UNCUT

ThE REplaCEMEN­Ts For sale: live at Maxwell’s 1986

A gloriously messy live album from the Twin Cities terrors finally sees the light of day. By Stephen Deusner

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“Do we know ‘Fox on The Run’?” Paul Westerberg asks the other Replacemen­ts, in response to a fan’s repeated shouts for the Sweet classic. on For Sale, a double live album documentin­g their 1986 tour, the band obligingly launch into an impromptu performanc­e without knowing exactly where they’re going. The first verse is shaky but determined, with Paul Westerberg seemingly rememberin­g the lyrics just seconds after they leave his mouth. The chorus, however, wobbles precarious­ly until the entire song simply falls apart. Even after his bandmates have dropped out, bassist Tommy Stinson soldiers on, defiantly playing that bouncy riff even as Westerberg promises, “We’ll try again later.” There are shouts from the audience for “Walk Away Renee” and “September Gurls”, but the quartet barrel directly into “Hold My Life”.

Clocking in at a mere 70 seconds, “Fox on The Run” may be a trainwreck, but it’s a revealing moment on For

Sale, which documents a tumultuous time in The Replacemen­ts’ career. In 1986 they were poised to break out of the undergroun­d and gatecrash the mainstream, having already graduated from the Minneapoli­s indie Twin/ Tone to Sire. In october 1985 they had released their major-label debut, Tim, produced by Tommy Erdelyi (better known as Tommy Ramone), still considered their best studio album. Their loud and drunken Saturday Night

Live performanc­e, which featured Westerberg dropping an f-bomb on live television, may have hindered their cause at the time, but it remains both a legendary television performanc­e and a major component of the band’s continuing legacy.

For Sale was Sire Records’ attempt to showcase the band in its natural setting: the club stage rather than the television or music studio. They opted for the friendly confines of Maxwell’s in Hoboken, New Jersey, where the band had already played and developed a devoted following. According to new liner notes by Bob Mehr, author of Trouble Boys: The True Story Of The Replacemen­ts, “Club owner Steve Fallon didn’t even advertise the date; by this time, The Replacemen­ts’ shows were such anticipate­d events that the club was teeming with fans based upon word of mouth alone.”

To record the show in such cramped confines, Sire hired a company called Effanel, which had overseen, among other live albums, U2’s Under A Blood

Red Sky. In the hours before taking the stage, the band partied in the club’s basement, and there was some suspense over whether they would be focused and coherent onstage or drunk and disorderly. From Westerberg’s first cries of “Murder!” on opener “Hayday”, it’s clear that The Replacemen­ts will be all of those things at once. Drummer Chris Mars performs the unglamorou­s feat of keeping these songs together, even as the band sprawls chaoticall­y in front of him. Westerberg and Bob Stinson don’t strum their guitars as much as they bash and batter them. The result is a beautiful mess: lovingly crafted pop songs played with youthful punk abandon.

The Replacemen­ts are still regaled for their pimply insoucianc­e, for the poetry of Westerberg’s lyrics, for the middle finger they flew in the face of music industry demands, and For Sale is perhaps the best document of these aspects of the band. The album’s title comes from the phrase gouged into Westerberg’s Les Paul Special, which signals the group’s semi-vandalisti­c aesthetic as well as their rejection of music-biz proficienc­y. The live setting only heightens the fidgety anticipati­on of “I Can’t Hardly Wait” and “I Will Dare”, the seediness of “If only You Were Lonely”, the snottiness of “Gary’s Got A Boner”, and the intense melancholy that underscore­s all of their songs. While they never get back around to “Fox on The Run”, The Replacemen­ts do manage to get all the way through leering covers of T.Rex’s “Baby Strange”, Kiss’ “Black Diamond” and The Beatles’ “Nowhere Man”. You can hear them trying harder to keep these songs together, playing them with more affection than they played their own.

Just a few months after the last notes of “Fuck School” faded, For Sale was already obsolete, documentin­g a band that didn’t exist any more. While The Replacemen­ts didn’t break up, they were forced to fire first their manager Peter Jesperson and later founding guitarist Bob Stinson, Tommy’s older brother. He was eventually replaced by Slim Dunlap, although the group’s paroxysms meant For Sale got lost in the shuffle, unreleased for 30 long years (although available as one of many bootlegs from this period).

Who knows how or if it would have changed the band’s fortunes in the 1986, but in 2017 it sounds like a revelation, not just a reminder of their glorious volatility, but also a raggedly beautiful effort that stands alongside The Replacemen­ts’ best records. They might not have gotten through “Fox on The Run”, but few bands could make such undeniable triumphs out of such abject failures; on For Sale, the ’Mats turn rock’n’roll sloppiness into something cathartic, romantic, and even noble.

 ??  ?? The Replacemen­ts – (l-r) Tommy stinson, Chris Mars, paul Westerberg and Bob stinson – at Maxwell’s, hoboken, New Jersey, Feb 4, 1986
The Replacemen­ts – (l-r) Tommy stinson, Chris Mars, paul Westerberg and Bob stinson – at Maxwell’s, hoboken, New Jersey, Feb 4, 1986
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