Matt Lukin
Matt Lukin | |
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Birth name | Matthew David Lukin |
Born | August 16, 1964 |
Origin | Aberdeen, Washington |
Genres | Punk rock, alternative rock, garage punk, hardcore punk, |
Occupation(s) | Musician, carpenter |
Instruments | Bass |
Years active | 1983-2001 (Musician) 2001-present (Carpenter) |
Labels | Sub Pop, Reprise, Ipecac, Alternative Tentacles, Alchemy, C/Z Records |
Associated acts | Mudhoney, The Melvins |
Matt Lukin (born August 16, 1964) is an American musician, best known as a bassist and founding member of the Melvins[1] and Mudhoney.[2]
The Melvins (1982-1988)
Lukin co-founded the Melvins in 1982 with guitarist/vocalist Buzz Osborne and drummer Mike Dillard in Montesano, Washington, where the trio had attended high school together. Beginning as a Jimi Hendrix cover band and then as a hardcore punk band, they changed their sound when Dillard left and a new drummer, Dale Crover joined the band, playing slower and heavier rock music. Soon they were one of the most important bands in the early Seattle-area grunge scene. When Crover joined the band, the Melvins also relocated to Aberdeen, Washington.
While with the Melvins, Lukin recorded Mangled Demos from 1983; Six Songs (later repackaged as 8 Songs, 10 Songs and then 26 Songs); and the band's first full-length album, Gluey Porch Treatments. He also played bass on the band's four contributions to the Deep Six compilation.
In 1988, the band temporarily dissolved while Crover drummed on a ten-song demo with Nirvana. Crover and Osborne then relocated to San Francisco, California, but Lukin stayed in Washington.
Mudhoney (1988-2001)
Remaining in Seattle, Lukin formed the grunge band Mudhoney with vocalist Mark Arm and guitarist Steve Turner, both formerly of Green River, and drummer Dan Peters, formerly of Bundle of Hiss. During this time, Lukin shared a house with Kurt Cobain on East First Street in Aberdeen's notorious "felony flats".
Lukin played bass on Mudhoney's first five studio albums (Mudhoney, Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge, Piece of Cake, My Brother the Cow, and Tomorrow Hit Today), as well as two EPs and numerous singles.
Lukin left Mudhoney in June 1999, but rejoined the band in December 2000 for a tour that lasted through January 2001. Since then, Guy Maddison has been Mudhoney's bassist.
In 1996 Pearl Jam wrote and recorded a short and fast punk song entitled "Lukin" naming it after Matt Lukin. Lukin describes the song in an interview for the book Everybody Loves Our Town: An Oral History of Grunge: “Vedder had a stalker chick that would come by his house that was freaking him out. He would start to avoid his house after a while, so he would just come by my place. Vedder’d come over and we’d sit ‘round the kitchen and drink and stuff. He would talk about his stalker problem a little bit, but I would just blow it off. It was just drunken talk, throwing darts, having fun. There’d be other people there, sometimes four or five of us. Just me and Eddie and our wives and mutual friends like [then Mudhoney manager] Bob Whittaker. The Pearl Jam song ‘Lukin’ is about how my kitchen’s a sanctuary for him. Also, I was giving him shit about all their songs being too long. That inspired him to make ‘Lukin’ a one-minute song. I’ve always flipped him shit. Never let him be the rock star that he is.”
Retirement from music (2001-present)
Since leaving Mudhoney, Lukin has essentially retired from music. Currently, he works as a carpenter in the Seattle area.
Discography
With The Melvins
- Six Songs (1986)
- Gluey Porch Treatments (1987)
- Eight Songs (1991, vinyl)
- 10 Songs (1991, CD)
- 26 Songs (2003)
- Mangled Demos from 1983 (recorded circa 1983, released 2005)
With Mudhoney
- Superfuzz Bigmuff (1988)
- Mudhoney (1989)
- Superfuzz Bigmuff Plus Early Singles (1990)
- Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge (1991)
- Piece Of Cake (1992)
- Five Dollar Bob's Mock Cooter Stew (1993)
- My Brother the Cow (1995)
- Tomorrow Hit Today (1998)
References
- ↑ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas; Prato, Greg. "Biography: Melvins". Allmusic. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ↑ Deming, Mark. "Biography: Mudhoney". Allmusic. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
External links
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