Showing posts with label Alternative Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alternative Rock. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 April 2016

Anniversary Albums: Edition Nine - Manic Street Preachers "Everything Must Go"



This weeks anniversary album is the Manic Street Preachers “Everything Must Go” which turns 20 next month.

Released in 1996, "Everything Must Go" was the Welsh rockers fourth record, and first since the disappearance of the band's song-writer and rhythm guitarist Richey Edwards. To this day Edwards has never been found and is presumed dead.


Musically speaking, this record represented quite a change for the band, who up until that point had played quite dark punk-inspired rock. This album goes down a more anthemic stadium rock route, with big rock ballads and more of a commercial feel.
This change of direction might have had something to do with the band trying to fit in with the very popular Britpop movement of the time.
Although in terms of guitar music, this record was quite different from Britpop, taking more of an influence from both hard rock and glam rock.


"Everything Must Go" also marked a shift for the band lyrically speaking, mainly due in part to Edwards disappearance. Gone were the introspective and autobiographical tracks of their previous work, and in came more historical and political themes of which they would go on to become well known for.
Nicky Wire in an interview put this down to the band feeling timid and nervous in the wake of Edwards departure.
The album also features five tracks with lyrics by Edwards. 


"Everything Must Go" was a critical and commercial success upon it release, It reached number two in the UK and also marked the moment the band went from a cult band to a commercially successful mainstream group.
The band won two awards at the 1997 BRIT awards in the wake of the albums success. Best UK album and best British group.



In terms of its legacy and place in British music, "Everything Must Go" is considered the groups best record alongside "The Holy Bible", and a classic mid-90s record.
Q Magazine voted it the 16th best album in the magazines lifetime, while Kerrang! Ranked it 24 in their list of the 100 best British rock albums.
"Everything Must Go" helped establish the Manic’s position as one of the best bands to come out of Wales, as well as one of the best guitar bands to come out of the UK during the 90’s. 


- Sam 

Sunday, 13 March 2016

Tracks of the Week 5: 7/3 - 13/3



Sup listeneaders/readisteners! Now onto the fifth straight week of new music tracks, having fun with this series, hope you’re enjoying hearing these tracks too. Yet again, it was a pretty varied & interesting seven days, it seems as if the more attention and effort you put into searching for new tunes, the better gems you’ll find. As is the case with this week.

Average Rap Band – “Fly Casual”


Tom Scott’s current project Average Rap Band is in the process of releasing their next effort El Sol, and dropped this track in advance yesterday. Along with the earlier promotional video, the visuals in “Fly Casual” are packed with 1980s/1990s nostalgic aesthetics – including neon-clad rollerbladers, 32-bit video games, TV advertisements and old school hip hop videos. The track itself, feeling like an alternative R&B/hip hop fusion, aims for a mellow, chilled vibe and pretty much nails it. 3.5/5

Flatbush ZOMBiES – “R.I.P.C.D.”


FINALLY! 3001: A Laced Odyssey is here, the debut LP by Flatbush Zombies after years of mixtapes from the Brooklyn collective. It’s something of a coincidence to see a track titled “R.I.P.C.D.” seeing as Kanye West tweeted about the “death” of CDs a few days ago. Though I often consider the so-called ‘demise’ of physical formats from a collector’s POV, there is another dimension as well – how it affects musicians, as Eric Arc Elliott says on the hook “RIP to the CD, can’t even play my hits / Cause new computer shit without the means to play the shit”. Potential line of the week from Meechy Darko as well – “My semi-automatic will splatter a nigga like Jackson Pollock”. 4/5

Joey Bada$$ – “Brooklyn’s Own”


March 9 marked the 19-year anniversary of the death of Notorious B.I.G., the undisputed king of Brooklyn. Joey Bada$$, who would have been just 2 years old when Biggie died, dropped this track as a way of tribute, another teaser for what I can only assume to be a new project following B4.DA.$$. In comparison to the tougher, aggressive & confident track “Ready”, this sees Joey back in his comfort zone – jazzy, laid-back beats with a catchy hook, straight out of the Digable Planets/A Tribe Called Quest playbook. 3.5/5

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – “Gamma Knife”


GAMMA! Aussie psych-rock outfit King Gizzard’s next full-length Nonagon Infinity is due next month. “Gamma Knife” bursts with electrified walls of psychedelic guitars, barking “uhhrrrwooo” vocals and a slightly manic rhythm section. It’s like Pink Floyd’s “Let There Be More Light” amped up by several more notches – maybe even up to 11. Syd Barrett would’ve definitely been tripping out to this, front & centre – facepaint, cult robe and everything. 4/5


