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  1. The album was produced by Peter Jesperson and Brian Paulson. [5] It was recorded over four nights, for less than $5,000. [6] [7] Chan Poling and Paul Westerberg contributed to The Old New Me. [8] Dunlap wrote 10 of the album's 11 songs, closing with a cover of James Burton 's "Love Lost".

  2. Paul Harold Westerberg (born December 31, 1959) is an American musician, best known as the lead singer, guitarist, and songwriter for The Replacements. Following the breakup of The Replacements, Westerberg launched a solo career that saw him release three albums on two major record labels.

  3. www.loudersound.com › features › paul-westerberg-folker-interviewClassic Rock Newsletter - Louder

    20 de feb. de 2024 · “That song [‘My Dad’] is like a photo in a way, like a snapshot of my dad towards the end,” says Paul Westerberg, on the phone from his home in Minneapolis. “There’s a photo on the new album with me on his knee as a kid, and that’s the first photo you see when you open it up. That’s him in his prime.

  4. It was no small feat wrangling Westerberg—the raspy-throated, brilliant tunesmith who effortlessly cranked out heart-on-flannel-sleeve soul searchers and underground rock-defining anthems...

  5. 16 de sept. de 2011 · In honor the Replacements’ impending reunion shows, I present to you this interview with Paul Westerberg. The Replacements were a very important band to me. I saw them in September, 1984, at the late and lamented Joe’s Star Lounge, weeks after arriving in Ann Arbor as a freshman. Per Hoffman – now one of my oldest friends, then a new and ...

  6. 24 de jun. de 1993 · Former Replacements frontman Paul Westerberg, the man with the rap sheet of an anarchist and the soul of an artist, is wandering in and out of record stores in downtown Manhattan, chain-smoking...

  7. 17 de mar. de 2016 · And that story is told in a new book. Bob Mehr’s Trouble Boys: The True Story of The Replacements is the result of more than a decade of work and was completed with full cooperation from the group. The seeds for the book were planted in 2004 when Mehr travelled to Minneapolis to conduct a face-to-face interview with Paul Westerberg.