The Replacements - Hootenanny (1983)
Treatment Bound 3:12Well, "Hootenanny" is the only record of theirs where it seems like they may not make it to the end of the album, so ragged and reckless it is. It lurches to life with the folk piss-take "Hootenanny" before spinning out of control with "Run It," a piece of faux-core harder and funnier than anything on Stink. Hootenanny continues to bounce from extreme to extreme, stopping for a Beatles parody on "Mr. Whirly" and the instrumental "Buck Hill" before Westerberg reads out personal ads on "Lovelines." Almost all of the album's 12 songs could be seen as slight on their own merits, but the whole is greater than its individual parts, not just in how it is a breathless good time, but how this album offers a messy break from American punk traditions, ushering in an era of irony and self-deprecation that came to define much of American underground rock in the next decade. Nowhere is the Replacements' influence clearer than on "Hootenanny", and although they made better records, no other one captures what the band was all about better than this. (amg)
Tracklist:
Hootenanny 1:51
Run It 1:10
Color Me Impressed 2:26
Willpower 4:22
Take Me Down To The Hospital 3:47
Mr. Whirly 1:52
Within Your Reach 4:25
Buck Hill 2:07
Lovelines 2:00
You Lose 1:44
Hayday 2:10
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