The Replacements Album: “Don't Tell a Soul”
 Description :
The Replacements: Paul Westerberg, Slim Dunlap, Tommy Stinson, Chris Mars.
<p>The last album the Replacements recorded as a full-fledged band effort, 1989's DON"T TELL A SOUL featured new guitarist Slim Dunlap replacing the departed Tommy Stinson's punk-inspired fervor with more subtle sonic flavors. At the time, fans found it too "soft," but in hindsight it's a solid, mature effort featuring some of the band's most melodic, well crafted tunes. Such songs as "Achin' to Be," and "I'll Be You" are sparkling, effervescent pop-rockers boasting both hooks and bite.
Track Listing :
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Album Information :
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UPC:075992583121
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Format:CD
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Type:Performer
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Genre:Rock & Pop - Alternative
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Artist:The Replacements
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Producer:Matt Wallace; The Replacements
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Label:Sire Records (USA)
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Distributed:WEA (distr)
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Release Date:1990/10/25
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Original Release Year:1989
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Discs:1
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Recording:Analog
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Mixing:Analog
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Mastering:Digital
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Length:39:20
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Mono / Stereo:Stereo
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Studio / Live:Studio
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
- Not nearly as bad as everyone says
I think I went the opposite route that most people take in terms of discovering the Replacements. It seems like most people start off checking out more respected albums like "Let It Be" and "Tim." I just happened to listen to this album first which might make me slightly biased since I had no basis for comparison.
First off, let me say that this is a great record. A lot of people find this album to be lackluster but I disagree. It's got all the ingredients of any good Replacements album which, simply put, are great songwriting and great music. It does lean more towards a pop style of music than their previous albums, but I don't mind pop if it's done well (which it certainly is here). The playing is also a bit more restrained here, but there's still enough of the Replacements' trademark recklessness that comes through. Like all their great albums, the songs are eclectic and no two sound the same. Following the low key vibe of "They're Blind" with the rave up, energetic stomp of "Anywhere's Better Than Here" are perfect examples of the various moods that they are capable of.
The only real problem with the album is that it does suffer a bit from the typical, overly polished, 80's style production. There's a lot of reverb on everything, especially the drums, which sort of saps the raw energy that tends to give the Replacements an edge. However, the songs are good enough so that it doesn't really matter that much. In some cases, the production even works to a song's advantage such as contributing to the haunting feeling of "Rock N'Roll Ghost."
In the end, I think "Don't Tell a Soul" is a really solid album that holds up over time and repeated listens. Is it their best album? No. But is it a bad record? Definitely not. Is it worth checking out? Absolutely!
In comparison with their other albums: 4/5 stars
P.S.-"Talent Show," the first track, is one of my favorite Replacements songs.
21 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
- Overlooked
If I could confess to you something I have noticed for years about my favorite band from the 80's The Replacements. Many of the Replacement fans are idiots. They cannot accept that a man grows older and changes. I remember when I first bought Don't tell a Soul the complaining from Mats fans. Paul sounds incredibly reserved. So the boys who played loud, fast and obnoxious grew up. Must we crucify them. The fact remains that "Rock & Roll Ghost" is a freighting epitaph for a man who has given his life to rock and roll and just disappeared before everyone's eyes. Since the Replacements were essentially ghosts none of the Tom Petty fans seemed to have minded when he lifted the line "Rebel without a clue" line from "I'll Be You" for one of his lame excuses for rock and roll. PETTY HAD A HIT WITH IT! "Darlin' One" hold the emotion of a man screaming the loss of a woman he so desperately wants and cannot have. Is that what the songs is about? I don't know that's what I read into it. That is what the song means to me! "We'll Inherit the Earth" should have been a Generation X mantra. Except it came out 3 years too early. This is a great album with great songwriting. This is one of the Replacements finest moments and the majority of Replacement fans dismiss it.......Simpletons......
"sparr0" (Kansas City, MO United States) - June 21, 2001
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
- A View from the Outside
It was strange to read the consistent mythos of these reviews: "The 'Mats Grow up and Sell Out (okay or not okay?)" If this really is one of the worst Replacements albums (sorry, I don't even know why they're the "'Mats"), I should just order the rest right now. I was given this disk by a friend of a friend over two years ago, and it has yet to leave my fast-rotation stack. Okay, I was just a bit too old to catch their wave the first time out. Maybe I'm the guy they were selling out to (though since my faves in the day were older Rundgren and Stomu Yamashta, no wonder that ploy didn't work). But this is still brilliant song-writing. I get the calls for better production, better playing, etc. But I think people have to get off being afraid to rate this album highly for fear of sullying the pristine record of the earlier disks. Maybe it's not up to such rarified standards of purity, but it's great listening. It's smooth without being soporific, haunting without ... sound effects, and loaded with unsubtle nuances - interesting small twists on normal pop expectations. People who don't know the Replacements from the Refreshments will hear this album and say "Damn. That's interesting." True-blue Replacementistas, please consider rating this on a scale for all music, not a private, tougher one for 'Mats albums. It won't hurt to have outsiders listen to "your" music; heck, it'll just jack up the price on the used copies of this CD that you probably want to sell anyway.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- If I could only have 5 albums.....this is on the list
This album hits me from note one and never stops. Absolutely brilliant song-writing and the boys seem to have put the beer bottle down long enough to finally take themselves seriously (literally: you can here a bottle hit the floor in 'Talent Show' - I love that.) Not to take from the attempts the lads took to depart from the normal car wreck approach on 'Tim' or 'Pleased To Meet Me', this release is cohesive and mature - they turned the corner on this one. Those who fell in love with the thrashpop of 80's Mats will no doubt call them a sell-out as 'I'll Be You' received a fair amount of radio time in the early 90s. This is a Replacements masterpiece - buy it now.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
- "The rich are gettin' richer and the poor are gettin' drunk."
The 'Mats' sixth studio album is the one that almost all fans hate. Dismissed as too mainstream and too slick in its production, Don't Tell A Soul is often disregarded in discussion of The Replacements' legacy and influence.
In reality however, the album is a progression from the rawer (and similarly brilliant) Pleased To Meet Me (1987), and is Paul Westerberg's most accomplished work as a songwriter.
The album stands as the band's most melancholy work, Slim Dunlap's lead guitar is refined and understated (replacing Bob Stinson's wild-man solos); Tommy Stinson's bass work is tighter than ever; Chris Mars' drumming is pure precision; and whilst Westerberg's songs are still built on attitude and alienation they are tinged with an air of acceptance and resignation: the band's first and only hit, 'I'll Be You,' hints at the band's desire to become, if only fleetingly, the stars they should have been, had their loutish, beer-soaked immaturity not got the better of them. The problem is, this belligerent f**k-'em-all gusto made The 'Mats so endearing, and the trouble fans have is refusing to acknowledge that even these beautiful losers had to grow up sometime, disavowing the fact that 'Achin' To Be' 'I'll Be You' 'Rock n Roll Ghost' and 'Darlin' One' are some of the most sophisticated rock songs ever written.
As someone has said earlier, if anyone thinks the band had sold out on Don't Tell A Soul, then Westerberg's tortured scream at the opening of 'Anywhere's Better Than Here' should tell them otherwise.
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