The Replacements: Classic or Dud?

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Dud. I don't recoil from the Replacements because they remind of Chuck Berry; it's because they remind me of fuckin' ska-punk. (Yes, that's a weird comparison, but it works for me.) It all just seem self-indulgent to me in some inexplicable way, as if Westerberg et al. had no right to their conflicted conflictedness.

I like the fact that the once set fire to Robert Christgau's hair, though. I give that cheap media stunt an A-plus.

Incidentally, the Cheers theme song done right would simply be the Cheers theme song, and "Love is a Battlefield" done angry would be "Love is a Battlefield." Not as if I like 'em or anything (though it's possible that if I ever heard Larry Levan play it at the Paradise Garage, my opinion would be different), it's just that I think there's nothing you possibly do to those songs that would make their sniveling sentiments any more palatable.

Michael Daddino, Friday, 16 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

i think mark hits upon an interesting note re: the freaky trigger mindset. as perhaps the lone member of the f.t. "collective" -- to tie up several threads -- to like the go-betweens, led zeppelin, orange juice and the replacements, i find it my right, nay, my DUTY to add to the fray.

the above four bands, when grouped, are unique in that i have a hard time summing up my feelings for them, explaining just why i love each, and i almost find it besides the point to try to *speak* about them, as the music says it all to me, and if it doesn't for you, then no reason anyone on this board will give will make you fall in love similarly.

if you don't enjoy the thump of "the immigrant song" or the glee of "bye bye, pride" or the ending of "tenterhooks" or the bridge of "can't hardly wait," then i've nothing to tell you, only that my world has been all the better for them.

fred solinger, Friday, 16 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

One last thing for naysayers, doubters, haters, and of course anyone who hasn't heard them. Go download "answering machine", and tell me that the guitar riff in between the lines in the verses isn't absolutely heartbreaking. GO!

larmey, Friday, 16 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

I've just downloaded "Answering Machine." I find that the guitar riff in between the lines in the verses is, in fact, not absolutely heartbreaking. Could it be that I just downloaded the wrong remix? Furthermore, the singer is bleaurghiriffic. Maybe there's something about the shame of having spiky hair which forces guys to overemote.

How does one say "I'm Lonely" to an answering machine? Easy. I've done it *lots* of times.

Incidentally, I have a problem with the kinds of sentences about pop music that go "If you don't love X, then you beyond the pale in some way or another." It's a way to pre-empt criticism, and hence, it is bad.

Michael Daddino, Saturday, 17 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

If you say "I've just downloaded "Answering Machine." I find that the guitar riff in between the lines in the verses is, in fact, not absolutely heartbreaking." Then we're going to say "Well... YOU JUST DON'T GET US, MAN!!!" And go turn up our stereos REAL loud, just like Bruce asked us to and listen to rock and we'll be free. So there.

JM, Saturday, 17 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

I like Tom's idea of the cultural rift, that makes sense to me. I'm trying to think of the reverse, bands that are too "British" for an American go "get" fully. This seems a good topic for a future thread.

Mark Richardson, Sunday, 18 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Mark: The Kinks, Blur... uh... Belle And Sebasitan. All of those bands have their little band of die hards, but they will never get the same exposure as Radiohead, etc.

Note that The Kinks lost their touck on the US charts once they stopped writing songs like 'You Really Got Me'

JM, Sunday, 18 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Jimmy, you're right about the Kinks, although they got BACK into the US charts in the late 70's when they turned up the guitars and went metal-lite. Their best and most creative period (1965-1970) went largely un-noticed in the USA as far as I can tell, except perhaps for 'Lola'.

Mark, it IS a great idea for a thread. There are many great British bands who the USA never 'got'. What about The Jam?

Dr. C, Sunday, 18 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Absolute Classic. Go back and reread Mark Richardson's post. If you still don't get it, you lose.

Tim Baier, Monday, 19 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Oh Please.

I've always been kind of on the fence about the Replacements. There are a couple of nice moments in their early songs, but I have always suspected the fawning praise from the indie-boy critics had more to do with their beery self-mythology than the music.

Saying that people who don't like them "don't get it" sounds a little too uncomfortably close to the rantings of an 11 year old angry at some critic for dissing Justin Timberlake. And the 11 year old has more of an excuse.

