With Moore occurring to be greatest often called a long-time member of Sonic Youth and Kramer as a producer (working with the likes of Galaxie 500, Low, Urge Overkill, and so forth.), it might not be till 2026 that the duo obtained the chance to work collectively. And as evidenced by such tracks as “Urn Burial” (a Velvet Underground-esque instrumental) and a canopy of an oft-overlooked Pleasure Division tune (“Perception”), the fabric highlights a shared affinity for mood-driven minimalism and understated experimentation.
Within the following dialogue with AllMusic, Moore discusses how the collaboration lastly happened, along with the early years of Sonic Youth, guitar, and an appreciation of a sure basic rock band’s early work (which can shock you).
How did the collaboration between you and Bonner Kramer come about?
“So, Bonner Kramer is his title, however everyone knows him as ‘Kramer.’ He is at all times been Kramer to all people. He is lately took on the title ‘Bonner Kramer’ in honor of his household. And he has an attention-grabbing type of household historical past, which solely he can let you know about. So, now he’s Bonner Kramer, and was to be known as such, which is completely cool, however everyone knows him as Kramer.”
“It happened…I imply, we I’ve recognized Kramer because the early ’80s in New York. And he was the engineer, proprietor of Noise New York, which was a downtown studio on West Broadway. And he was the man working it. He was like an actual character, and he was a musician.”
“I knew about him as a musician as a result of he had been enjoying across the experimental music scene in downtown New York with folks like John Zorn and Eugene Chadbourne. And so I knew about this man, however working with him for the primary time was as an engineer. I imply, Sonic Youth did their very first demo at Noise New York, earlier than Kramer was concerned with that place, and it was up in Midtown someplace. After which Kramer purchased the place from the earlier proprietor, and it turned the place to go to that was inexpensive, particularly when you’re doing type of bizarre music that was actually on the margins of all the things.”
“And it was up like a mile excessive set of stairs, on West Broadway, on this constructing. And that was very near Tier 3, which was a venue that we used to go to within the late ’70s. It was an notorious place. I keep in mind he instructed me a narrative about Lou Reed recording there, when Moe Tucker was doing her classes there, Kramer produced, and simply arising along with his amp, after which buzzing the door, and Kramer buzzing him in and him trying up the stairwell and simply saying, ‘Oh fuck, I obtained to hold my amp up these stairs?’ Lou Reed, of all folks. Y’know, the inglorious glory of rock n’ roll, carrying an amp up like three flights of stairs. And that is once I met him.”
“I might go out and in of there for various issues. All of us within the band had been enjoying with totally different varieties of individuals. And Don Fleming was residing upstairs from Kramer’s studio. And I might play with totally different classes that he would arrange for his bands – he had a band with Kramer referred to as B.A.L.L., that was on Kramer’s personal file label, referred to as Shimmy Disc, which nonetheless exists. After which Don Fleming had a band referred to as Gumball – it was simply friends with these guys. After which, we’d file collectively. And like I stated, Mo Tucker was up there. Half Japanese was at all times up there. Daniel Johnston was recording up there. So, all this type of like bizarre music was occurring, and we had been completely into that. So, I used to be at all times working with him.”
“Then he disappeared. He did some very excessive profile data with, like Galaxie 500. He did stunning data with the band Low, Alan Sparhawk…however then he disappeared. And I did not know the place he had gone – by all of the years of the start of the late ’90s, 2000s all people’s lives morphed and turned into what they turned into. And all of us type of grew up and obtained into our 50s, and now we’re in our 60s and 70s.”
“So, about eight years in the past, I used to be in Miami, Florida, which is the place I used to be born, and I’ve household there. And I used to be spending a variety of the pandemic 12 months there with my spouse, Eva, and we had been engaged on guide tasks. She’s a guide editor and I used to be writing music and simply ending ‘Sonic Life’, the memoir I wrote, and I noticed one thing on-line a few gentleman named Frank, and he was the primary proprietor of Noise New York. And I remembered him – he was posting one thing from South Miami, Florida.”
“And I wrote to him, I stated, ‘Are you in South Miami?’ By the way in which, I hadn’t seen this man in 35 years. He stated, ‘Yeah. What are you doing right here?’ And we met at a lodge bar, and we simply spent the three hours speaking. He stated, ‘By the way in which, Kramer resides in Hollywood, Florida, and he is been right here along with his spouse for fairly some time. He took over considered one of his dad and mom’ homes, and that is the place he is been. He is nonetheless working with the Butthole Surfers and making music with Paul Leary, and placing data out on Shimmy Disc, and Half Japanese and Daniel Johnston stuff.’ And I stated, ‘You bought to be kidding me.'”
