Moving to a major label doesn't affect Hüsker Dü's sound greatly -- although the production is more full-bodied than
Spot's razor-thin work, the Hüskers don't change their blazing attack at all. Much of
Candy Apple Grey charges along on the same frenzied beat that propelled
New Day Rising and
Flip Your Wig, and both
Bob Mould and
Grant Hart are in fine form, spinning out fine punk-pop with "Sorry Somehow" and "Don't Want to Know If You Are Lonely." However, the sound is beginning to seem a bit tired, which is what makes
Mould's two acoustic numbers, "Too Far Down" and "Hardly Getting Over It," so welcome. Demonstrating that punks can mature without losing their edge,
Mould inverts the rules of conventional confessional singer/songwriter songs with these two haunting numbers, and in doing so, he illustrates the faults with the relatively staid post-hardcore punk that dominates the remainder of the record.
1. Crystal
2. Don’t Want To Know If You Are Lonely
3. I Don’t Know For Sure
4. Sorry Somehow
5. Too Far Down
6. Hardly Getting Over It
7. Dead Set On Destruction
8. Eiffel Tower High
9. No Promise Have I Made
10. All This I’ve Done For You
AMG Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
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