Nicole, Monday, 19 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Dude, if you don't like Justin Timberlake, you really don't get it.

Sterling Clover, Monday, 19 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Nicole, obviously you didn't read Mark's post. You just stated the fact that you were one of the people that is turned off by their "beer-y self mythology". You were the person that he's talking about. You just admitted to it. I don't care that you don't like the Replacements, but PLEASE, don't like them for the right reasons, not because your opinions area a result of the fallout of "indie-boy critic" parise. THAT would be quite 11-year old like.

I didn't mean that people who "don't get" the Replacements lose. I meant that people who don't get Mark's post lose. You, obviously, lose. Sorry. :)

Tim Baier, Tuesday, 20 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Tim, the problem with Mark's post is that The Replacements didn't write great pop songs. They wrote boring crap. Their songs are almost uniformly uninteresting AND painfully sung. They, along with Soul Asylum, represent the nadir of the Twin Cities music scene and I, for one, could never fathom why people liked them so much.

When people go on and on about Husker Du, I understand, because Bob Mould and Co. were doing some very cool stuff within the framework of accessible, understandable rock music. The Replacements don't and could never compare to that.

Dan Perry, Tuesday, 20 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Eh? Tim, I don't think you read my post, or were viewing it through an Alta Vista translator or something...

I gave the replacements a try, I really did -- I knew people who raved about them so I tried to give them a chance to impress me.They didn't. I have listened to all of their material up through Pleased to Meet Me. It's not bad...but on other hand, there's just nothing particularly compelling about it to give it that spark that the best pop music has. I don't hate it - I just don't love it either, so I'm still a little baffled as to how you read the phrase "on the fence" as a stand-in for "dislike".

I never "admitted to" being turned off by the beery self-mythology. I was just casting about for an explanation of why certain people might be into them to such a fanatical extent. Maybe I should have included other reasons, to make the point more clear. You know, like maybe it wasn't the beery self-mythology people liked, it was the fact that Tommy Stinson looked like a hairier version of Rob Lowe if you were squinting in a smoky club (well, it was the eighties)? Or maybe airline pilots worldwide rallied round their cause for having the courage to diss stewardesses in "Waitress in the Sky"? Maybe that's what earned them all of that "parise". I don't honestly know.

If that means I've lost something, well...as the legendary Robbie Neville once sang, "C'est La Vie". :-)

Nicole, Tuesday, 20 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Dan: You shouldn't have said that the Replacements didn't write good songs and tell me who DID because whaddaya know? I've never liked Husker Du and I wouldn't say that anything they did could touch what Westerberg did in a "classic" manner. I like some HD songs but I haven't felt compelled to listen to one of their records in years, while I just listened to TIM last week. And to equate the Mats and Soul Asylum? Why don't you just throw the Goo Goo Dolls in there!?!?

Nicole: Pardon my errant assumption, but it sure sounded like you were giving the "beery self-mythology" as your reason for not liking them since you didn't give any other reasons.

Tim Baier, Wednesday, 21 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Um.

The Replacements and Soul Asylum are both from the Twin Cities and have, at alternate times, been held up as examples of how vibrant and wonderful the Twin Cities music scene is. The Goo Goo Dolls are from Buffalo and therefore irrelevant to the conversation.

Dan Perry, Wednesday, 21 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Gee Dan, thanks for that bit of history. Your extensive knowledge of musical alterna-lineage is astounding. One thing they must NOT be teaching at Har-vard is a bit of creative thinking. Who cares what town the fucking bands came from? Its all about the music, eh? There's no doubt that the Goo Goo Dolls have stolen extensively from the Mats but that's not a reason for the Mats sucking. Soul Asylum sucks. The Goo Goo Dolls suck. Can you put all of this together?

Tim Baier, Tuesday, 6 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Let's recap for a moment:

I said that The Replacements and Soul Asylum represent the worst of what the Twin Cities music scene had to offer, yet both bands seem to be liked a lot and I could never understand why.

Tim (after taking a moment to slam Husker Du) asked why I didn't bring up the Goo Goo Dolls.

