Don't You Know Who I Think I Was?: The Best Of The Replacements

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (194 ratings)
Don't You Know Who I Think I Was?: The Best Of The Replacements album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 65:25

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Sean Fennessey

eMusic Contributor

Director of Merchandising, emusic.com

01.11.10
This terribly talented and terribly doomed quartet were never a singles band in their day - no matter!
2006 | Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.

An efficient, effective collection of the Minneapolis band's hits, misses, slag-offs and come-ons that somehow manages to pack each changing movement in the band's career into 18 songs, and two modest new rockers. It's quite a feat. For many, this will, quite literally be a soundtrack to your life because the Replacements so impressively shifted from fragile ballads to spleen-slashing spasms. Pissed off at life? Try "Shiftless When Idle" from Sorry Ma, Forgot To Take Out the Trash. Lovelorn and lost? There's always "Answering Machine." Need a pick-me-up? "Can't Hardly Wait" awaits. This terribly talented and terribly doomed quartet were never a singles band in their day. But to hear this compilation is to never know the truth.

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

The Beatles of the 80's...on booze.

DarkSock

Passion over pyrotechnics; wistful lyrics over posturing; knee-walking drunken passion over sobriety. The Mats made the lifestyle of F'ing up the canvas upon which they puked their passions. There has never been a spark like them before or since. They made the 80's worth enduring. Poor Bob.

user avatar

Magically rough around the edges

SwellJoe

I discovered the 'mats somewhat in reverse, starting with Pleased to Meet Me, and working my way back through their catalog. As greatest hits collections go, this one is top notch, and a great introduction to one of the greatest rock and roll bands of the 80s, and one of the purest rock and roll experiences you'll find on record. The only possible reason you could have for not downloading this record is if you instead plan to download the whole collection of full albums. You can't go wrong in either case.

user avatar

A Great Introduction to the Best Band in the World

theamazingrando

If you are unfamiliar with the Replacements, get this right now, with a few warnings: 1) The album is sequenced chronologically, so don't be discouraged if you press play and the first coupla songs are abrasive and difficult. You'll learn to love 'em, but the more tuneful stuff starts midway on the comp. 2) The last two songs are new tracks, and while they're great, aren't really best-of sort of material. 3) You WILL end up spending more money on this band. Just start getting used to that fact.

user avatar

Thanks E-Music!

palmbird

Love this group.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

1

36 Songs To Soothe the Pain

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

Whether you're happily married or told Cupid to shove it a long time ago, we can all agree on one thing: to quote the one-and-only Nazareth, "Love hurts/ Love scars/ Love wounds/ And mars." Or something. That's why we went ahead and compiled a list of 36 Songs To Soothe the Pain, from the bloodletting confessionals of Neko Case, Bright Eyes and Sunny Day Real Estate to the melancholic melodies of Sigur Rós, the Shangri-Las… more »

0

Six Degrees of Dusty in Memphis

By Andria Lisle, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

0

Icon: The Replacements

By Sean Fennessey, eMusic Contributor

"Like maybe the main act doesn't show, and instead the crowd has to settle for an earful of us dirtbags..." drummer Chris Mars wrote in an unpublished memoir, explaining his band's name. Dirtbags: that's probably the word for this sloppy, perpetually drunk but deeply affecting Minnesota quartet - comprised of frontman Paul Westerberg, Mars, guitarist Bob Stinson, and Stinson's kid brother, Tommy. Few groups have made such a drastic but inevitable evolution (some might call… more »

0

Six Degrees of Loaded

By Matthew Fritch, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

0

2008 Innovators: The Gaslight Anthem

By Matthew Fritch, eMusic Contributor

Reviewers of The '59 Sound, the Gaslight Anthem's second album, spent an awful lot of words describing what the record is like rather than what it is. It's difficult to blame them. The New Brunswick, N.J., band invites Bruce Springsteen comparisons not only by virtue of its Garden State birthright; there's also a restless, Born To Run energy coursing through singer/guitarist Brian Fallon's songs about small-town regrets and big-time dreams. The '59 Sound shoots straight… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Great as the Replacements were, it’s a little difficult to recommend one of their great albums as an introduction to the band. Sure, it’s easy to see Let It Be as a masterwork of the ’80s underground, capturing the group’s ragged humor and heart, but it doesn’t quite illustrate the depth of Paul Westerberg’s songwriting the way Tim did, even if that record wasn’t as ferocious as Let It Be, nor did it have the slick diversity of Pleased to Meet Me — and none of the three had the raw, raucous kick of the ‘Mats’ first three albums (they also didn’t have the desperate-for-a-hit vibe of Don’t Tell a Soul or the sadly beautiful hangover of All Shook Down, but that’s another matter entirely). It could be argued that any of those three would be effective intros, but the Replacements truly needed a compilation. Of course, they already got one in 1997, when Reprise issued All for Nothing/Nothing for All, containing one disc of hits and one of rarities, but due to legalities, it had nothing from the band’s Twin/Tone work, which meant it had nothing at all from anything before Tim — a severe handicap for a career overview to overcome. Released nearly a decade later, Don’t You Know Who I Think I Was?: The Best of the Replacements trumps its predecessor for the mere fact that it does contain cuts from Twin/Tone — eight of them, in fact, sampling from Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash, Stink, and Hootenanny in addition to three selections from Let It Be. While it’s possible to quibble about the actual selections — any teenager or college kid of the ’80s will likely have a friend that put “Androgynous” on a mixtape, not “Answering Machine” — these records are well-represented, as are Tim with four songs and Pleased to Meet Me with three cuts, balanced by the two singles from Don’t Tell a Soul (“Achin’ to Be,” “I’ll Be You”) and a song from All Shook Down, an underrated record that nevertheless feels like the first Westerberg solo album it should have been, so it’s rightly downplayed. These 18 songs make for an excellent introduction to one of the major American bands of the ’80s, and that alone would have been a nice addition to the Replacements’ catalog (not to mention a good appetizer for the forthcoming box set allegedly in the works). But what makes Don’t You Know Who I Think I Was? noteworthy for fans is the presence of two new tracks by a reunited Replacements. While this isn’t exactly the full-fledged reunion that many fans have longed for — Chris Mars sat this one out on drums, but he does provide harmonies — “Message to the Boys” and “Pool & Dive” are perfectly credible, enjoyable throwaways, sounding a bit like if the ‘Mats were Westerberg’s backing band for 14 Songs. They’re not great, but they’re loose, silly, and a whole lot more fun than anything Westerberg has been up to since 14 Songs, and a nice coda to an already strong compilation. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

more »