PJ Harvey – “The Community of Hope”



Alt-rock/folk-rock queen PJ Harvey’s The Hope Six Demolition Project isn’t far away – about a month to be exact, a short space of time considering the 5-year gap after Let England Shake. It packs quite a bit in for a 2:24 track – strong guitar & rhythm sections accompanied by forceful yet melodic vocals from Harvey and backup singers on the chorus. It’s slated to be the opener on the new album, detailing a small township or community negatively affected by government and corporate development projects, ironically called “The Community of Hope”. Will be interesting to see how this concept plays out through the rest of the album. 4/5

 - Karl

Sunday, 28 February 2016

Tracks of the Week 3: 22/2 - 28/2




Three for three! Back again with some selections of my favourite music from the past week. Even though this is a new series for the blog, I was blown away with the quality of great music this week, definitely give these tracks a listen if you haven't already. As always, let me know of any other new songs from the past week which I might have missed.

Iggy Pop – “Sunday”


Post Pop Depression, the collaborative project between Iggy Pop & Josh Homme (from Queens of the Stone Age) isn’t out until March but the album leaked online a few weeks ago, and Iggy’s official youtube channel dropped this track from the album yesterday. Apart from the already released “Gardenia”, I think this is the strongest offering from the album – I love the backing vocal harmonies, driving guitars and thumping rhythm sections. (I’m always a sucker for good handclaps too) The sickly-sweet string outro is a bit strange, but it’s not an unpleasant aftertaste. 4/5


Joey Bada$$ - “Ready”



When I picked Joey’s debut LP B4.DA.$$ as one of my favourites from 2015, I mused about the need for him to demonstrate a bit of versatility for whatever he channels himself into next – don’t get me wrong, I love old-school sounding hip hop, jazz rap in particular, but staying fresh in the game is paramount! That freshness is exactly the vibe I’m getting from his latest offering, produced by Statik Selektah. He seems to be leaning more towards a tougher, harder style of delivery, and clever wordplay like this “And if you really break a leg, I hope they still will cheer you” is dynamite. 4/5


Macklemore & Ryan Lewis ft. Chance The Rapper – “Need to Know”


Chalk up another slam dunk for Chance, the hype is definitely getting substantial towards his third mixtape project. A recurring theme in This Unruly Mess I’ve Made is reflection and self-evaluation, focusing on Macklemore in particular in the years following his controversial Grammy win for Best Rap Album in 2014. I think the two play around the subject matter brilliantly, Chance even looks back on when he used to open shows for Macklemore, and how things have changed since then. The piano, horn & flute segments make for a great beat too. 3.5/5


Miguel – “Waves (Tame Impala Remix)”


Kevin Parker can literally do no wrong – everything he touches turns to spectacular, lush psychedelic goodness. This is one of several remixes featured in Miguel’s Rogue Waves EP, and stands miles apart from the rest – even eclipsing Miguel’s original. The additional backing vocal, “Gonna riiiiiiiide that waaaaaaaaave” is glorious, sung by Parker himself (I’m assuming?) and the extra instrumentation provided by Tame Impala that we all know and love transforms this into an addictive, trippy, R&B doozy. 4.5/5


Santigold – “Rendezvous Girl”


During my listen of Santigold’s new album 99¢ I had to double-check that I hadn’t accidentally swapped over to an 80s playlist when this came on. “Rendezvous Girl” is a straight mesh of new wave & electropop aesthetics, something I’d expect to hear from Duran Duran or New Gold Dream-era Simple Minds. The terrific driving beat, pulsating synth melodies and Santigold’s airy vocals all combine perfectly. It’s impossible to sit still while listening to this – I challenge anyone to do so. This is the banger of the week, right here. 4.5/5

- Karl

Sunday, 21 February 2016

Tracks of the Week 2: 14/2 - 21/2


Back again for the second instalment of Tracks of the Week. Let me know if there were any tracks you enjoyed over the past seven days which I might have missed. These are just five selections that I dig.