I stated that the Goo Goo Dolls were from Buffalo and have nothing to do with my point, which is that the Replacements and Soul Asylum are two of the worst bands to come out of the Twin Cities.

Tim has a fit.

There are a ton of jokes begging to be made here, but in light of Tom's new stance regarding abusive posts, I will refrain. So, to Tim: Since you want to bring the Goo Goo Dolls into this so desperately, I can't say that they rank among my favorite bands, either, but at least their lead singer can sing. That will excuse many things in my book. (Also, congratulations on being the first person on these boards to attempt to take a shot at me for posting with a Harvard email address.)

Dan Perry, Wednesday, 7 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Dan, thank you for recapping what can be read three inches above on the screen as I was having trouble finding the scroll bars. You are a god-send for all like me who were not fortunate enough to attend Har- vard. And I'm always up for jokes even at my expense, so please make all you want. That's what us "commoners" are for, after all. Although I've found that someone who says there are good jokes to be made but notes that he/she will refrain from making them actually can't think of any at the time. They just think that someone with a better sense of humor than themselves could come up with a real zinger on the fly. Don't be scared of the forum rules. After all, I haven't seen anything in my Inbox. Think hard now....

Anyway, by your "relevance" thinking, what does Soul Asylum have to do with the Replacements? Do you think that has more or less musical relevance than what the Goo Goo Dolls have to do with the Replacements? If "your point" was that Soul Asylum is crap, why bring it up in a Replacements thread? Just because they're both from Minneapolis? Fine (however backwards as I see it), but allow me the same freedom to bring up a band that is far more relevant to the "conversation", and the Goo Goo Dolls seem more relevant to the Mats in a musical context than Soul Asylum. And we're still talking about the MUSIC, right?

And was I REALLY "slamming" Husker Du? Do I now need to recap what I said or can we all just scroll up a bit to re-read it? (I'm going to trust that we've learned to use them by now.) I didn't rip 'em a new a-hole or anything. I don't "slam" many bands and certainly not HD. But they have neither the highs nor the longevity of the Mats.

Tim Baier, Thursday, 8 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Can I just say that despite having almost nothing to contribute to this thread (I have one Replacements LP at my parents' house that I've barely listened to and apparently it's one of the later, crap ones anyway) it is the most entertaining one I can remember reading. Rarely has a they suck/they rock argument been elevated to such heights. .

Nick, Thursday, 8 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Tim, you're quite welcome for the recap. I'm sorry that it hasn't helped you realize that we're having two seperate conversations, but I gave it the old college try.

Now, you ask, "What does Soul Asylum have to do with the Replacements?" Perhaps if you had utilized your newly-mastered skill with scroll bars, you would have noticed that I initially wrote, "They, along with Soul Asylum, represent the nadir of the Twin Cities music scene and I, for one, could never fathom why people liked them so much." Once you've mastered reading comprehension, you'll see several pieces of information in that sentence:

- I think The Replacements are horrifically overrated.
- I think Soul Asylum is horrifically overrated.
- Both bands come from the Twin Cities.
- Both bands have received critical acclaim and have been held up as representations of Twin Cities music.
- I think that there are a lot of bands from the Twin Cities who are much better than both bands. I facetiously (oops, sorry: jokingly) said Limited Warranty, but that list also includes Husker Du/Sugar/Bob Mould, Walt Mink, The Blue Up?, Tool & Die, Savage Aural Hotbed, Prince and the NPG, The Time/Morris Day/Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Psykosonik, Project X, Lies Incorporated, and Ex- Boyfriends of Pamela.

The only reason I brought up Soul Asylum was to illustrate a point about how people view the music scene in the Twin Cities. I was not equating Soul Asylum to The Replacements as far as their respective sounds are concerned. I never claimed to equate their respective sounds (beyond putting them in a general category called "Bad").

As far as "slamming" Husker Du is concerned: You just said that they had neither the highs nor the longevity of the Replacements. Considering how painfully mediocre the Replacements are, I don't see that as a very positive comment on Husker Du.

Finally, I'd like to point out that, unless there's been a major bio- engineering breakthrough while I wasn't looking, the Replacements aren't your mother and I'm somewhat puzzled as to why you're reacting so vehemently at my disdain. I'm further puzzled as to why you're obsessed with where I went to school, but I really can't do anything about other people's jealousy.