“And so I reached out to Kramer, and we obtained collectively. We hadn’t seen one another in ages, and we simply began hanging out, like two previous guys, type of reconnecting from the ’80s downtown New York scene. After which Kramer moved away. He moved to Asheville, North Carolina, and arrange a studio there. And he wrote to me stated, ‘We should always have recorded once I was there.’ I stated, ‘File what?’ He says, ‘Simply file music collectively. Why not? How come we have by no means executed that?’ We had performed collectively just a few occasions by the ages, however simply with a bunch of different folks on stage making a racket, improvised noise.”
“He flew again all the way down to Miami, arrange just a little mini recording state of affairs within the residence I used to be renting, and I simply picked up a guitar or two, and he stated, ‘Simply go, man, go.’ And he turned it on, and I improvised. I simply performed every kind of simply free, open guitar music. And he sat there simply type of smiling. After which each 20 minutes, I might wind down and cease, and he is like, ‘Oh my God, okay, let’s take a break and do it once more.’ And so we did it for total two days.”
“He took the information, introduced them again to North Carolina. And a few month later, he stated, ‘Okay, I put my stuff on it,’ and he despatched me the information. And he simply did this, like, magical combine – he performed piano and bass and simply totally different devices, and did these fantastic mixes, and constructed songs, items of music as an album’s price of songs.”
“The one identifiable piece of music was a canopy of a Pleasure Division track, ‘Perception,’ and that was his thought. So, on the finish of creating all this guitar noise for him. He stated, ‘Let’s do ‘Perception’ by Pleasure Division.’ I stated, ‘I do not know that track.’ I imply, I do know Pleasure Division songs, however I could not place it. And he stated, ‘Yeah, it’s kind of of a deep lower.’ However as soon as he began enjoying the bass, I acknowledged it. You realize that bass line? [Sings] Do, do, do, do, do. Very basic. And he stated, ‘This is the lyrics.’ I believe I did it in a single take.”
“I simply sat in entrance of the microphone, and type of did my greatest Bryan Ferry impersonation. If I’ve to sing actual vocals, I type of channel the primary two Bryan Ferry solo data [1973’s These Foolish Things and 1974’s Another Time, Another Place]. For some motive, these inform me with out getting too over dramatic. So, that is what we did and we put this file collectively.”
“I imply, we simply type of had these concepts come up. Kramer had this {photograph} that he needed to make use of, he had this title he needed to make use of, and I used to be completely cool along with his sensibilities with it – and we put this file out. I imply, I am making a brand new file in June, which is my group, which is the Thurston Moore Group – which is me and Deb Googe from My Bloody Valentine, and two different London musicians. And we have been lively doing this for years now. We put out like, three albums, so there is a new album being made this June.”
“As quickly as all people settles down, Deb’s out with My Bloody Valentine proper now, look ahead to her to come back again. So that is what I am doing. Kramer and I had been enjoying it on the Huge Ears Competition in Tennessee subsequent week [March 26-29, 2026]. It’s going to be the primary time we play collectively as a duo. So, that’ll be attention-grabbing. We’re simply going to go for it.”
Will there be different members within the stay band, or will it stay simply you and Kramer?
“Simply me and Kramer. And there is a large, stunning pipe organ, I consider, on this house that we’re utilizing. And Kramer goes to make the most of that. And we’ll reference the music on the file for certain. However it will not be cookie cutter. We’re gonna simply take off, and we might or might not do the Pleasure Division track. We’ll rehearse it and see, like if we now have sufficient confidence to do it proper.”
“However, y’know, it is Huge Ears – I’ve like, three gigs there. I’ve the one with Kramer. Kramer has a bunch of gigs. He is doing one thing with Pan Sonic. I am doing a duo with Steve Shelley, who’s on tour with Invoice Orcutt and Ethan Miller. So the Orcutt Shelley Miller Trio is enjoying. So, me and Steve Shelley will do a duo, simply improvise guitar and drums music. And I am additionally doing one other improvised set with Shabaka Hutchings, the good avant garde, spirit jazz saxophonist from England. And we all know one another – we have performed collectively lately a few occasions, as soon as with Moor Mom, one thing she arrange, after which at Cafe OTO right here in London, with Evan Parker.”
