The Modern Lovers

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The Modern Lovers album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 62:03

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Jonathan would disagree, but play it LOUD!

pitdog1

One of the most important albums of the second half of the 20th century. Oh, this isn't hyperbole, it's fact. This album is the Johnny Appleseed of punk, featuring the Talking Heads, Jerry Harrison, The Cars, David Robinson, and punk journeyman, Ernie Brooks. The songs are great and Jonathan's voice is perfect. He is like a, pre-junk, Lou Reed. It has a beautiful, whine-y, elegance. Jonathan's influence can be heard in Joey Ramone and Pete Shelley, to name a couple. This is the only time these guys played like this. Jonathan changed his style dramatically after and while still lovely it doesn't drive like this. Own this record. You owe it to yourself.

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So Influencial!!!

MacD

If you listen to this album and don't hear the infuence that they had on about 1000 other bands to come,you better check your ears. I keep seeing the word "essential". Is it? You better believe it!

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No Freakin' Way!!!

Algernon

eMusic continues to surprise the hell out of me. Just when I thought I was getting out, they pull me right back in.

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Yay! Finally!

tedcox

One of the essential albums shoulda been on eMusic long ago. Hooray for the extra material as well, such as "I'm Straight," key to Richman's catalog.

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must have!

SemolinaPilchard

You can't say you know the soul of rock n' roll without having experienced this recording over and over. From the sublimely hysterical "Pablo Picasso" through the love-numb "Hospital" to the driving, wistful "Dignified And Old," this recording shined a light on on a path that bands from the Replacements, Husker Du and Luna would revel in, to our collective benefit. Absolutely essential.

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some records change music forever

midcoastmaine

Johnathan Richman once sat in my living room in Cambridge MA, a few months before recording these tracks, and said "I want my music to sound like washing machines going over a cliff". We all laughed, but it turns out he was on to something.

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They Say All Music Guide

Compiled of demos the band recorded with John Cale in 1973, The Modern Lovers is one of the great proto-punk albums of all time, capturing an angst-ridden adolescent geekiness which is married to a stripped-down, minimalistic rock & roll derived from the art punk of the Velvet Underground. While the sound is in debt to the primal three-chord pounding of early Velvet Underground, the attitude of Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers is a million miles away from Lou Reed’s jaded urban nightmares. As he says in the classic two-chord anthem “Roadrunner,” Richman is in love with the modern world and rock & roll. He’s still a teenager at heart, which means he’s not only in love with girls he can’t have, but also radios, suburbs, and fast food, and it also means he’ll crack jokes like “Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole…not like you.” “Pablo Picasso” is the classic sneer, but “She Cracked” and “I’m Straight” are just as nasty, made all the more edgy by the Modern Lovers’ amateurish, minimalist drive. But beneath his adolescent posturing, Richman is also nakedly emotional, pleading for a lover on “Someone I Care About” and “Girl Friend,” or romanticizing the future on “Dignified and Old.” That combination of musical simplicity, driving rock & roll, and gawky emotional confessions makes The Modern Lovers one of the most startling proto-punk records — it strips rock & roll to its core and establishes the rock tradition of the geeky, awkward social outcast venting his frustrations. More importantly, the music is just as raw and exciting now as when it was recorded in 1973, or when it was belatedly released in 1976. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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