- Pleased To Meet Me · 1987
- Let It Be · 1984
- Tim (Expanded Edition) · 1985
- Tim (Expanded Edition) · 1985
- Pleased To Meet Me · 1987
- Don't Tell a Soul (Expanded Edition) · 1989
- Tim (Expanded Edition) · 1985
- Tim (Expanded Edition) · 1985
- Let It Be · 1984
- Let It Be · 1984
- Pleased to Meet Me (Expanded Edition) · 1987
- Tim (Expanded Edition) · 1985
- Tim (Expanded Edition) · 1985
Essential Albums
- The Replacements were the ‘80s alternative rock band that almost made it. For their ardent fans, the magic is in that ‘almost.’ The band, led by songwriter Paul Westerberg, focused on life’s beautiful losers, those cursed by circumstance and the fatal flaw that never allows success through the door, no matter how loud the knock of opportunity. Southern cult rocker, Big Star’s Alex Chilton is lauded in a song bearing his name, and it’s on his wild, weary spirit that the band’s raucous Stones-esque sound is based. “I.O.U.,” “Never Mind,” “Valentine” and especially the diving suicide tale of “The Ledge” stand among the their finest songs. Guitarist Bob Stinson was out of the band by this point, leaving the guitar duties to Westerberg, who was also busy wrestling with Chilton’s old producer Jim Dickinson over what he saw as too-controlling production. The sparse acoustic gentility of “Skyway” points towards Westerberg’s eventual solo career, while “Can’t Hardly Wait” struggles to put Memphis horns on the band’s audience rousing staple with relative success. Perfection was never in the band’s vocabulary. Like the Faces who the band clearly emulated, they specialized in a warts-n-all realism.
- Tim was the album that pushed The Replacements into the mainstream with their intricate, punk-infused rock. “Bastards of Young” is backed by a searing electric guitar and propelled by sparse drums; “Left of the Dial” is anthemic and frantic, with guitars crashing and ebbing. On the other end of the band’s spectrum, the charming and gently melodic tingle of “Kiss Me on the Bus” brushes against romance in a way The Replacements never had before.
- Most punk groups eventually “mature,” once they learn to play their instruments better. But The Replacements grew into the most loved rock ’n’ roll band in the ‘80s indie scene—and this third album shows why. Their cover of Kiss’ “Black Diamond” is pure rock thunder, but “Unsatisfied,” “Androgynous,” “Sixteen Blue,” and “Answering Machine” are cries from the heart that established Paul Westerberg as a singer for misfits everywhere. His cracked, pained vocals are beyond compare. Even silly stuff like “Tommy Gets His Tonsils Out” and “Gary’s Got a Boner” rock with heart.
Music Videos
- 2021
- 2021
- 2021
- 2021
- 2006
Artist Playlists
- Meet the sons of no one.
- They were raised on classic rock but corrupted by punk.
- The Mats have spawned pop-punk stars and raspy-voiced raconteurs.
- Behind the drunk-punk reputation is a sense of adventure.
Singles & EPs
Live Albums
Compilations
More To Hear
- Mark chats with Tommy Stinson of The Replacements.
About The Replacements
There’s a great story about The Replacements concerning an early show they played at a punk club in Trenton, New Jersey. Frontman Paul Westerberg wanted to introduce a new song, a ballad, called “You’re Getting Married One Night.” Even the band wasn’t sure about it—guitarist Bob Stinson said Westerberg should save it for his solo album, because whatever it was, it didn’t belong in The Replacements. By the end of it, he had the punks eating out of his hand. They’d always had a knack for playing what the audience didn’t want to hear (Sinatra covers for the hardcore kids, hardcore sets to the college kids)—a tendency that, combined with perpetual drunkenness, made them one of the more antagonistic bands of the early ‘80s. But the flipside to their antagonism was a utopian, be-yourself attitude that went on to define indie and alternative rock. Punk preached a haven for the freaks, but The Replacements—from the punks to the classic-rock kids to the art-school students—made space for everyone. Including, it should be said, girls. From the beginning (1981’s Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash, 1982’s Stink) they didn’t fit in: They were too self-deprecating, too classic (“Shiftless When Idle”), too interested in the minute details of the American experiment to get caught up in politics or concept. They wrote love songs about convenience-store checkout girls (“Customer”) and peans to technological alienation about how it’s hard to be real on an answering machine (“Answering Machine”). They never spared attitude (“Bastards of Young”) but weren’t macho enough to suggest that their swagger wasn’t just a mask for vulnerability (“Here Comes a Regular,” “Unsatisfied”). Let it Be and Tim, in particular, bridged the warmth of classic rock with the edge of the underground in ways no band had before, opening the door for everything from Green Day to Wilco. Even as they edged toward the mainstream (“Alex Chilton,” “I’ll Be You”) they made you feel like you were one of them—in the passenger seat, maybe, shouting along at the loud ones, looking out the window when things got quiet. They famously never quite made it—a story punctuated by a breakup in 1991, and the death of Bob Stinson a few years later, at 35. But listening to their music—the yearning, the disappointment, the bittersweet glory of the underdog—it’s hard to imagine it any other way.
- FROM
- Minneapolis, MN, United States
- FORMED
- 1979
- GENRE
- Rock