I eagerly await your nonsensical, ranting reply.

Dan Perry, Thursday, 8 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Ah! Now I see! The whole 'mats backlash is coming from a bunch of snobby prah-pah types with thick upper class accents. Proles like me, who got rejected by Harvard and instead had to settle for worthless trade-schools like UC Berkeley and thus are doomed to homelessness and low-band internet access, well we don't need the 'mats explained to us -- We've LIVED THEIR MUSIC, Man!

(On a different note, I actually think the Replacements should get classic status from their seminal proto-slacker attitude, which was fairly distinct at the time)

Sterling Clover, Thursday, 8 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Sterling, you rock. If I knew where you were, I'd buy you a beer.

Dan Perry, Thursday, 8 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

I think Paul Westerberg was a good songwriter both in terms of lyrics (Little Mascara) and song structure (Kiss Me On The Bus).

I think that their slacker attitude (as opposed to Pavement's) does not translate well outside the US. (For the reverse thread - I would suggest Robyn Hitchcock and the Egyptians: "The Man With the Lightbulb Head" reminds me of British comedies on PBS. They're funny, though I never feel like I'm laughing for the right reasons.) A 'beery self-mythology' would leave songs like "Androgynous" and "Little Mascara" unexplained.

I think that Paul Westerberg may have sounded 'bleaurghiriffic' (great word!!) intentionally, but I find this endearing, like the nasality of Jonathan Richman's voice.

I'll quote part of Dan Perry's answer to the tunes thread: "Certain tunes fit certain ways of singing. Certain ways of singing fit certain tunes. [...] Is it suited to the lyrics being sung? Is it suited to the voice singing it? Does the person have the vocal training to pull it off? Does the person have too much vocal training to pull it off?"

I think Paul Westerberg's way of singing fit his songs. On the other hand, listeners may have different tolerances for vocal imperfections based upon their own training.

I think the claim that the Replacements' 'conflicted conflictedness' makes their songs illegitimate is not the same as saying ska-punk is bad because it rips off other musical genres. Experience may be genuinely secondhand. I think it's a suburban thing.

So I would say CLASSIC, but not for reasons of technical virtuosity or being really innovative or anything like that.

I hope I haven't destroyed the fun of this thread.

youn noh, Friday, 9 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Oh don't worry, its not that much fun anyway. I was really hoping that Dan would post some of his jokes that he said he had. That would have made this fun and the potential for them was the only reason why I came back. Certainly not to hear Dan's "informed criticism" or continued repetition of his assertions and uber-knowledge of Twin Cities music. *Yawn* Now I'm just bored because I've stopped talking about the Replacements and the promise of spirited and humorous rebuttals has not materialized. And as for my "disdain", I could care less if you like the Mats. You're the one who led in with the 14 year old Valleygirl-esque reply "Um...". That's bait. I should have just replied with "No duh", and left it at that.

Dan, if I knew where you were, I'd buy you a beer too cause you definitely need to lighten up a little.

Tim Baier, Friday, 9 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Here's to good friends, tonight is kinda special...

etc., etc., etc.

Nicole, Friday, 9 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

Yeah, so, classic. No doubt.

larmey, Friday, 9 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-five years ago)

six months pass...
"Sorra Ma, Forgot To Take Out The Trash."

That's one of few punk albums I like. It's just so dang good.

"Mature" Replacements just don't ring my bell. They're just songs, y'know? Not bad, not especially good. Just songs, and who needs more of those.

Jack Redelfs, Tuesday, 25 September 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

three weeks pass...
The Replacements = the American Kinks. No more, no less. Plus, lookswise Paul Westerberg could be Ray Davies' Yank cousin (or Keith Richards, if you like).

Tadeusz Suchodolski, Sunday, 21 October 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Personally I'd say classic if only for the fact they introduced me to Alex Chilton. I love the rocking and I love the lyrics. In some ways it reminds me of Catcher in the Rye in the way Westerberg vocalized what so many teens felt. But hey what the feh do I know?

helen fordsdale, Sunday, 28 October 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Aerosmith's "Jaded" really reminds me of late Replacements. Like that song Westerberg wrote for Joan Jett, "Backlash".

