Minus The Bear were a band who fit in everywhere and nowhere all at once. They emerged in the early 2000s, at a time when so many different alternative/independent/underground rock scenes were taking off, and they had things in common with all of them but seemed to be the square peg in just about every scene's round hole. In our recent podcast interview with guitarist David Knudson, he said (and I'm slightly paraphrasing) that Minus The Bear were too earnest and uncool for the dance-punk stuff taking off in New York and too fun for the indie scene in their Pacific Northwest hometown area. They did end up being embraced by and touring with some of the bands in the then-exploding emo scene, but they also made a conscious effort not to fit in with the pop punk and post-hardcore-leaning stuff that tended to populate that world. With David coming out of the soon-to-break-up, soon-to-be-very-influential mathcore band Botch; vocalist/guitarist Jake Snider coming out of the indie/math rock band Sharks Keep Moving; bassist Cory Murchy and drummer Erin Tate coming out of the post-hardcore band Kill Sadie; and keyboardist/producer Matt Bayles having worked with Botch, Isis, The Blood Brothers, and more; Minus The Bear's members had already had a variety of different backgrounds, and they set out to make this band different than any band any of them had ever been in. They embraced the guitar tapping techniques they learned from listening to influential math rockers Don Caballero, but David especially became known for using pedals and loops and treating his guitar more like an electronic instrument, while he and Erin also bonded over the danceable rhythms of Daft Punk. At the same time, Minus The Bear didn't want to write overly complex math rock or beat-driven dance music; they wanted to write songs, and -- like a lot of Pacific Northwesterners did around that time -- looked to the songwriting of Built To Spill for cues. The result was a band who pulled from and/or collided with indie rock, math rock, electronic music, dance-punk, pop, emo, post-hardcore, and more, and by the mid/late 2000s they'd start heavily embracing prog too. And on top of it all, Jake was often casual and subdued but he could erupt when he needed to. His lyrics were conversational and poetic and funny and serious all at once. He sang about partying and drinking and relationships and the regular mundane parts of life with equal fervor. His vivid lyrics could instantly transport you to whatever scene he was singing about, and his sticky hooks always gave you something to sing along to.
Minus The Bear broke up in 2018, but having put out their farewell live album less than a year ago, it still feels fresh, and with the approaching 20th anniversary of their debut album Highly Refined Pirates, the recent reunion of David Knudson and Jake Snider on David's debut solo album, David's series of guitar playthrough videos of MTB and Botch songs, and the new Botch song and Botch reunion shows, Minus The Bear have just been in the air lately, so I thought it'd be a good time to look back on their rich discography in the form of an album ranking. I included all six of their proper full-length albums, as well as their two core EPs from their early days, but left off the two acoustic albums, their remix album, the live album, and 2014's outtakes collection Lost Loves, because I didn't think those necessarily made sense in a ranking, but they're all cool and very worth checking out. And though a ranking does imply a certain type of hierarchy that might do a disservice to a discography as consistently rewarding as Minus The Bear's, I really just see it as a fun way to dive into their career and hopefully provide a starting point for new listeners, but each Minus The Bear album is worth hearing and just about every one brings something unique to the table.
With all that said, read on for the list...