The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
16
new
SPILL NEWS: THE DARKNESS KICK OFF FESTIVITIES WITH NEW “MISTLETOE AND WINE” COVER
SPILL NEWS: SHEEPDOGS ANNOUNCE NEW LP ‘KEEP OUT OF THE STORM’ VIA RIGHT ON RECORDS | CANADIAN HEADLINE TOUR KICKS OFF MARCH 13
SPILL NEWS: KENNYHOOPLA RELEASES DELUXE VERSION OF ‘CONDITIONS OF AN ORPHAN//’ FEATURING TWO NEW TRACKS
SPILL NEW MUSIC: SHOWING TEETH PREMIERES VIDEO FOR SNARLING DEBUT TRACK “LABYRINTH”
SPILL NEWS: TRACY BONHAM WANTS TO “UN-F*K THIS F*KT UP CHRISTMAS” | NEW FESTIVE SINGLE OUT NOW VIA A WOODY HOLLOW
SPILL NEW MUSIC: PETER MURPHY & BOY GEORGE “LET THE FLOWERS GROW (JUNO REACTOR REMIX)” OUT NOW ON METROPOLIS RECORDS
SPILL NEW MUSIC: SQUEEZE RELEASE SECOND TRACK “TRIXIES, PT. 2” FROM HIGHLY ANTICIPATED 2026 ALBUM ‘TRIXIES’
SPILL NEWS: SPILL TAB & BOYLIFE TEAM ON NEW SINGLE “PARANOIA”
SPILL NEWS: CHET FAKER RETURNS WITH “CAN YOU SWIM?” | ‘A LOVE FOR STRANGERS’ LP OUT FEBRURARY 13 VIA BMG
SPILL NEW MUSIC: CTZNSHP – “HOLIDAY LIGHTS”
SPILL NEWS: JUNO NOMINATED BREAKOUT INDIE OUTFIT GOOD KID ANNOUNCE THEIR HIGHLY ANTICIPATED DEBUT LP ‘CAN WE HANG OUT SOMETIME?’
SPILL NEW MUSIC: DOWNGIRL TURN FEAR INTO FURY ON “CPR”
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE DIRTY NIL – LIVE AT THE DINE ALONE STORE
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: KIRA METCALF – LESSONS IN MAJESTIC HUMILIATION
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE WATERBOYS – THE WATERBOYS PRESENT: RIPS FROM THE CUTTING ROOM FLOOR
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FINE YOUNG CANNIBALS – FYC40
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
  • Spill Menu
    • Reviews
      • Album Reviews
      • Features
      • Live Reviews
      • Festivals
    • Portraits
    • Headlines
      • News
      • Contests
      • Events
      • Entertainment Headlines
      • Concert Listings
      • Toronto Concert Venues
    • New Music
      • Premieres
      • Track Of The Day
    • Track Of The Month
    • Books + Movies
    • About
Album Reviews
1
208
previous article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FRANK TURNER - THE NEXT TEN YEARS
next article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: IRIS CALTWAIT - AGAIN, FOR THE FIRST TIME

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HÜSKER DÜ – 1985: THE MIRACLE YEAR

Hüsker Dü

HÜSKER DÜ
1985: THE MIRACLE YEAR
NUMERO GROUP

The trailblazing and endlessly entrancing Hüsker Dü has returned to the limelight on your favourite streaming apps, in the form of a 43-song live compilation comprised of tracks recorded at various live shows throughout one of the most exciting years in the band’s history, 1985. The first half of the record, which captures the entirety of a show the power-pop rockers played at Minnesota’s First Avenue concert venue, is 23 songs. Meanwhile, the second half of the record is 20 miscellaneous live tracks from the semi-eponymous year. It’s a monumental collection of recordings that are mixed and mastered to perfection, while still maintaining the slicing and gritty, yet incredibly catchy sounds that made Hüsker Dü so attractive as a musical act during its origins.