Arthur, Sunday, 28 October 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

two weeks pass...
Replacements, most definitely classic, in their vein. But, you'd have to be someone that can relate to what they're doing.

Isn't that it, though? This long discussion has mostly just varied by personal taste and that common problem of 'young man rock passion,' where dumbass young man can't see over his ego (to his mind, quite a large vein! --lmfao) to see that his view is not the only one in the world.

sindee light, Tuesday, 13 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

my god they were awful. are any of yo0u guys mental enough to like the film "singles" as well?

bob snoom, Tuesday, 13 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Yes. But Reality Bites is better.

JM, Tuesday, 13 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Aerosmith's "Jaded" really reminds me of late Replacements.

Good call! Now that you mention it it does seem reminiscent of "Don't tell a Soul" era Replacements, when they were patiently plugging away at MTV in the hopes of getting REM big.

Nicole, Tuesday, 13 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

*sigh*... when Ms. Ryder could do no wrong....

Sterling Clover, Wednesday, 14 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Sterl: You saw the SNL season ender last year with the Weekend Update Cliffhanger Ending?

JM, Wednesday, 14 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

No. Do tell.

Sterling Clover, Wednesday, 14 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Tina Fey (HOT): And now it's time for the Weekend Update Cliffhanger Ending, starring Winonna Ryder!

Jimmy Fallon (wearing glasses): Cool, Tina.

Tina: That's right, it's... Jimmy! You don't wear glasses!

Jimmy: I-I don't?

Tina: No! What's going to happen next!

(Winonna Ryder runs out)

Winonna Ryder (VERY HOT): One of you is the father of my child!

(shocked looks as they all freeze for the camera. Winonna Ryder cracks up. Scene falls apart)

JM, Wednesday, 14 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

two weeks pass...
I listened to All Shook Down twice in the car this weekend. It's funny how he always puts a slow song at the end. So old-fashioned of him.

youn, Monday, 3 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

one month passes...
i like the replacements. they make me feel good. their songs rock, and they're fun for me to pick up my guitar and bash the chords out on, you know? i like westerberg's voice, i like their arrangements, and i like the production on the early albums. hell, even "Tim" has some really good moments. maybe i think like a rock critic, but all i know is that the replacements mean something to me, even though i've discovered the music 20 years or so after the fact. if it's strong enough to do that, all the better.

joe, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

my god they were awful. are any of yo0u guys mental enough to like the film "singles" as well?
Especially the joke about how famous in Belgium the band was. Har har.

helenfordsdale, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

fuckin 80s failures. replacements. sort of crap u hear on glr dan baker and that irish twat taste in there arse no real peopl bot it shows wot load of shit it really was. worse than spin doctors. crowd in a house. thank fuk for nirvana save us from this college boy crap.

XStatic Peace, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

thank fuk for nirvana save us from this college boy crap.

Wha...?...? Nirvana stole its act from the Replacements.

Dave225, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Nirvana is college boy crap. And they stole their act from The Pixies by Cobain's own admission.

JM, Wednesday, 23 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-four years ago)

nine months pass...
Dan Perry's comments brought back memories of why the Minneapolis music scene is as pathetic as anywhere else.

Oh, and I grew up in and around the Twin Cities, too, so I figure my line of bullshit is just as qualified as anyone else ranting around here.

Virtually from the time they signed to Twin/Tone, the Replacements were hated by many other local musicians, probably from jealousy as much as anything else. Which is the way it's always been up there (or anywhere else on earth, I imagine) and why it's such a pathetic "scene." The same thing happens to every band that sells any records or gains a scintilla of popularity: they get ragged on. The hissing and backbiting for Trip Shakespeare, the Geardaddies, the Jayhawks, even Prince...if a band could fill the main room a couple of nights at the First Avenue, they definitely were too popular for the Twin Town cognoscenti. Time and time again I endured bitching by worthless other bands about how Westerberg sold out, couldn't write good songs, couldn't play for shit, and the worst offense--that he quit drinking and lost his talent with his habit--whenever crawling the racks at the various record stores and clubs around town. Sick.