Aesop Rock – “Rings”


I find that hip hop lends itself particularly well to personal narratives & reflection upon past experiences, which is what this new track by Aesop Rock provides. It’s a recollection of the New York rapper’s failed ventures as a visual artist, lyrically very solid and an appreciable flow that doesn’t leave the listener reeling. I just wish there was bit more spice with the production. But I’ll be checking out Aesop’s new project regardless. 3.5/5


Kanye West – “Ultralight Beam”


Since last week’s post, The Life of Pablo (Mk I) has been & gone. Amongst its 18 tracks are a handful of songs I’d rank alongside Kanye’s best material, one of the standouts being the rousing, gospeltastic opener “Ultralight Beam” featuring Kelly Price, The-Dream, Kirk Franklin and a verse from Chance The Rapper which has been touted as the best set of rhymes on the album – I’d be reluctant to disagree. 4.5/5


J Dilla – “The Introduction”


Those familiar with Jay Dee a.k.a. J Dilla know that his place as a legendary producer & beatmaker is indisputable. But the upcoming release The Diary is a collection of Dilla’s vocal work, something which I'm not too familiar with. But based on this opening track from the album, he certainly could handle himself as an MC. I’m definitely curious to hear what this collection of previously unheard material will be like. 3.5/5


Tim Hecker – “Castrati Stack”



I saw this was getting a fair amount of buzz online, as a newcomer to Tim Hecker’s work I did not expect to hear a minimalistic, atmospheric electronic piece accompanied by a haunting vocal section from the Icelandic Choir Ensemble. It reminds me of the abstract, musique concrète electronic material that Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark dabbled with in the early 1980s, as well as Brian Eno’s famous ambient pieces. 4/5

Weezer – “L.A. Girlz”



It’s 2016 and Rivers Cuomo is still making music lamenting the nature of his relationships, in this instance the women that reside in Los Angeles who have seemingly wronged him! Again! Musically speaking it’s a welcome return to form, reminiscent of the band’s best output between Weezer (Blue Album) and Pinkerton. Rivers can still belt out a decent vocal performance, too. 3.5/5

- Karl

Saturday, 19 September 2015

The Libertines - Anthems for Doomed Youth (2015)


The fact the Libertines have reunited to do some shows is not a surprise. Bands are reuniting all the time, this is not unusual in this day and age. What is a surprise, however, is the fact they have recorded an album, eleven years after their last one in 2004. The Libertines continue to pulverize opinion, you either love them or you hate them. Those that dislike them remember the very public relationship difficulties between Pete Doherty and Carl Barat, as well as Doherty’s very well publicized drug problems. There are also those who think their music is to one-dimensional and dare I say it boring. At the same time, they are well-loved British indie darlings, particularly by the music press. They were a band who took indie out of the 90s and brought it down a peg back to the level of the people, this after the heights of Britpop. So the fact they reconvened in Thailand of all places to record new music caught some people unawares, but has made this reunion just that more interesting in the knowledge that new music would follow also suit.

The album is titled “Anthems for Doomed Youth”, a title which in itself is perhaps more relevant than ever for a majority of today’s youth who are struggling in a firmly entrenched neo-liberal society. In terms of the word anthems, well, the Libertines are good at producing rousing anthemic indie rockers. You just have to look back at some of the songs off their first two albums to see this. But ten years after their last record, what would the 2014 Libertines sound like? Would the new tracks stand up and are new audiences ready for the rousing and very personal anthems that the Libertines are known for? Well, after several listens to this album, I would say yes. The likely lads are back and perhaps they are better than ever.

The album kicks off with “Barbarians”. This is classic Libertines with very catchy vocals, and Barat and Doherty harmonizing in the choruses. This track also has quite a Pulp-like sound to it, which in itself is quite interesting. Next is the reggae-sounding “Gunja Din”. This was the first track that was released and is very unlike the Libertines in sound. Was it the Thai surrounds that made them go down a reggae path? Or were they just caught up in a desire to experiment? Either way it sounds good and it shows there is more to this band than just straight out indie rock. “Fame and Fortune” is a very British pop track with nods to the Kinks and Blur, Camden and London, while “Anthem for Doomed Youth” is a rousing ballad that I can just see thousands of people sticking their cigarette lighters in the air to. Side one then ends with an old track “You’re My Waterloo” and the bouncing rocker “Belly of the Beast”.

