89.3 The Current and City Pages present TOMMY STINSON
TOMMY STINSON
It would be hard to find a character in rock and roll who has played the part better than Tommy Stinson. From his beginnings as bassist of the legendary Replacements to his current tenure with Guns N’ Roses, Tommy has always done things his own way and has lived to tell the tale.
The story begins with seminal Minneapolis band The Replacements. Tommy started the group with his big brother Bob at the tender age of 13. His spirited bass playing, sense of style, and impenetrable bullshit detector helped make the band special. He dropped out of high school a few years later to focus on touring full-time, and hasn’t looked back. Until the Replacements unceremonious demise in 1991, Tommy and his bandmates found themselves hazily thrashing through the world with reckless abandon. Their unpredictable shows are the stuff of legend — nobody that has ever seen the Replacements on stage will ever forget it. In the end, all he had to show for it was a few bruises and a hell of a reputation to uphold.
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Only 24 when the band broke up, Tommy set off on his own. He formed the Faces-flavored group Bash & Pop, followed by the more polished Perfect. In 1993, Bash & Pop released the album Friday Night Is Killing Me, while Perfect’s 1997 album was shelved due to record label tomfoolery. It was eventually released in 2004, under the name Once, Twice, Three Times a Maybe. Tommy’s life took yet another interesting turn in 1998, when Axl Rose asked him to be the new bassist in Guns N’ Roses. Since then, he has writing, recording, and touring the world with them. His fingerprints are all over the Chinese Democracy album and his signature presence on stage adds a unique dimension to this notoriously great live band.
Stinson released his first solo album in 2004. Village Gorilla Head was well-received by the music press and fans alike. He subsequently toured on the album using his friends’ bands The Figgs and Alien Crime Syndicate as his backing bands. In 2005, Tommy was asked to fill in on bass for Soul Asylum (with his high school pal Dave Pirner) after bassist and founding member Karl Mueller succumbed to cancer. The following year he helped finish recording The Silver Lining album with them. He still writes, records, and plays shows with the band whenever he can, and relishes playing with his old friends.
Tommy is coming to First Avenue with a full band behind him to preview songs from his upcoming solo album, One Man Mutiny, due this summer. Be the first to hear the raw, slide-guitar driven jams that Tommy has been keeping from us for far too long.
THE 4ONTHEFLOOR
The 4onthefloor deliver stompin' blues at an alarming intensity. 4onthefloor was born in the bottom of a bourbon bottle with the idea that it’s effing time to have some fun and make amazing music as well. Audiences immediately took to the infectious driving feel of not one, but four bass drums pulsing to the beat of the songs. The music is inspired by the gutsy stomp of the Delta Blues and the hoe-downs from America’s past and present. While 4onthefloor prides themselves on their original songs, they also love putting their signature stomp on covers from the likes of Wilco to Tom Jones.
DAVE HAUSE
Dave Hause learned to craft a memorable song in his long running Philadelphia punk/rock and roll band THE LOVED ONES. On his first solo full length record Resolutions, he takes all the catchiness of his previous efforts and brings along ALL of his musical influences as a songwriter, destroying the mold of punk singer gone solo.


