Though largely overlooked during their relatively brief lifespan,
Slint grew to become one of the most influential and far-reaching bands to emerge from the American underground rock community of the 1980s; innovative and iconoclastic, the group's deft, extremist manipulations of volume, tempo, and structure cast them as clear progenitors of the post-rock movement which blossomed during the following decade.
Whatever the extent of
Slint's own influence, the group grew out of Louisville, Kentucky's legendary
Squirrel Bait, another seminal band which languished in relative obscurity during its own lifetime but ultimately spawned the likes of
Gastr Del Sol,
Big Wheel, and
Bastro. Guitarist/vocalist
Brian Mcmahan formed his first group at the age of 12; within a few years, he teamed with drummer
Britt Walford, and after the addition of vocalist
Peter Searcy, guitarist
David Grubbs, and bassist
Clark Johnson, they founded
Squirrel Bait in the mid-'80s. After two ferocious records, a self-titled 1985 effort and 1987's
Skag Heaven, the group disbanded, leaving
Mcmahan and
Walford to continue on as
Slint with guitarist
David Pajo and bassist
Ethan Buckler.
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