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Album details Peak chart positions US [1] US Vinyl [4] Boink: Released: April 1986; Label: Glass — — All for Nothing / Nothing for All: Released: October 28, 1997; Label: Reprise; 143 — Don't You Know Who I Think I Was? Released: June 3, 2006; Label: Rhino — — The Complete Studio Albums 1981-1990 [8] Released: April 14, 2015; Label ...
Replacements frontman Paul Westerberg had written "Can't Hardly Wait" in 1985 in the aftermath of the Let It Be sessions. [2] The band attempted to record the song for the 1985 Tim album, but were dissatisfied with the recording; Westerberg commented, "We had played it so many times that we were tired of it."
The band They Might Be Giants made a tribute song to them called "We're The Replacements". [90] 1234 Go! Records released We'll Inherit the Earth: A Tribute to The Replacements on October 3, 2006. The album contains twenty-three covers of the Replacements songs by various rock, punk, pop and country artists.
The Replacements’ first and only LP as a Bob Stinson-less trio was largely tracked with producer Jim Dickinson at Memphis’ Ardent Studios, where heroes Alex Chilton and Big Star had recorded ...
How much is the Replacements’ “Tim: Let It Bleed Edition,” a just-released boxed set that commemorates that band’s classic 1985 … That’s a provocative question — maybe one we need to ...
The album peaked at number 183 on the Billboard Top 200. It was placed 136th on Rolling Stone's 2003 list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, and 137 in a 2012 revised list. [1] It ranked 4th in the Alternative Press list of the Top 99 albums of 1985–1995. [2] Along with the band's previous album, Let It Be, Tim received five stars from ...
Paul Harold Westerberg (born December 31, 1959) is an American musician, best known as the lead singer, guitarist, and songwriter for the Replacements. [2] Following the breakup of the Replacements, Westerberg launched a solo career that saw him release three albums on two major record labels.
An unnamed (fictional) professional football league is hit with a players' strike with four games left in the season. Washington Sentinels [3] [4] owner Edward O'Neil calls a former coach of his, Jimmy McGinty, telling him that the league's going to finish the regular season with replacement players, and asks McGinty to return to coach the Sentinels the rest of the season, adding that winning ...