Paul Westerberg and Tommy Stinson are reuniting as the Replacements. Soul Asylum is touring without co-founder Danny Murphy. And the Suburbs are releasing a new album.
Who would have predicted these 2013 headlines for three kingpins of the 1980s Twin Cities rock scene? But the last one is the biggest surprise.
"Never in a million years did I think we'd make another album," said Suburbs singer/guitarist Beej Chaney.
"No, absolutely not," said Suburbs drummer Hugo Klaers in a separate interview.
Well, there was one believer in the band, which broke up in 1987 and has intermittently reunited since 1992.
"I always call the New Standards my age-appropriate band," said Suburbs singer/keyboardist Chan Poling, 55, referring to his lounge-pop trio. "But always in the back of my mind I knew I had another rock record in me. Who would I get to play? I thought I'd call some all-stars. Then the more I thought: What's the best rock band that I know? I already have it."
So, 27 years after the Suburbs made their last studio album, the quintet will release a new album, the fan-funded "Si Sauvage," on Tuesday, then play the State Fair Grandstand next Friday.
This is not a vintage Suburbs album, on which nervy new wave collided with disco and jazz, and Poling and Chaney sang about cows, chemistry and cigarettes in backward.