“So, that is type of the music I discover actually rewarding today, is enjoying simply actually free improvisation. It is a very type of difficult music to type of get entangled with. It is not jamming, it isn’t similar to, winging. It is similar to actually listening to one another and creating instantaneous compositions, like spontaneous compositions within the second, and fascinated about it as a bit of music that has a starting, center and finish. Not simply type of some lengthy winded jam out. So, that is one thing I have been type of studiously concerned with for the final decade.”
How did you initially begin experimenting with guitar tunings?
“I by no means considered myself as a standard guitar participant, regardless that I liked nice, excessive approach conventional guitar gamers. So rising up, I used to be actually into Jimi Hendrix and Jimmy Web page. I used to be actually into Joni Mitchell and what she was doing with guitar. I’ve an older brother who’s 5 years older – he is a guitar lunatic. So, him and his buddies could be enjoying guitar all by the early ’70s in the lounge, and I might simply be gleaning it.”
“I believe I obtained into enjoying experimental guitar, similar to once I began seeing punk rock bands, in like, ’76/’77. I used to be very eager about how a variety of the guitar gamers weren’t conventional guitar gamers, within the sense the place they had been attempting to play a lot just like the mannequin of Jimmy Web page, Eric Clapton. Although rather a lot had been, I imply, Binky Phillips of the Planets was, Miki Zone of The Quick was…and I am speaking about bands from ’75/’76 in New York.”
“After which once you noticed the Ramones, it was similar to, ‘Oh, it is similar to, down stroking barre chords.’ However it’s creating this, like, actually unbelievable catalog of songs that was actually identifiable as a music that was not like anyone else’s music. And it was actually efficient. I imply, it was so, so nice. And it was additionally actually liberating. It is like, ‘Oh, I can truly simply type of play barre chords and it is a be all and finish all.’ And I type of began doing that, and I might write songs as a teen – I assumed I used to be writing songs for the Ramones to play. I wrote a track referred to as, ‘I Do not Need to Clear My Room No Extra.’ Issues of that nature.”
“After which listening to the Intercourse Pistols and listening to the Damned, it was similar to these guys had been wilding on guitar, however making actually nice music out of it. And I used to be like, ‘Okay, you could be extra freer on guitar.’ However once I moved to New York, I instantly type of obtained it. I obtained concerned with listening to and seeing such radical music, whether or not it was music that was occurring on the Kitchen Middle with musicians like Rhys Chatham and Glenn Branca, seeing no wave bands like The Contortions and Mars. And these folks weren’t using any conventional guitar approach of their of their enjoying with the guitars. And I actually type of thought that is type of what I need to apply myself to.”
“I do not actually need to, like, study to play ‘Eric Clapton guitar.’ I did not actually have the need to have that ambition in the direction of that. I obtained began instantly to do various things with the guitar. And in addition, one of many components was I had a pleasant Fender Stratocaster, and it obtained stolen nearly instantly after transferring to New York. Somebody broke into the residence and stole the guitar. They heard it. They had been like, ‘Okay, there’s some man in there with a guitar. Let’s go get it.’ And I had a few guitars that I purchased at yard gross sales in Connecticut – they had been low cost, crappy guitars. And that is what I used.”

“After which, once I began enjoying, I performed in a band referred to as The Coachmen, and we had been enjoying normal, type of chordal, type of Speaking Heads/Tv-influenced music. And whereas I used to be in that band in ’78/’79, I might be going to those little golf equipment – and that we’d play at typically – however I might see issues the place folks had been actually doing rather more freakier stuff on guitar. And I might see some folks simply enjoying actually free improvised guitar, the place they had been actually expressing themselves on the guitar both noisily or not noisily. And that basically attracted me.”
“And in some unspecified time in the future, after the band that I used to be in, The Coachmen, broke up, I instantly began enjoying like that. I stated, ‘I am simply gonna play free. I am gonna open up and I am gonna take the guitar, I am gonna go wild on it and type of see what occurs, and attempt to apply that to songwriting.’ And that is how Sonic Youth type of began, as a result of I began enjoying with this younger lady named Stanton Miranda, and she or he launched me to Kim Gordon, after which I began enjoying with one other lady that I had met named Anne DeMarinis, who was the girlfriend of a well-known conceptual artist named Vito Acconci, residing in Brooklyn. And I began enjoying with Miranda and Anne.”