The second half of the album kicks off with “Iceman”, a great track that sounds like it could have come from a mid-90s Blur album. This is followed by one of the stand out tracks on the album “Heart of the Mattter”, which is sure to get pubs, clubs and festival crowds singing in unison. A couple of weaker tracks then emerge in the form of “Fury of Chonburi” and “The Milkman’s Horse”, but luckily things pick up again with the fantastic “Glasgow Coma Scale Blues”. Boy this is a great track full of driving guitars, great vocals and a brilliant chorus. The album then ends with “Dead For Love”, another softer ballad, something the Libertines are not known for, but which appear quite a bit on this album. Along with the main album, the deluxe edition contains some fantastic bonus tracks which are also worth checking out. “Love on the Dole”, “Bucket Shop”, “Lust of the Libertines” and “7 Deadily Sins” keep in line with the quality found on the album and only serve to extend the idea that the Libertines have come back with a bang on “Anthems for Doomed Youth”.


So in summing up, my thoughts on “Anthems for Doomed Youth” is that it is a great return for the Libertines who many thought were done as a recording act and would fade away into indie history. They seem to have matured as a recording act and their songs seem more crafted and melodic than a lot of their earlier work. The classic Libertines sound is still there in the form of great harmonizing and the ever-present minor chords (are they ever not playing in a minor key?), but at the same time they have shown a willingness to experiment with other styles and not simply just sit and attempt to re-invent the past. The band have been touring and playing festivals and by all accounts aside from one incident before a show where Pete Doherty had an anxiety attack, everything has gone smoothly and they have been well received by audiences. Where to now is any ones guess, as previous history with this band suggests anything is possible both good and bad. But if this is the final Libertines album, it does hold up well musically, and would be a fitting way for the boys in this band to go out on. 

A-

Sam 

Sunday, 3 August 2014

Big Star - #1 Record (1972)


#1 Record was the debut album by American power pop group Big Star. Released in 1972, this album was quite a landmark record, why? Well it brought power pop, a style of rock made popular in the UK by bands such as The Kinks and The Who during the 60s into the 70s, and into the US, while simultaneously taking the style down a completely new path musically to boot.

The line-up for the recording of this album was the classic Big Star line-up, Chris Bell on guitar and vocals, Alex Chilton on guitar and vocals, Andy Hummel on bass guitar and Jody Stephens on drums. So pretty much your standard rock four piece. Musically, power pop was a style that nobody else was really doing in the States at the time and stylistically consists of a big guitar sound with lots of power chords and heavy rhythms, complemented by some big anthemic pop hooks in the melody and vocals. This was far removed from the hard rock, blues rock and psychedelic music that had dominated for five to six years stateside, and to achieve this very authentic sound for its day, the band in their recordings tended to always play for the song and not for individual virtuoso performances. The songs themselves were the main centrepieces, not the players, and it was all for the purpose of sounding distinct and different from everyone else, something they definitely achieve on this album.

As for the songs, well the album kicks off with “Feel”, a track which showcases the Big Star sound right from the get go. There are big booming drums and powerful vocals, while a horn section and some blues guitar playing adds a nice tough to proceedings. “The Ballad of El Goodo” is a ballad of the power pop kind and quite simply oozes melody. This track also has a slight Graham Parsons feel to it, especially in the choruses with their country-like harmony vocals, a definite album stand out. “In the Street” is Big Star’s most well-known song and probably the a-typical power pop track to the point that if I was to introduce someone to power pop I would probably play them this track straight off the bat. This track simply makes you want to get in a Cadillac or mustang convertible and road trip across the US, it’s got that kind of free feel to it. The band slow things down a little on “Thirteen”, an acoustic-folk track which is a step down from the in your face explosion of some of the other tracks, but things are quickly back up and running on “Don’t Lie to Me” which has a sort of CCR/rock and roll vibe to it, showing that the band could rock out when they wanted to quite easily. After the forgettable “The India Song”, the troubadour rock of “When My Baby’s Beside Me” and the retrospective “My Life Is Right” carries us on to side two of the album in style, however it is at this point that the album loses a bit of its gusto and intensity with tracks such as “Give Me Another Chance” and “Watch the Sunrise” lacking the quality of some of the earlier tracks. But thankfully the album does not end this way and ends instead with the reflective rock ballad “Try Again”, a song that could easily put many Californian singer-songwriter to shame, while emphasising the song-writing talents of Bell and Chilton as a pairing, a pairing that unfortunately would not be seen on Big Star’s future releases.

