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Slim Dunlap

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Birth name
  
Bob Dunlap

Name
  
Slim Dunlap

Instruments
  
Guitar

Role
  
Musician


Genres
  
Rock music

Labels
  
Twin/Tone, Restless

Music group
  
The Replacements

Slim Dunlap Slim Dunlap39s long difficult recovery inspires star

Born
  
August 14, 1951 (age 72) Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States (
1951-08-14
)

Occupation(s)
  
Guitarist, singer-songwriter

Associated acts
  
Curtiss A, Spooks, The Replacements

Albums
  
The Old New Me, Pleased to Meet Me, All Shook Down, Don't Tell a Soul, Boink

Years active
  
Early-1970s – present

Slim dunlap and the replacements merry go round


Bob "Slim" Dunlap (born August 14, 1951) is an American rock musician. He is a Minnesota-based guitarist and singer-songwriter who is best known for replacing The Replacements' original lead guitarist, Bob Stinson in 1987. Dunlap also recorded two solo albums in the mid-1990s.

Contents

Slim Dunlap Springsteen sings the praise of sidelined Minneapolis

Dunlap was influenced by Hank Williams and Keith Richards, and has been called "one of the last old-school cool guitar players". Ralph Heibutzki at AllMusic said that he "epitomizes the journeyman musician who plays for the fun of it, when his day gig allows".

Slim Dunlap Twin Cities music hero Slim Dunlap suffers stroke

Slim dunlap stairway


Biography

Slim Dunlap consequenceofsoundfileswordpresscom201202sli

Slim Dunlap was born in Plainview, Minnesota on August 14, 1951. He started playing guitar when he was about ten. In the early 1970s he teamed up with rock musician and visual artist Curtiss A, also known as Curt Almsted, and together they formed Thumbs Up, an "unusual mix of rhythm and blues with pop [that] has been described as early new wave". He also joined Almsted's punk-rock group, Spooks, and featured on all but one of Spooks's albums. Dunlap's work with Almsted established himself as an "intuitive, reliable musician who could fit any situation", and he attracted the attention of Paul Westerberg of The Replacements, a Minnesota-based punk/alternative rock band. Westerberg was looking for a guitarist to replace Bob Stinson, who had been asked to leave in the mid-1980s because of his drug and alcohol problems, and approached Dunlap. Dunlap initially turned down the offer, but joined The Replacements in 1987 on account of "his admiration for Westerberg's songwriting". Dunlap's day job at the time was working as a janitor at First Avenue, a nightclub in Minneapolis, the same venue where The Replacements had launched their career in the early 1980s. Dunlap became the "replacement Replacement", and remained with the band until their breakup in 1991, featuring on their last two studio albums.

In 1991 Dunlap toured with ex-Georgia Satellites lead vocalist Dan Baird to promote Baird's solo album, Love Songs for the Hearing Impaired. Towards the end of 1992 Dunlap started recording his own first solo album, The Old New Me, which was released in 1993. It was followed by his second solo album, Times Like This in 1996. AllMusic called The Old New Me a "rootsy, engaging ride", and Times Like This "the opposite of the Replacements' rowdy, unscripted alt-rock vitriol [that] wins on its own unobtrusive terms". Dunlap performed at The Bottom Line in New York City in December 1997, and he and his own band were active in the Minneapolis area until February 2012 when he was hospitalized after suffering a severe stroke.

Songs For Slim

After Dunlap's stroke, a non-profit project, Songs For Slim, was established to raise money for him by having other artists cover his songs and other merchandise. The releases included an EP by his former band mates from The Replacements, Songs for Slim featuring cover art by Chris Mars.

Solo discography

Source: AllMusic

  • The Old New Me (1993, Twin/Tone Records)
  • Times Like This (1996, Restless Records)
  • References

    Slim Dunlap Wikipedia