“After which I used to be launched to Kim by Miranda, and I introduced Kim into the fold, and she or he had a bass that she had purchased, however she did not actually know easy methods to play it a lot. So I gave her some reggae data and stated, ‘Simply take heed to the reggae data and play together with them. That is a bass lesson proper there.’ And that is how we began. And so I used to be enjoying with these three ladies, and Miranda instantly left the group, and I began utilizing totally different drummers that The Coachman had had, till we had discovered first Richard Edson after which Bob Bert, then Steve Shelley.”
“Lee Ranaldo I had recognized as a result of he was anyone who was enjoying music round city, and he noticed The Coachman, and he turned a little bit of a fan. He began coming to our gigs, and I appreciated what he was doing. After which he began enjoying with Glenn Branca. And I attempted out for Glenn Branca, after which I lastly began enjoying with Glenn Branca. The 2 of us had been enjoying with Glenn Branca, and we first toured Europe with Glenn Branca in ’82 or one thing.”
“And I requested Lee to be within the band that was occurring with Anne DeMarinis, Kim and I. And Anne DeMarinis left. And so there was a little bit of a gap within the band. And so we requested Lee, as a result of we had been enjoying in the identical type of little bizarre, noisy locations, and that was it. There was just like the three of us had been the core of what turned Sonic Youth.”
“And as quickly as Lee joined, I just about obtained the title Sonic Youth. I imply, we did one gig with Anne DeMarinis as Sonic Youth. However it was like, issues had been falling aside. I may inform. And I stated, ‘Properly, I am simply gonna take possession of this band, and I am gonna use this title that has been at the back of my thoughts, and it is gonna be the best title ever, and we’re gonna be the perfect experimental rock band of the world. And that is what’s gonna occur. No one’s going to cease us.'”
“And so it was like, going to get Lee, increase, it simply began occurring. And we adopted our sensibilities. We weren’t like, going out of our method to type of promote ourselves. We simply did what we did, and we actually did not have any notion of changing into well-known or something. We actually needed to type of be a part of this group that we adored. Creating attention-grabbing music and being a part of that.”
“After which, we had no thought how issues had been going to develop. Like, who was going to place a file out by us, after which the totally different bands that may come up after us that we type of turned related to – whether or not it was Mudhoney, Pavement, Nirvana, no matter. I imply, it is like all that stuff got here later. That got here on the finish of the ’80s into the ’90s. However through the ’80s, it was Meat Puppets, Butthole Surfers, Minutemen, fIREHOSE, Black Flag and that entire SST scene. After which main as much as type of the Sub Pop scene. SST, Southern California, type of actually ‘outsider,’ type of similar to post-punk, post-hardcore, type of…Saccharine Belief was actually large for us. These type of bands.”
So it was just about by working with Lee that you simply began doing the attention-grabbing guitar tunings?
“Oh, positively. There was a second that even earlier than Lee was within the group the place I went to the Kitchen Middle to see a retrospective of Rhys Chatham‘s guitar music, which he was enjoying these superb items of music that had been simply utilizing, like, one notice or one chord. And it was like, loud and it was simply driving, and it was a very radical utilization of guitar in rock music. However it wasn’t rock music. It was simply new music, utilizing rock instrumentation. And so I keep in mind going to that and sitting subsequent to Lee, and the each of us type of so giddy with the promise of this. And I knew immediately, that is actually the place we’re going – creating experimental music with guitars.”
“And as quickly as we began, enjoying the guitars in any conventional facet, they had been such awful guitars that they sounded horrible. You could not play an E main chord. It simply sounded out of tune, or it sounded bruised and so they did not keep in tune. They sounded clacky and plasticky. Perhaps placing a drumstick beneath the twelfth fret and noting it so you possibly can truly play on both facet of that drumstick, and turning the amp up sufficient the place you possibly can truly rub that drumstick with one other drumstick, the extra serrated, the higher. It created this type of droning, type of multi-harmonic sound – like shards of sprinkling sounds, and so they’re utilizing totally different implements.”
“Lee introduced in a hand drill and put a put a contact mic on and despatched it to his amp, as an alternative of enjoying a lead guitar solo. He performed that on the primary track we ever wrote, which was referred to as ‘The Burning Spear,’ on our first file [1982’s Sonic Youth]. He performs the electrical hand drill for the solo. We had been simply establishing ourselves as a band that was going to type of actually simply break utterly away from what a standard rock band was, however nonetheless honoring what a standard rock band was. We had been a four-piece. There was two guitars, bass, and drums. All of us interchanged the instrumentation. It turned established.”
