Stink [Deluxe Edition] EXPLICIT LYRICS The Replacements

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CD - Expanded / Bonus Tracks / Special Edition / Reissue

  • Release Date: 04/22/2008
  • Original Release: 1982
  • Sales Rank: 35,198
  • Label: RHINO / RYKODISC
  • UPC: 081227993634

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CD - Remastered$14.99

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Stink [Deluxe Edition]

1LISTENKids Don't Follow 2:51
2LISTENFuck School 1:26
3LISTENStuck in the Middle 1:49
4LISTENGod Damn Job 1:19
5LISTENWhite and Lazy 2:07
6LISTENDope Smokin Moron 1:31
7LISTENGo 2:29
8LISTENGimme Noise 1:58
9LISTENStaples in Her Stomach previously unreleased / Bonus Track / Outtake 1:28
10LISTENHey, Good Lookin' previously unreleased / Bonus Track / Outtake 1:55
11LISTEN(We're Gonna) Rock Around the Clock previously unreleased / Bonus Track / Outtake 3:02
12LISTENYou're Getting Married / Paul Westerberg previously unreleased / Bonus Track / Solo Home Demo 5:11

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Editorial Reviews

Almost as if they were aware that Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash was masquerading as a hardcore album, the Replacements designed their second record as a mean, lean, nasty, brutish affair, the opposite of the mirthfully messy Sorry Ma. Stink wasn't even a full-fledged album -- at eight tracks, it was labeled a mini-LP, maybe just a bit longer than an EP, but it was just scraping by at 14 minutes regardless of what label it wore. So, it was tighter than Sorry Ma but that wasn't the only way Stink seemed more like a hardcore record: the band approximated a hardcore rave-up at the end of the white blooze parody "White and Lazy," and Paul Westerberg's songs bristled with anger against all manner of middle-class irritants, as he spit vitriol at his "God Damn Job" and told school to go f*ck itself. Such a sudden burst of anger could almost seem parodic, especially with such snide jokes as the Frère Jacques chorus of "Gimme Noise," if the Replacements didn't sound so lethal: they're hard and merciless, never stopping for air. This is where the brevity of Stink is in its favor -- not that it would be too much to take if it were longer, but at such a brief length this dose of thunder is positively addictive. And only when it starts to roll away does it sink in that Westerberg wrote his first genuine anthem with the great "Kids Don't Follow." [Rhino's 2008 expansion of Stink proves that the album is just as addictive and still as nasty at a slightly longer length, as it's pumped up with four bonus tracks: the delirious "Staples in Her Stomach," a song better than many on Sorry Ma, ridiculous covers of "Hey Good Lookin'" and "(We're Gonna) Rock Around the Clock," and then "You're Getting Married," a brokenhearted Westerberg solo home demo that doesn't fit sonically or thematically with the rest of Stink, but it's too good not to save, and it demonstrates that beneath all this absurd fury, Westerberg was getting serious and growing as a songwriter.] Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

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