Album Reviews
Paul Westerberg the Replacements' lead singer, songwriter and principal guitarist on Let It Be writes about funny little things, like "Tommy Gets His Tonsils Out," then fills the songs with anger, frustration and excitement. His voice is great so desperate when he sings, "How do you say I'm lonely to an answering machine," so sympathetic when he sings, "Your age is the hardest age; everything drags and drags." In "Androgynous," Westerberg seems to find shortcomings in the whole lot of males in his generation: "Don't get him wrong/Don't get him mad/He might be a father, but he sure ain't a dad," he sings sadly. And in the heavy rocker "Favorite Thing," with the other members of the Replacements pounding behind him, he screams like an incensed Joe Strummer.
Whereas most of the songs on the group's first two albums, Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash and Hootenanny, were speeding, hard-driven rock, there's an amazing range to Let It Be. Westerberg works out his many different ideas by occasionally augmenting the band which is almost invariably awful live with friends like R.E.M.'s Peter Buck on guitar and the Suburbs' Chan Poling on piano. He leads into "Unsatisfied" with a gorgeous solo on twelve-string acoustic guitar, then tears out your heart singing, "Everything goes or anything goes/All of the time/Everything you dream of is right in front of you/Liberty is a lie." Of course, he's not the first rocker who wanted satisfaction and couldn't get any, but in an age when most rock records are studied and wimpy, this rugged album feels truly fresh.
(Posted: Feb 14, 1985)
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- I Will Dare
- Favorite Thing
- We're Comin' Out
- Tommy Gets His Tonsils Out
- Androgynous
- Black Diamond
- Unsatisfied
- Seen Your Video
- Gary's Got A Boner
- Sixteen Blue
- Answering Machine
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Bluemask writes:
The 'Mats last indie album and the first hint at the greatness that good have been. Though there are some tossaway joke songs (Gary's Got A Boner), the album takes a deeply serious tone such as the caberatesque Androgounous. How John Waters didn't use Sixteen Blue in one of his movies is beyond me. The best moments though are on Unsatisfied (with REM's Peter Buck supplying the guitar) and the album's closer Answering Machine, the best song ever written about a long distance relationship. "How do you say I'm lonely to an answering machine."
Dec 6, 2005 03:38:41
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