The Replacements had some great, great moments in their released work, though live they were generally spotty. Westerberg's songs were not groundbreaking or sonically challenging but to refer to The Replacements as representative of the "worst" that the Twin Cities has or had to offer is just plain bullshit. It smacks of the immature jealousy that ruins any potential music scene. And it's all based on the fact that more people bought 'Mats' albums than Walt Mink's. And while I didn't get into all the other bands proffered up by Perry as better than the Replacements, I saw more than a few bad nights by a few of them to know that they were far from perfect. Or more relevant in any way.

The Replacements are a classic.

Don Weiner, Friday, 25 October 2002 16:41 (twenty-three years ago)

Yay, I have a hata!

I'm not at all jealous of The Replacements. I just don't like them. Surely that isn't very difficult to comprehend?

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 25 October 2002 17:04 (twenty-three years ago)

good to see it revived. hilarious stuff. i must try one of their recs someday.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Friday, 25 October 2002 17:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Yo Dan, I'm not a hata.

At least, not any more than you are.

It's not that you just "don't like them." It's that you posit that they were the *worst* of what the Twin Cities had to offer. I mean really, you can't think of dozens of other bands who were worse? Or, as I posit, do you just think they represented the nadir of the scene because a) so many people knew who they were and b) so many more people bought their records?

There were and are plenty of reasonable people who think that the Replacements were a dumbed down version of Thin Lizzy or a lazy version of Bad Company. There are also plenty of reasonable people who think that the Replacements had some damn great songs. But you're part of the group who is intent on spinning their success (?) into something much more negative than that, something that the local music scene never needed. If anything, the attention the Replacements brought on to the indie scene in Minneapolis gave a lot of bands deals that they likely never otherwise would have had. The cancer on any scene is resentment, and whether you will deny you had any towards the Replacements, a lot of bands did.

RIP Paul Wellstone.

"Dapper" Don Weiner, Friday, 25 October 2002 18:03 (twenty-three years ago)

I like you, Don.

I freely admit that my stance on The Replacements as put forward in this thread is blatant hyperbole. I'm certain that there are many TC bands I want nothing to do with who are *objectively* (if you can measure that) worse than The Replacements. My issue with The Replacements is that they don't hit any of my emotions or any of my "ooh, that's neat!" buttons. The bands I listed do. I think _Miss Happiness_ is one of the most underrated albums of the 90s, Husker Du were phenomenal, and most of the other groups I listed outside of the Prince Axis are dance/industrial groups whose core audience probably wouldn't have had anything to do with The Replacements, anyway. I mean, the entire focus of Savage Aural Hotbed was performance art featuring kodo drumming, PVC tubing, guitar squalls, woodwind abuse and tricks with rhythm; if that's the type of thing you're looking for in your music, you're going to find The Replacements wildly uninteresting. (Likewise, the first Walt Mink song I heard was "Croton-Harmon", with its super-syncopation and absolutely killer 4/4:7/8 hook between verses; once I heard that, I was ready to dive into the rest of the album full steam.)

So, you can look at my stance from a particular viewpoint and say, "Well, he hates them because he's jealous of their success," but that's woefully inaccurate. It's much closer to "He hates them because he's not at all disposed towards the style of music they embody, but people latched onto it and he had to hear them everywhere he went because of his older brother."

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 25 October 2002 18:19 (twenty-three years ago)

love it

a (waterface), Friday, 3 October 2025 18:44 (nine months ago)

Should be about that 90s Arizona band The Refreshments

brimstead, Friday, 3 October 2025 18:44 (nine months ago)

It's too bad Michael Snow is no longer with us. He would've made a film worthy of the Tim videos.

birdistheword, Friday, 3 October 2025 18:51 (nine months ago)

scenes:
* me and Bob goofin around in the Cuyahoga Valley, ideally during spring or fall
* me and Bob bickering about how to decorate the attic (specifically window treatments)
* Bob teaching me some basic drum patterns and us jamming dorkily in the garage, collapsing into laughter
* me and Bob sharing a chaste and wholesome hug as he decides that he is moving on after his retreat at my parents' house
* Bob lives

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Friday, 3 October 2025 18:59 (nine months ago)

* me and Bob playing dress up

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Friday, 3 October 2025 18:59 (nine months ago)

* you and Bob making pancakes

a (waterface), Friday, 3 October 2025 19:10 (nine months ago)

i put a smiley face on his and he rolls his eyes (before gobbling it with his hands), we lol

tell me this wouldn't be more amusing than a biopic of a book that everyone who wanted to read has already read

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Friday, 3 October 2025 19:15 (nine months ago)

I would've written slashfic about Tommy, but it's the kind where we hook up, have an awesome time, and the next day he calls me a fag in front of all his friends.