#1 Record and Big Star themselves would go on to influence many alternative rock and indie bands in the US and elsewhere, especially bands like REM and The Replacements in the US 80s college rock scene. This despite the fact that at the time of its release #1 Record suffered from very poor sales, even though it was universally praised by critics. This album certainly set the band in motion and despite Bell’s departure, would spring board them nicely into their carefully crafted and melodic follow up Radio City. Big Star was one of the 70s most underrated bands, but they did release one of the more heavily acclaimed albums of the decade. #1 Record stood out from the rest of the US rock scene in its uniqueness and was probably ahead of its time with its power pop sound, a style that became more popular in the late-70s and 80s. Seemingly America in the early-70s were still hung over from flower power and just weren’t ready for this more melodic, poppy rock sound. Still, all these years later, I am glad we get to marvel at the songs on this album and enjoy it just as much as I am sure the 10,000-odd people who bought it in 1972 must have done.

A- 

- Sam 



Sunday, 8 June 2014

Jack White - Lazaretto (2014)


Jack White has had a very diverse music career and is what I would describe as being a bit of a musical chameleon of sorts. He had great success with the White Stripes, whilst also intermittently moving between off-shoot projects such as the Raconteurs and the Dead Weather. The beauty of following Jack White is that you don’t really know what he is thinking and where he will go next musically, making his career an intriguing follow as much as anything. With this in mind he has now moved on to a solo career, releasing his debut solo album in 2012 Blunderbuss which was a solid first up effort that encompassed many different styles. It is now 2014 and again White has another album out, his second solo offering Lazaretto and although there are some good tracks on here, the results end up being a little bid underwhelming.

White again mixes up the sounds on this album, with blues rock, garage, alternative and country all making appearances in various guises. White has been known to speak of his song-writing methods and how he never has a pre-set plan of making an album but simply records what he feels like at the time, and this is perhaps why his first two solo records sound so diverse musically and do not follow any set patterns. Lazaretto starts up with a storming track the bluesy rocker “Three Women” which on first listening perhaps could be deemed one of his best. It certainly gets the album off to a positive start with its sizzling organ and playfulness lyrically and musically. The title track “Lazaretto” follows next and is a typical White garage rocker that congers up early White Stripes with its heavy guitar riffing and pounding drums. It is nice enough as a track, but falls a bit flat as it doesn’t really explore any new musical ground and ends up being a bit pedestrian. On “Temporary Ground” White goes all country/singer-songwriter as he often has a tendency to do, and is accompanied on vocals by one of the members of his all-female backing band, with a bit of fiddle thrown in for good measure, while “Would You Fight for My Love” is a mysterious almost dark track with a bit of a psychedelic rock feel to it in what is one of the stronger tracks on the record. The first half of the album then ends with an instrumental “High Ball Stepper” which does nothing for me, and “Just One Drink” which has a country-blues vibe to it with a good sing-along line about drinking, what could be better.

The second half of the album begins with “Alone in My House” which brings out Whites softer country side again while also showcasing some thunderous piano playing, a strong feature of the album. White sounds good when he dives into the country-folk area and I am still waiting for the day the record a full country/Americana album. However, it is at this point where the record begins to flounder a bit, starting with “Entitlement” a country ballad which although sweet is a bit predictable. This is followed by “That Black Bat Licorice” which returns to the heavy guitars of the title track, but with less success in what is quite a high intensity number that moves in all sorts of directions. The album finally comes to an end with “I think I Found the Culprit” a filler type track that sees White moving in an alt-country direction this time and “Want and Able”, yet another country ballad with the ingenious lyric (insert sarcasm) “who is the who telling who what to do”. By this point I am afraid it sounds like White is running out of ideas both lyrically and musically, with this track sounding a bit like a good warm up studio track but nothing more.


So in conclusion, I would say that Lazaretto is an album with flashes of brilliance and small moments that make you sit up and take notice, but these are few and far between, with side one being the best half of the album before it eventually falls away. At this point I am still waiting for Jack White to deliver an entire album of good material, or should I say a complete musical statement that measures up to his reputation as a twenty-first century rock master, something he has so far failed to do on his first two solo outings. 

C+

- Sam 

Sunday, 11 August 2013

The Replacements - Tim (1985)


Perhaps the most significant collection of misfits to emerge in the 1980s, Minneapolis-based The Replacements were a group unquestionably deserving of crossover success, at their peak releasing a series of albums that screamed mainstream appeal which never really eventuated. From their early snarling and hissing punk-laden beginnings, the group matured surprisingly quickly with the sublime release Let It Be in 1984, an album that gained so much acclaim that the group was granted an inevitable major label contract with Sire Records, leading to the release of their fourth album Tim in 1985.