“Just a few years into it, Kim turned the bass participant, Lee and I had been the guitarists, and we had a drummer, and we turned extra subtle as gamers, and we turned extra of a normalized band than we first had been, once we began. However on the identical time, we had been into type of referencing nice conventional rock, whether or not it was Grateful Useless, whether or not it was Creedence Clearwater Revival – these sorts of issues. In addition to, like, simply open-ended experimental music.”
“So, we had been actually attempting to create type of a borderless unity with these type of aesthetics, a band that type of was each experimental but straight forward. So, it type of allowed us to exit and be a part of Lollapalooza or no matter, which is like, we had been the straightest band on Lollapalooza [in 1995]. We had been clean-cut. No one was large drinkers. There was no druggies within the band, none of that. We learn books, we went to bookstores. However all the opposite bands, whether or not it is Gap or Jesus Lizard or Pavement, all people else is simply type of wild and wooly of their life…however their music was extra ‘straight forward indie rock.’ The place our music was by no means that. So, there was a paradox the place we had been the straightest band making this crooked music.”
I as soon as heard a rumor that I needed to ask: is it true that you simply’re an admirer of the album Queen II?
“Adore it. Queen I and Queen II are like important data for me. And when the primary Queen album got here out, I instantly purchased it. And the American model of it is actually nice, as a result of it has that embossed sleeve. The OG UK one doesn’t. I did not know that till a lot later, once I turned rather more of a file collector nerd.”
“However I liked Queen I, and I performed that file to demise. Brian Could‘s guitar enjoying all by that file was nice. And the songwriting is simply superb. They shredded. There’s one thing very type of Bowie-faye about it as properly, which is cool. It was like glam. And there was one thing very, very ‘fairly boy’ about it. However it was shredding, it was as heavy as the rest. After which Queen II was simply pretty much as good…if not higher.”
“I at all times remorse not seeing them, as a result of I used to be just a little too younger. I used to be like, 14, 15, 16. And I used to be residing in Western Connecticut, and I knew the stuff was occurring at New Haven Coliseum. Y’know, some older youngsters had been like, ‘Yeah, we went to New Haven Coliseum and noticed such and such.’ And I knew that Queen was on a invoice with Mott the Hoople. And I actually appreciated Mott the Hoople – I had the Mott album, and I assumed it was actually cool. And I believe I had All of the Younger Dudes, as properly. However I did not have the wherewithal, I could not determine it out, like, ‘How do you get to New Haven?'”
“The primary time I went was some associates stated, ‘We will New Haven Coliseum to see Frank Zappa.’ And I went. I obtained a ticket with them. And I noticed Rick Wakeman, I went to see Kiss up at Springfield Civic Middle. And Blue Öyster Cult and a few of these early ’70s issues. Some higher than others. However what I actually needed to see was what I used to be seeing and studying in Rock Scene Journal.
I actually needed to see the New York Dolls. I actually needed to see the Dictators. After which first listening to about Tv, I actually need to see that, and I actually needed to see Patti Smith. And at last, I did see Patti Smith in Westport, Connecticut, on the Playhouse in ’76. And by that point, I obtained my driver’s license, after which I began going into New York and seeing Wayne County and all the things.”
“However Queen, these two data, yeah, they’re large for me. The third album, Sheer Coronary heart Assault, I believe that was a very good file, too. However by the point Sheer Coronary heart Assault got here out, it was already too late. I used to be like, Ramones, Pistols, Conflict, y’know? So Sheer Coronary heart Assault was like…I keep in mind listening to it and going, ‘Yeah, it is actually good. However it’s just a little too ornate.’ Like, I am into the Heartbreakers, y’know?”
Properly that proper there are all of the questions I’ve. I simply needed to say it was nice to lastly communicate with you, Thurston.
“Oh, cool man. I am actually completely satisfied and proud with of this file. And I believe I’ve to doff my hat to Kramer – he did such an awesome job with it. I wasn’t actually in search of, like, some new file of mine to be out proper now. That was not on my agenda. And it simply type of got here out now. And I used to be similar to, ‘Oh, okay.’ And folks began buzzing about it.”
“I put a variety of bizarre improv and noisy data out and cassettes on a regular basis. So when one will get this type of consideration in that world, I used to be similar to, ‘Oh.’ It wasn’t actually on the agenda, however it’s type of cool. That label, Silver Present, that Ethan Miller is working, I believe it is a actually nice label. I believe he is doing a very good job. He is at all times been an excellent egg.”
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