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Don't Tell a Soul

Don't Tell a Soul
Artist: The Replacements
Label: Rhino / Rykodisc
Category: Music

List Price: $18.98
Buy New: $14.99
You Save: $3.99 (21%)



Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 11620

Format: Original Recording Remastered
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 513981
UPC: 081227990244
EAN: 0081227990244
ASIN: B001CI41RC

Release Date: September 23, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Talent Show
  • Back to Back
  • We'll Inherit the Earth
  • Achin' to Be
  • They're Blind
  • Anywhere's Better Than Here
  • Asking Me Lies
  • I'll Be You
  • I Won't
  • Rock 'n' Roll Ghost
  • Darlin' One - The Replacements, Westerberg
  • Portland
  • Wake Up
  • Talent Show
  • We'll Inherit the Earth
  • Date to Chruch
  • We Know the Night
  • Gudbuy t' Jane - The Replacements, Holder, Noddy

Similar Items:

  • All Shook Down
  • Pleased to Meet Me
  • Tim
  • Let It Be
  • Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
2008 Remastered and expanded edition with bonus tracks of The Replacements' 1989 album, Don't Tell A Soul. The album was produced by Matt Wallace and the band and it was recorded at Cherokee Studios in Los Angeles. The song "I'll Be You" was the hit single off the album.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Counterpoint to bad review from smug Adam Ant and XTC fan   November 4, 2008
Petar Ticinovic (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada)
1 out of 4 found this review helpful

The remastering is really good and the bonus tracks, especially "Wake up" and the Slade cover, are too. It's not their best and it may not be as important and essential as "Ant music" but it holds up fine after two decades, actually it sounds even better now. Oh, and the Pixies thing at the end isn't funny.


2 out of 5 stars Okay reissue from The Mats' supposed adult/MOR album.   November 1, 2008
Bill Wikstrom (Long Island, NY)
2 out of 6 found this review helpful

This album was The Replacements' supposed 'adult, Middle-Of-The-Road, intended for tons of airplay, attract a legion of new fans' album. This didn't exactly happen and it upset some fans to boot. It's not as bad as some will have you believe (a bad album by The Replacements is probably still better than an okay album by several other artists) but it's still a pretty maddeningly-uneven album if there ever was one. "I Won't", "Back To Back", "Anywhere's Better Than Here" and "We'll Inherit The Earth" are hollow, counterfeit rockers and pseudo-anthems written by an artist under the pressure of a label hungry for hits. And what's worse is, if you have any prior knowledge of the band at all, you can here this upon the very first listen.

There are some great songs. "I'll Be You" (the band's only top forty hit)
is a great single. So great that Tom Petty (for whom the 'Mats opened for on this tour) borrowed the "rebel without a clue" line for his "Into The Great Wide Open". "Achin' To Be" contains some cliched lyrics that should make you cringe but Westerberg gives them an entirely sincere reading with a perfect arrangement for them. "They're Blind" is a fine teenager ballad with a late 50's slow-dance backdrop. "Rock 'n' Roll Ghost" and "Talent Show" are both great Westerberg outings that often get overlooked. And "Asking Me Lies" (which plenty of fans have decried several times) to these ears sounds like The Replacements in a good mood re-writing late 70's era Rolling Stones (nothing too cringe-worthy). It's unfortunate that for every great song on the album there's an awful one right behind it. Enough yammering about the original album though.

These reissues have been fraught with various issues (edited tracks, audio drop-outs, poor choice of bonus tracks, corny footsteps ending each album proper which cue the bonus tracks, ill-advised and uninformed/uninformative liner notes, etc.). So much so that one can't help but wonder if any one QC'd (Quality Checked) these before they went anywhere. It looks like that didn't happen. This DTAS disc has a surprising amount of mid-range and the loudness issues (i.e. no dynamic range, everything in the red) is not so much of an issue with this reissue. Although if you're buying this album for the first time: this is the decidedly definitive version. The sound quality on all of the tracks have been somewhat improved and not at all compromised as on reissues of earlier albums.

The band recorded an entire album (plus) with Tony Berg at Bearsville Studios but mysteriously decided to scrap it and start again with Matt Wallace. Only "Wake Up" and the fine "Portland" have been released from these sessions. One would think that a few more could have been included as bonus tracks here but alas, once again, it is not to be. You can only fathom that there's a box set in the works for all these puzzling oversights and glaring omissions.

There's an alternate version of "Rock 'n' Roll Ghost" that could have appeared here, but did not. An alternate version did appear for the vague "We'll Inherit The Earth" (sounding like an entirely different, almost very good, song). "We Know The Night" and "Date To Church" (both also on the 'Nothing For All' comp.) are pretty okay additions but are new no one. A great studio demo for "Talent Show" contains a subtle slide guitar part and shows the song fully-formed. The Slade cover ("Gudbuy t' Jane") is a fine, if insubstantial addition and The Pixies' "Monkey Gone To Heaven' secret reprise at the end is kind of funny.

The failure to include the Tony Berg sessions as bonus tracks leads one to believe (from what was included) that the band was under-pressure, uninspired and creatively scratching it's head, losing what was amazing about the band in the production in the process. Maybe we'll hear an entire pre-Petty tour live show from 1989 to hear what this band really sounded like around this time, one day.

Recommended: Almost no, but just, yes.


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