Tim [Expanded Edition]

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (351 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 57:37

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Sean Fennessey

eMusic Contributor

Sean Fennessey is the editor of GQ.com. He is a former Director of Merchandising at eMusic and has written about music and culture for Spin, Rolling Stone, The ...more »

01.12.10
An impressive major label transition that doesn't lose the thread of authenticity
2008 | Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.

Getting called up to the big leagues is always daunting. But Tim is an interesting exception. Somehow the Replacements managed to grow more, cleaning up and sometimes diluting their sound thanks to recruited producer Tommy "Ramone" Erdelyi, to record an album perhaps less emotionally indignant than Let It Be, but more physically rewarding. They're still having fun, but this time they're in the front of the bar boogieing, instead of out back vomiting. But this trip into a presentable avenue of mainstream American rock slowly began to rub Bob Stinson the wrong way. Songs like "Kiss Me on the Bus" and "Waitress in the Sky" — acoustic forays into feel-good Beatles simulacra — proved to be some of the most gorgeous and beloved of the band's career. And "Left of the Dial," a sort of indie insider's wet dream, became an emblem of outsider affection, with Westerberg talking about "your band" and maybe his own. But they were a dividing line; a real point of contention for Stinson. The reeling "Bastards of Young" and "Lay It Down Clown" were more in line with what the band once represented: rip-chord-pulling slop rock with traces of punk sentiment. But somehow the goofy… read more »

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Bonus Tracks

lastkings

I have mixed feelings about some of this album (Lay it Down Clown and Dose of Thunder just don't make me care) but this album does have Paul Westerberg's best song in Here Comes a Regular. In addition, the bonus version (less effects and production) may even be better than the original. The same goes for the two versions of Can't Hardly Wait. One version is a raw electric demo (mercifully, no horns)but the acoustic version is the true wonder; it sounds like one mic left on in auditorium picking Paul up just by chance. It's a fabulous and unconventional sound, the kind of thing that bonus tracks should be.

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buy the mats!

ganjangles

this one did it for me. from start to finish - if you don't got it - you don't get it. Get it

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wow...

SemolinaPilchard

12 credits for a slice of the best rock n' roll ever laid down... God I am feeling old seeing this one in the digital 'cut-out' bin!! From Little Mascara to Kiss Me On The Bus this one perfectly captures the torment of youth, careening between rebellion and sweetness.

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Haunting

Duffalo

The Replacements embodied contradiction. They eschewed and embraced mainstream sensibilities, underground elitism, rock egotism, saccharine sentimentality, self-aggrandizement, and false modesty. The Replacements never fit a bill. They were innocent and profane. They defied the expectations of fans and marketers alike. Then the bassist--the brother of canonized martyr Bob Stinson--took up with Guns 'n' Roses. I always wanted them to succeed, but to back up Axl Rose, for Christ's sake, innocence is dead. What was I on about? This is a great album, the whole thing.

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Great Album By Beloved Band

Nyabinghi

After Let It Be, this is their strongest record. More polished than their Twintone stuff and great songwriting. Kiss Me On The Bus is one of those perfect pop songs after P's idol Chilton. Left Of The Dial and Little Mascara make me tear up. Can't say enough about the greatness of this band. Loved that anti video of Bastards of Young with the woofer blasting away.

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Love it

4x8

Catchy and a bit more polished than Let It Be and Pleased To Meet Me. I rate it 3rd behind those two, but still a great record.

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Addictive

tromafiend02

An amazing, entertaining album full of listenable tunes. Great mix of noise, pop, energy and mellow.

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This was their best!!

DesertED

They were a good band that could have been great but this is a great record and their strongest overall. It's too bad with what happened to Bob but he's all over this album. Enjoy!

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eMusic Features

Icon: The Replacements

By Sean Fennessey

"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 »

They Say All Media Guide

Moving to a major label was inevitable for the Replacements: they garnered too much acclaim and attention after Let It Be to stay on Twin/Tone, especially as the label faced the same distribution problems that plagued many indies in the mid-’80s — plus, the ‘Mats’ crosstown rivals, Hüsker Dü, made the leap to the big leagues, paving the way for their own hop over to Sire. The Replacements may have left Twin/Tone behind but they weren’t quite ready to leave Minneapolis in the dust, choosing to record in their hometown with Tommy Erdelyi — aka Tommy Ramone — who gives the ‘Mats a big, roomy sound without quite giving them gloss; compared to Let It Be, Tim is polished, but compared to many American underground rock records of the mid-’80s (including those by the Ramones), it’s loose and kinetic. The production — guitars that gained muscle, drums and vocals that gained reverb — is the biggest surface difference, but there aren’t just changes in how the Replacements sound; what they’re playing is different too, as Paul Westerberg begins to turn into a self-aware songwriter. A large part of the charm of Let It Be was how it split almost evenly between ragged vulgarity and open-hearted rockers, with Westerberg’s best songs betraying a startling, beguiling lack of affect. That’s not quite the case with Tim, as Westerberg consciously writes alienation anthems: the rallying cry of “Bastards of Young” and the college radio love letter “Left of the Dial,” songs written with a larger audience in mind — not a popular audience, but a collection of misfits across the nation, who huddled around Westerberg’s raw, twitchy loneliness on “Swingin Party” and “Here Comes a Regular,” or the urgent and directionless “Hold My Life.”
These songs are Westerberg at his confessional peak, but instead of undercutting this ragged emotion or hiding it away, as he did on the Twin/Tone albums, he pairs it with the exuberance of “Kiss Me on the Bus” — an adolescent cousin to “I Will Dare” — and channels his smart-ass comments into the terrifically cynical rockabilly shuffle “Waitress in the Sky.” All this eats up so much oxygen that there’s not much air left for any of the recklessness of the Twin/Tone LPs: there’s no stumbling, no throwaway jokes, with even the twin rave-ups of “Dose of Thunder” and “Lay It Down Clown” straightened out, no matter how much Bob Stinson might try to pull them apart, which is perhaps the greatest indication that the Replacements were no longer the band they were just a couple years ago. Some ‘Mats fans never got over this change, but something was gained in this loss: the Replacements turned into a deeper band on Tim, one that spoke, sometimes mumbled, to the hearts of losers and outcasts who lived their lives on the fringe. If Let It Be captured the spirit of the Replacements, then Tim captured their soul. [The highlight of the six bonus tracks on Rhino's expanded 2008 reissue of Tim is the first official release of the Replacements' post-Let It Be/pre-Sire session with Westerberg idol Alex Chilton as producer: there is "Nowhere Is My Home" -- the great forgotten 'Mats song of this era, getting its first CD release -- along with two early versions of "Can't Hardly Wait," a wonderful, shambolic acoustic version and a full-blown electric outtake, both deserving of their legendary status among collectors. While not quite as noteworthy, the other three tracks are all quite good: a really raucous, blisteringly loud demo of "Kiss Me on the Bus"; a simpler, straightforward alternate of "Waitress in the Sky"; and an alternate of "Here Comes a Regular," which is the second of only two takes Westerberg did of the song.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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