Originally intended to be handled by Big Star’s Alex Chilton, the production duties on Tim were instead managed by punk contemporary Tommy Ramone, and with the financial backing of a major label, Tim sees a vast technical upgrade over the rather sparse, budgeted Let It Be. True to the band’s style, the opening track “Hold My Life” wastes no time setting the tone of much of the album, roaring into life with a mess of heavy guitar, crashing drums and pounding bass, along with lead vocalist Paul Westerberg howling with the spirit of a young Bruce Springsteen, but with an indifferent, adolescent edge – “Hold my life until I’m ready to use it / Hold my life because I just might lose it”. Slightly more refined but just as emphatic, the following “I’ll Buy” is a rollicking number that not just evokes 50s Rock ‘n Roll, but references it (“Movies are for retards like me and Maybelline”) and it’s here that the album’s higher-end production style becomes its greatest asset, with Westerberg’s vocals jumping from prolonged wails of “Anything you want, dear” and “Everything you say, dear” to powerful reverberating bursts of  “fine, fine, fine, fine” and “buy, buy, buy, buy”.

An endearing, backhanded ballad to unfriendly flight attendants, the thumping, folk-driven “Waitress in the Sky” is among the album’s highlights, as Westerberg cruelly points out “You ain’t nothing but a waitress in the sky”, later comparing the term ‘air hostess’ with other professions that are somewhat unsavoury (“Sanitation expert and a maintenance engineer / Garbage man, a janitor and you my dear”). The closer of the album’s first side, “Swingin Party” presents itself as evidence of the band’s ability to shift in tempo, featuring delightfully breezy, jangly guitar along with prolonged, heartfelt and pained vocals by Westerberg. It’s a track filled with so much self-deprecation and insecurity that it’s almost unbearable, as Westerberg laments his future (“Quittin’ school and goin’ to work and never goin’ fishin’”) as well as bleakly putting his faults on display (“If being wrong’s a crime I’m serving forever / If being strong is what you want I need help with this here feather”)

Completing a superb one-two punch of track sequencing, the opener of the album’s second half “Bastards of Young” is without a doubt the ultimate rambunctious punk anthem, with Westerberg continuously screaming over relentless, blistering guitar work by Bob Stinson. As gnarly and hard as this track is, the poignancy of Westerberg’s lyrics are remarkably striking and hard-hitting (“The ones who love us best are the ones we lay to rest / The ones who love us least are the ones we'll die to please”) all the while chastising the state of Reagan’s ruthless, competition-driven America – “God what a mess on the ladder of success / Where you take one step and miss the whole first rung”, and the refrain “We are the sons of no-one / Bastards of young” typifies a sort of confused, adolescent sense of marginalisation. This track was fittingly chosen for the band’s network debut on Saturday Night Live, which has since become infamous not just for its raucousness, but also the band’s conduct – Westerberg cursed on air and the band stumbled around drunkenly on stage after concluding the song. Although this wasn’t a huge shock to Replacements fans (they were notorious for their hectic live performances), it was a bit of a setback for the band, receiving a lifetime ban from the show and probably hurting their chances of further mainstream exposure.

After the adrenalin-infused college radio staples “Lay It Down Clown”, “Left of the Dial” (the title itself a reference to college radio) and “Little Mascara” is the down-tempo, miserable closing track “Here Comes a Regular”, featuring just acoustic guitar alongside Westerberg’s morose vocals. As the album’s final chance to impart anything on Westerberg’s generation, he warns against idly sitting in a state of procrastination and apathy – “The fool who wastes his life, god rest his guts” all in the context of a narrator in a bar, watching the seasons pass as the people around him come and go, while he just stays at home and endlessly drinks. I’ve always regarded R.E.M. as America’s counterpart to The Smiths, but after hearing tracks like this, I’d say The Replacements are probably more fitting of that comparison – particularly when considering Westerberg’s emotionally-driven, introspective lyrics as well as his undeniably emphatic presence as a vocalist, not to mention chaotic and captivating displays by Stinson, who resented playing compositions similar to “Here Comes a Regular”, eventually being ejected from the band.

Overall, Tim is an astonishing, breath-taking record, carrying the listener through soaring highs and subterranean lows over indisputably passionate and energetic instrumentation, with Westerberg being the ideal spokesperson for a disillusioned generation of young Americans, his grizzly, throaty voice at times furious, other times forlorn. It’s a flawless collection of songs from a band that flew far too low under the radar, but as a consolation their output has been consistently ranked by critics as among the greatest achievements of the era, and deservedly so. Simply put, Tim is the quintessential rock record, easily a must-have for any music fan.

A+

-Karl