“You’ve never lived until you’ve walked through a field at high noon with the sun out and not a cloud in the sky and it’s 40 below,” Alan Sparhawk told the Chairs Missing zine in a 1996 interview. “It’s like walking on the moon. The sun is straight up over your head and you can feel like death is right around the corner!” I live in Upstate New York, and as I write this, the weekend forecast is calling for temps well below zero, before taking into account windchill. It’s February, and the piles of icy snow rise above eye level. A good time to put on some Low.
In the earliest days, the fact that the band came from Duluth, Minnesota, a small city at the westernmost tip of Lake Superior, whose name is synonymous with the sensation of cold for anyone who has immersed their body in it, was the third most important thing to know about Low. The second most important thing was that two of its three members were practicing Mormons, which made them outsiders twice over in the underground rock world in which they operated: To be a self-described Christian in this milieu was strange enough, and here they were in a branch of the faith that many Christians weren’t even sure about.
No score yet, be the first to add.
And the most important thing to know about Low, of course, is that they played slow. Very slow. And quiet, which intensified the effect of the tempo. The word “slowcore” was used to describe a band in 1993, the year Low formed and wrote and recorded the songs that wound up on their debut album, I Could Live in Hope. But it was used in a piece about New York’s Codeine. And while Codeine did indeed play at a measured pace, they were also dynamic, which meant noisy catharsis was a vital part of their aesthetic. Early on, Low didn’t do catharsis. They made you feel something sad or uneasy and then they kept you there for many minutes on end until you weren’t sure what to do with yourself.
Low’s three-decade saga of innocence and despair began in an elementary school in Clearbrook, a tiny farm town surrounded by even smaller farm towns a few hours northwest of Duluth. There, Alan Sparhawk, age 9, enrolled after moving from Utah with his family. He later described his parents as somewhat free-spirited as devout Mormons went; perhaps they carried just a little of the hippie temperament that infiltrated many Christian communities in the 1970s. Mimi Parker, two years older than Sparhawk, was already in attendance. By high school they were dating and then they married in their early twenties. Parker converted to Mormonism, and the ceremony was held at a temple in Provo.
By the time of their wedding, Sparhawk was already a couple of years into trying to make a life in a band. Music had long been an obsession, and he had an unusual attraction to underground music at a time and place when information about it was hard to come by. An image of a punk rocker glimpsed in a magazine triggered months of internal theorizing about what the music these people made might sound like, and he eventually developed a fondness for greyscale, goth-leaning bands like the Cure and Joy Division. He bought a bass, then a guitar, which, around age 19, he started playing in a Duluth band called Zen Identity. They sounded pretty much like you’d expect a rock band from a town with a nearby college radio station to sound at the turn of the ’90s—Sparhawk later described them as an inferior version of early Soundgarden. Incredibly, there’s a decent video on YouTube of them playing a gig in Superior, Wisconsin. In a poetic twist, they were opening for Quiet Riot.