The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 October 2025 19:29 (nine months ago)

LL I would 100% watch your movie and also contribute to its Kickstarter.

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Friday, 3 October 2025 19:48 (nine months ago)

xpost Tommy Gets His Tonsils (Blown) Out

Baronet Drowned in Night Frolic (President Keyes), Friday, 3 October 2025 20:00 (nine months ago)

Alfred's Got a Boner

The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 October 2025 20:05 (nine months ago)

All this talk makes me want a biopic of Pollard

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Saturday, 4 October 2025 19:50 (nine months ago)

Danny McBride and Walton Goggins as Bob and Tobin.

Mike Dixn, Saturday, 4 October 2025 20:38 (nine months ago)

lol

a tv star not a dirty computer man (the table is the table), Sunday, 5 October 2025 01:59 (eight months ago)

Leaving aside the lameness of some of the company here — and the center squish of Spanberger — this is still a good show by Tommy.

https://i.imgur.com/acMCXpf.png

paper plans (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 14 October 2025 12:41 (eight months ago)

Wow. Didn't know Klobuchar was in Manassas.

Tight steel. Alien forces. Megamachine vs. the sleazers. (President Keyes), Tuesday, 14 October 2025 13:42 (eight months ago)

one month passes...

Has anyone listened yet?

Nicholas Raybeat (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 21 November 2025 21:30 (seven months ago)

Didn’t buy Let it Be box set and not seeing it in streaming yet

curmudgeon, Saturday, 22 November 2025 05:07 (seven months ago)

Oops it is on streaming

curmudgeon, Saturday, 22 November 2025 05:24 (seven months ago)

I bought it, but tracking only says a label was made so I guess Electric Fetus still needs to drop it off at the post office. (I ordered from them because they had that exclusive free live CD as a bonus.)

birdistheword, Saturday, 22 November 2025 05:27 (seven months ago)

one month passes...

Haven't checked for original painting yet:

The Replacements' album art

The painting that inspired the band's second album, Not Available, a variant image of Edweena of that used on cover. The back of the album credits it as “based on a drawing by a Resident”. Sold by PBA Galleries for $4,062 following an estimate of $200-$300.

https://www.finebooksmagazine.com/fine-books-news/robert-hoe-accused-lincoln-conspirator-letter-and-replacements-album-art-week-rare

dow, Monday, 12 January 2026 21:15 (five months ago)

uh i think you mean The Residents

a (waterface), Monday, 12 January 2026 21:18 (five months ago)

sic!

dow, Monday, 12 January 2026 21:35 (five months ago)

If Paul Westerberg ever comes out of retirement, he should do it as a secret gig swap with the Residents, because man that would be hilarious for about five minuets before the anger of the concertgoers got out of hand.

birdistheword, Monday, 12 January 2026 21:49 (five months ago)

i like both!

ICE = Tonton Macoute (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 12 January 2026 22:17 (five months ago)

I was all, Who the hell is Edweena?

https://i.ibb.co/Y4gBXXns/MS0x-Mjk2-Lmpw-ZWc.jpg

pplains, Tuesday, 13 January 2026 01:23 (five months ago)

Loool!

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 01:37 (five months ago)

i had that record in my shop decades ago

ICE = Tonton Macoute (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 13 January 2026 02:45 (five months ago)

Bob Mehr suggested on social media that Finn's hair in a later sketch was also a tribute to Tommy's crazy barnet from the Mats' infamous SNL performance. He did not wear Bob's loon pants - WIMP!

the important "maybe his head just did that" theory (stevie), Sunday, 18 January 2026 20:17 (five months ago)

Love the almost deep focus effect in the photo of Valerie Dee Naranjo standing in the back pretty much echoing his pose.

Eric Blore Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 23 January 2026 16:22 (five months ago)


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