The Replacements Stop Caring and Start Growing Up: Let It Be at 40
It’s not as if Paul Westerberg and the 'Mats were the first to sing about the disillusionment of adolescence, but Let It Be does so in a way that steps into those timid teenage sneakers and actually takes all the fragile, frustrations of those formative years seriously.
Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
There was always a lot more Alex Chilton than Johnny Rotten in Paul Westerberg. The closest the Replacements ever came to making a straight-ahead punk rock album was 1982’s Stink EP, an effort drummer Chris Mars admits left the band feeling confused about their identity. Its full-length predecessor, Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash, often gets filed away in the punk rock bin as well, a label that, while not totally inaccurate, sadly discounts a debut sloshed with emerging musical ideas, self-deprecating humor and the irrepressible melodic cadences in Westerberg’s singing. By 1983, it was time for a change. It’s not that the band felt above the punk scene—or anyone else, for that matter. After all, their own name came from an in-joke about being down the depth chart as a band, and their eventual nickname, the ‘Mats, derived from lopping off the beginning of “Placemats.” No, the rebellious punk scene ironically just proved too rigid in its rules for a janitor (Westerberg), two high school dropouts (guitarist Bob Stinson and Mars) and a kid brother (bassist Tommy Stinson) dead set on avoiding rules, getting hammered and, as Westerberg once put it, “writing songs, not riffs with statements.”
The Replacements weren’t unique in this stepping stone. Punk rock proved to be the path of least resistance for a number of Midwest indie bands cutting their chops in the early 1980s. “I figured if they could do it, anybody could,” recalled Hüsker Dü frontman Bob Mould upon first hearing the Ramones. Fellow Minneapolitans and Twin/Tone labelmates Soul Asylum, as well as friendly St. Paul rivals the Hüskers, focused on playing as fast and loud as possible before eventually landing on the fuller sounds that came to define them beyond the punk realm. Hootenanny, the 1983 follow-up to Stink, can similarly be heard as a musical declaration of independence—the moment the Replacements ripped free from their punk roots and stopped caring about what anyone outside the band thought. From the opening title track, which finds the guys dicking around on each other’s instruments, to the twangy, lo-fi country strum of closer “Treatment Bound,” it’s clear that the ‘Mats gave zero shits about any expectations placed on them. Songs like the effortlessly catchy “Color Me Impressed” and the beat-driven ballad “Within Your Reach” also hinted at just how broad a musical palette and deep an emotional well Westerberg might draw from as a songwriter if given the chance.
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