is finished. It premieres at the Minneapolis/St. Paul Film Festival on April 12 and surely will make it to Duluth soon. An early cut of it was screened in Duluth two or three years ago.

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