The First Avenue performance that immediately captures the listening audience is a treat to experience in such a pristine fashion. Not only does it feature my personal favourite Hüsker Dü song, “Diane,” about 14 songs into the setlist, but it also features a jarring and exciting collection of covers at the climax of the set. Various songs by The Beatles are covered, including “Helter Skelter,” which sees Hüsker Dü reimagine the rhythmic and sonic progression of the seminal song by The Beatles. This section features a notable amount of classic Hüsker Dü tracks as well, such as “Pink Turns To Blue,” “I Apologize,” “The Girl Who Lives On Heaven Hill,” and “Makes No Sense At All.” During a cover of Sonny Curtis’ “Love Is All Around,” which acts as the closing track to the first section of the compilation, the recording captures continuous applause from the live audience at First Avenue on January 30th, 1985. One can’t help but feel the impulsive urge to clap along with the roaring audience in this situation, as the seamlessly stitched together performance, which just took place in your eardrums, can only be described as electrifying.

The miscellaneous collection of 20 songs on the last half of the compilation, aptly titled More Miracles, doesn’t pull any punches in terms of auditorial excitement and a feeling akin to mainlining adrenaline. The gritty and grainy vocals, that push and strain with glorious intent, get emphasized every time you go one song deeper into the tracklist. An eight-min performance of the fan-favourite track, “All Work And No Play” ends with an instrumentally lone, pulsing drum beat and the attending audience screaming the words of the chorus back to the band. This is one of the many moments on the compilation that remind contemporary rock ‘n’ roll scenes where their mantras regarding ultra-fast riffs, passionate playing, and audience involvement come from. This chapter of the compilation also features a bountiful amount of classic Hüsker Dü tracks, which will intrigue new listeners and delight long-time fans alike. Tracks such as “Flip Your Wig,” “Eiffel Tower High,” “Chartered Trips,” and the seminal “Don’t Want To Know If You Are Lonely,” are among the sprawling list of inclusions.

One wouldn’t be blamed for assuming that an exercise like this could grow tedious in practice; listening to 40+ songs straight with such high-octane energy that you can hear how physically strenuous it must’ve been to perform does sound draining. However, Hüsker Dü prove that they can pull off the borderline-impossible and keep listening audiences hooked for a compilation that runs for multiple hours and stretches through four different LPs on its physical release, with their unique and groundbreaking brand of rock ‘n’ roll. There are a few archived moments of banter that will either appear at the beginning or the end of a track; these moments act as description cards that emphasize and provide context as to why Hüsker Dü was, and still is, so essential to its local community and (eventually) global music scenes at large. Before anything else, it’s because they cared significantly about giving it 110%; the band wanted to give it their all, their blood, sweat, and tears, to ensure that everyone listening (whether it be at the First Avenue show or on this compilation) would never forget the sounds they just heard. That is what 1985: The Miracle Year is all about.



Artist Links

website_flat_2016 facebook_flat_2016

Item Reviewed

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HÜSKER DÜ – 1985: THE MIRACLE YEAR

Author

Ben Scanga

Here's what we think...
Spill Rating
Fan Rating
Rate Here
New Criteria
10
9.4
9.0
Total Spill Rating
9.4
Total Fan Rating
1 rating
You have rated this
Album Reviews
1985: the miracle yearalbum reviewalbum reviewshüsker dünumero group
1985: the miracle year, album review, album reviews, hüsker dü, numero group
About the Author
Ben Scanga
A self-described “retired Guitar Hero pro” and “music snob extraordinaire.” Ben is currently studying at Sheridan College for a Bachelor’s Degree in Creative Writing & Publishing. His lifelong love of music, movies, and books alike can be attributed to a butterfly effect moment involving a hand-me-down Walkman and his mother’s CD collection.
RELATED ARTICLES
album reviewalbum reviewshüsker dü
 
8.0
The Dirty Nil
10

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE DIRTY NIL – LIVE AT THE DINE ALONE STORE

by Gerrod Harris on December 5, 2025
THE DIRTY NIL LIVE AT THE DINE ALONE STORE DINE ALONE RECORDS Having wrapped up their Canadian tour in support of their sixth full-length studio EP, The Lash, The Dirty Nil is closing out their 2025 with Live At The Dine Alone Store. The live [...]
 
