Terry James Katzman (March 8, 1955 – November 8, 2019)[1] was a producer, sound engineer, archivist, and record-store owner in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, known for his work with the Twin Cities music scene, particularly during the formative early years of
Hüsker Dü,
The Replacements, and
The Suburbs.[2]
Katzman was a mainstay of the early punk rock scene in Minneapolis beginning in the late 1970s. Hüsker Dü guitarist
Bob Mould recalls Katzman working backstage when Mould attended his first concert in Minneapolis, a
Suicide Commandos performance at
Jay's Longhorn Bar in 1978.[3] He was a sound engineer at legendary club
First Avenue, where he became the Replacements' preferred sound mixer for their shows.[4]
With Mould and the other members of Hüsker Dü, Katzman co-founded
Reflex Records, which released Hüsker Dü's early single "
Statues" and first studio album Everything Falls Apart. Under Katzman's guidance, the label would also release several compilations of regional underground and alternative bands, as well as albums by local post-punk bands
Rifle Sport,
Man Sized Action, Otto's Chemical Lounge, and Articles of Faith, as well as the
Minutemen's 1985 EP Tour-Spiel.[5] Both Katzman and the Hüsker Dü members became too busy with other projects, and the label quietly folded in 1985.[6]
Katzman frequently recorded live shows by Minneapolis bands, from the early 1980s to his death in 2019.[7] One recording of a Replacements performance at a house party in January 1982, which was shut down by the Minneapolis police amid angry shouting from the partygoers, was used as the intro audio on the band's Stink EP.[8] Katzman's archive of more than 100 live Hüsker Dü shows was used as the main source of the 2017 rarities collection Savage Young Dü.[9]
Katzman played a vital part in the independent record stores that supported the Twin Cities underground music scene, working at
Oar Folkjokeopus Records starting at the dawn of the punk era in 1976,[10] and in 1985 founding his own store, Garage D'Or Records,[6] which he later expanded into a record label.[8] Garage D'Or released several CDs archiving live shows by seminal punk and New Wave-era Minneapolis bands, including the Suburbs' High Fidelity Boys - Live 1979 and the Suicide Commandos' The Legendary KQRS Concert 1976.[11]
Katzman also co-produced Lick, the 1989 album by Boston alternative rock band
The Lemonheads.