Pleased To Meet Me [Expanded Edition]

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Pleased To Meet Me [Expanded Edition] album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 22   Total Length: 70:53

eMusic Review 0

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Sean Fennessey

eMusic Contributor

Director of Merchandising, emusic.com

01.11.10
Down to a trio, the 'Mats depart down South and away from their roots
2008 | Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.

Farewell to Bob Stinson, fired for drunkenness and a refusal to cater to Westerberg's growing pop instincts. And so the Replacements carried on as a trio on this second album for major label subsidiary, Sire. Helmed by Big Star producer Jim Dickinson and recorded in Memphis, TN, the album is a love letter that band's gifted singer-songwriter, Alex Chilton. Chilton was originally in line to produce the band's previous album, Tim, but was forced to pull out. Pleased To Meet Me is a departure in a lot of ways, employing Memphis brass on several songs, including that enduring anthem of youthful impatience "Can't Hardly Wait." There are great moments here, including an out and out tribute to Chilton called, fittingly, "Alex Chilton," that featured the indelible chorus, "I'm in love / What's that song? / I'm in love / with that song!" But the band's forays into cocktail jazz and Stax-style raveups are often just derivative moves. Only "Shooting Dirty Pool" and "Valentine" seemed to capture their earlier verve. Outtakes on this expanded edition reveal a band that futzed around too much in the studio; the alternate takes are always always better than the originals, particularly the dueling versions of… read more »

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Fennessy = Idiot

pHreddieH

So keeping a drunken buffoon in the band is necessary to maintain its "spirit". This is such a tired old argument about the Mats without Bob. Bob had his greatness, but Paul IS THE SPIRIT of the Mats, and he had every right to grow up emotionally and musically. This is one of the best rock and roll records ever, with not one, but TWO of the greatest singles of all time (AC and CHW). By the way, Fennessy, if you really knew your Mats, you'd know that Bob was already a virtual non-presence on "Tim". The guitars are mostly all Paul's! So did that album have the Mats spirit? Lazy lazy lazy rock criticism there Sean my friend!

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good stuff

ganjangles

stinson or not - this album's awesome... the extras are worth a spin too

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This Rocks and whats sean fennesys problem...?

RezFink

is it just me or does mr fennesy has a personal issue with westerberg..?.just read all of his reviews on the mats...i love this album and all the mats albums...morphing and changing just like me growing up...plus i do think that westerberg and the stintson bros, dunlap, mars they all rocked...they captured the genius of f'ing up on purpose...

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Good memories!

JerryBalls

Ohh, so many great memories from those remote high school times! Just the artwork of this album brings to mind so many images... I would also coincide that this is my second best Replacements album. Red Red Wine!!!!

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A close 2nd

4x8

This is my 2nd favorite by The Replacements, my favorite being Let It Be. Can a song be any catchier than 'Can't Hardly Wait'. Okay, maybe Dyslexic Heart by solo Paul Westerberg.

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They Say All Music Guide

All things considered, Tim was an easy transition to the majors for the Replacements, at least as far as the making of the album goes: things went wrong after the release, as the band botched big showcases like its Saturday Night Live spot, leading up to the dismissal of Bob Stinson at the conclusion of the Tim tour. The dust hadn’t settled when the ‘Mats headed down to Memphis to record Pleased to Meet Me with producer Jim Dickinson at Ardent Studios — or to phrase it in Alex Chilton-speak, to record with Big Star’s 3rd producer at the studio where all three Big Star albums were made. All this fanboy worship perhaps naturally led to a full-blown mash note to Paul Westerberg’s idol, who also turned up to play a couple of licks on a finally finished “Can’t Hardly Wait,” which initially was attempted with Chilton as a producer before Tim, but Pleased to Meet Me didn’t resemble either the crystalline pop of #1 Record or the narcissistic black hole of 3rd. Dickinson gave the Replacements a full-blooded, muscular production, cranking up guitars, hauling out an upright bass for Tommy Stinson, and bringing in horns — even strings — to flesh out Westerberg’s songs. This was the Replacements as professionals and, ever the contrarians, they strained against it — albeit only sporadically and underneath the surface — with Westerberg’s outsider stance calcifying into the invigorating bitterness of “I.O.U.” and “I Don’t Know.” These two proto-slacker anti-anthems — quite the inverse of the call to arms of “Bastards of Young” and “Left of the Dial” — are the only times the group’s self-sabotage surfaces here, as the bandmembers pretty much give themselves over to Dickinson’s studio savvy, leading to the ominous pulse of “The Ledge” and the brilliant, shining power pop of “Never Mind,” “Alex Chilton,” and “Valentine,” along with such left-field twists as the mock jazz of “Nightclub Jitters.” This kind of colorful, almost cinematic production — even the greasy rocker “Shooting Dirty Pool” is enhanced by the sound of breaking glass — was unheard of on a Replacements record and it all came to a head on “Can’t Hardly Wait,” which was glossed over with swelling strings and the Memphis Horns.
All these fancy accoutrements would seem like the antithesis of the Replacements’ spirit, but Dickinson’s grand production merely blows the ‘Mats up to epic scale, leaving their essence intact: Westerberg even gets a lovely fragile acoustic moment in “Skyway” and there are down-and-dirty rockers like “Shooting Dirty Pool” and “Red Red Wine” that feel like throwaways, but are necessary to the spirit of the record. The Replacements never sounded better with a bigger production than they did on Pleased to Meet Me, so it’s hard not to see it as the one that got away, the record that should have been the breakthrough, especially in the year when fellow American underground rockers R.E.M. leaped into the Top Ten (but, it’s also true that “The Ledge” may not have been the best single choice, as songs about suicides don’t often provide entry into the Top 40). Then again, the Replacements don’t make sense as a success story, so the failure of the gleaming, glistening Pleased to Meet Me winds up making its polish kind of heart-rending. As it turns out, this was the last time they could still shoot for the stars and seem like their scrappy selves and, in many ways, it was the last true Replacements album. [Rhino's 2008 deluxe reissue of Pleased to Meet Me has a wealth of 11 bonus tracks, almost all of them excellent. First, there is a quartet of studio demos recorded just after Bob Stinson was let go: "Birthday Gal," a somewhat brokenhearted love song whose chorus later partially resurfaced on "Merry Go Round"; an early version of "Valentine," containing a bridge that was excised from the finished version; the terrific "Bundle Up," which harks back to early-'60s novelty rockers; and finally, "Photo," an urgent, romantic rocker that deserved to go further than a demo. Then there are the three B-sides to "The Ledge": the slow heavy blues "Election Day" and a run-through of "Route 66" eclipsed by a careening "Tossin' n' Turnin'." There are two alternate takes -- a slightly rougher "Alex Chilton" and another version of "Can't Hardly Wait" with no overdubs and slightly different lyrics -- and a demo of the sprightly unreleased pop tune "Kick It In." Finally, there's a pleasantly ambling version of "Cool Water," the first Chris Mars lead vocal that was originally released as the B-side of "Can't Hardly Wait."] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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