8.0
Kira Metcalf

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: KIRA METCALF – LESSONS IN MAJESTIC HUMILIATION

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on December 5, 2025
KIRA METCALF LESSONS IN MAJESTIC HUMILIATION SYMPHONIC Has the singer-songwriter categorization, as a genre, lost its meaning? If you think of it solely in the sense of its origins (a solo artist with an acoustic instrument, such as an acoustic [...]
 
7.0
The Waterboys

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE WATERBOYS – THE WATERBOYS PRESENT: RIPS FROM THE CUTTING ROOM FLOOR

by Aaron Badgley on December 5, 2025
THE WATERBOYS THE WATERBOYS PRESENT: RIPS FROM THE CUTTING ROOM FLOOR SUN RECORDS The Waterboys, in particular Mike Scott, the founder and only original member from 1981, have never done what was expected of them. For example, in April 2025, [...]
 
7.0
Fine Young Cannibals

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FINE YOUNG CANNIBALS – FYC40

by Roxy Macdonald on December 5, 2025
FINE YOUNG CANNIBALS FYC40 LONDON RECORDS It seems unusual for a band that was only active for a few years to get a deluxe 40th-anniversary treatment, but Fine Young Cannibals is a band with a long and storied history that reads like a who’s who [...]
 
8.0
Singer. Mattress. Cat.

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SINGER. MATTRESS. CAT. – SUBTROPICAL PERSONALITY

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on December 1, 2025
SINGER. MATTRESS. CAT. SUBTROPICAL PERSONALITY INDEPENDENT There’s one question that might be looming among the melody-oriented indie rock fans; is bedroom pop a dying breed, or are they going into a sort of merger? If you ask Australian [...]

Latest Album Reviews
View All
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE DIRTY NIL – LIVE AT THE DINE ALONE STORE
8.0
10
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: KIRA METCALF – LESSONS IN MAJESTIC HUMILI...
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE WATERBOYS – THE WATERBOYS PRESENT: RI...
7.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FINE YOUNG CANNIBALS – FYC40
7.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SINGER. MATTRESS. CAT. – SUBTROPICAL PERS...
8.0

STAY UP-TO-DATE
WITH OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER!

SPILL MAGAZINE MENU
  • Home | The Spill Magazine
  • Newsletter
  • Premieres
  • SPILL RETRO REVIEWS
  • Track Of The Month
  • Album Reviews
  • Books + Movies
  • Features
  • Live Reviews
  • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • News
  • Events
  • Entertainment Headlines
  • Concert Listings
  • Toronto Concert Venues
  • About Us
  • Contests
  • New Music
  • Contributors
  • TOTD
  • Privacy Policy
  • The Scene Unseen
  • Newsletter

Copyright © 2025 | The Spill Magazine
All Rights Reserved.

TRENDING RIGHT NOW
   
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: RICHARD ASHCROFT – LOVIN’ YOU
833
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CHAMELEONS – ARCTIC MOON
831
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BIG WRECK – THE REST OF THE STORY
693
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: RHEOSTATICS – THE GREAT LAKES SUITE
654
 
SPILL NEWS: DONOVAN WOODS CELEBRATES 10 YEARS OF “PORTLAND, MAINE” WITH NEW VERSION FEATURING JORDAN DAVIS | 2026 SPRING TOUR SUPPORTING THE PAPER KITES
651
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: STEVE PORCARO – THE VERY DAY
613
 
SPILL LIVE REVIEW: QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE w/ PARIS JACKSON @ MASSEY HALL, TORONTO
589
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SLOAN – BASED ON THE BEST SELLER
577
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE BEATLES – ANTHOLOGY COLLECTION
533
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: ODC – TWISTED LOVE
475
 
SPILL CONTEST: WIN A PAIR OF TICKETS TO SEE MEN WITHOUT HATS AT THE MOD CLUB ON NOVEMBER 20!
474
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CITY AND COLOUR – SOMETIMES LULLABY
454
 
SPILL FEATURE: IT WAS A VERY POSITIVE ALBUM, STILL IS – A CONVERSATION WITH JEREMY CUNNINGHAM OF LEVELLERS
435
ENTERTAINMENT HEADLINES