SOUNDTRACK: THE REPLACEMENTS-Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash (1981).
Since I’ve been talking about The Replacements so much, it made me want to go back and listen to their stuff. The Replacements are the quintessential band that “grew up” or “matured” and for better or worse sounds utterly different from their first album to their last (a span of only nine years!). In fact, I don’t imagine that there are too many people who would enjoy all seven of their discs. One suspects that if the band themselves were given a copy of their All Shook Down disc in 1981, they would have smashed it.
So this was their first release. It has 18 songs in about 30 minutes. That’s pure hardcore, right? Well, not exactly. Even though the songs are short and fast and quite sloppy, there’s something about Paul Westerberg’s voice and delivery that makes these songs seem not quite hardcore. He enunciates! And you can understand him most of the time. And, maybe this is a better indicator: there’s parts to these songs, it’s not just breakneck pacing. They also have song titles that belied how good their song writing would become. Like: “Shiftless When Idle.”
In fact, “Johnny’s Gonna Die” isn’t fast at all. It shows what the kind of songs that they would eventually write: literate and moving indie rock.
There must have been something in the water in 1981 in Minnesota. Hüsker Dü, the other amazing punk outfit out of Minnesota (referenced in the ‘Mats song “Something to Du”) also put out a blistering live hardcore record in 1981 called Land Speed Record (17 songs in 26 minutes, listed as 2 tracks on CDs because they don’t pause in between songs). Like the ‘Mats, Hüsker Dü wouldn’t recognize their later incarnations in 1981 either. And why are The Replacements abbreviated as The ‘Mats? I don’t know.
But this ‘Mats record is the kind of sneaky record that can get you to enjoy punk even if you don’t think you like it. There’s something so fun about Sorry Ma, that you don’t really notice that it’s all done so fast.
[READ: May 22, 2009] “My Great Depression”
This essay collection is tough to catalog. Do I include all of the authors in the title of the post, do I pick selected ones, or just go with none. Yes, go with none.
Harper’s asked ten authors/artists to send stories from the near future, after the economic collapse of the country. All of the pieces are three columns or less, and some are more enjoyable than others. (more…)

SOUNDTRACK: ART BRUT-Art Brut vs. Satan (2009).
I’ve mentioned Art Brut before. I enjoy their talky/punk style. This, their new album, is produced by Frank Black of Pixies fame. I can’t honestly say that I see a real difference in production values, but I don’t usually notice things like that.
I first heard about this magazine from my friend Ailish’s then-boyfriend, Dave (this was sometime in 1993, I would guess). Dave fancied himself an artiste: he typed his novel on a portable Underwood, loved Henry Miller and read
SOUNDTRACK: MP3 Radio Transmitter
I was looking for a solution to my broken CD Player and I recalled that there are these mini transmitters that broadcast your MP3 player like a radio station. The broadcast range is pretty weak, but it’s usually strong enough to go from your player to your car radio. In theory this allows for everyone to be their own tiny radio station which I find utterly cool.
SOUNDTRACK: Radio New York, WNYE, 91.5FM.


This album seems to get overshadowed by the anti-George Bush track “Bu$hleaguer.” Evidently many people were turned off by this track, and that may have had an impact on sales. Of course, I’m sure many other people were introduced to the band by this song, too. Regardless, the rest of the album shouldn’t be judged by this track, as it is rather unusual.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Yield (1998)
This Pearl Jam disc is something of a return to form after the experimentation of No Code. Part of me feels bad that they experimented less, because I do enjoy a band’s wild side, and yet these songs are uniformly fantastic, and they include some of my favorites by Pearl Jam.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-No Code (1996).
I’d always sort of liked this disc because of its principles–I believed that the title came about because there is no barcode on the disc. Pearl Jam is always tilting at some windmill or another, and I can support that.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Ten [remixed] (2009).
Pearl Jam reissued Ten this year with a new mix by Brendan O’Brien, the producer who has mixed the bulk of their catalog. So, this gives everyone a chance to hear what it would have sounded like if it were released after Vs., or something like that.