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  1. 26 de sept. de 2008 · Don't Tell a Soul was met with plenty of derision at the time, but an even larger reason for its bad rep since likely has to do with the fact that this is the sound emulated by the Replacements ...

  2. 14 de ene. de 2013 · 79. It would be easy to dismiss much of The Replacements' album, Don't Tell a Soul, as sort of generic alternative rock lacking the same energy and fire of the band's previous works. Maybe that's true, but we are looking back on history after the virtual cavalcade of alternative-rock-turned-adult-contemporary acts like Goo Goo Dolls, Soul ...

  3. The ReplacementsDon't Tell A Soul. More images. Label:Rhino Records (2) – R1 25831, Sire – R1 25831: Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue. Country:US: Released:Jan 17, 2017: Genre: ... My copy has Don't Tell A Soul Side 1 on one side, Side 2 has Please To Meet Me Side 2 label on Side 2. Interesting. Reply Helpful. YourVinylSucks Jan 9, 2020.

  4. When The Replacements released Don't Tell a Soul in 1989, many of their fans felt like the record was too polished and too pop. Producer Matt Wallace [Tape Op #128] took a good portion of the blame for the band’s “selling out.”But what a lot of people overlooked is that the record was not mixed by Matt, but by Chris Lord-Alge.

  5. 30 de jul. de 2008 · The Replacements released Don't Tell A Soul in 1989 and was maybe their most commercial record. Working with producer Matt Wallace, who would later go on to work with Maroon 5, the album includes some of their most highly emotional songs such as "They're Blind", "Anywhere's Better Than Here" and "Darlin' One".

  6. Who gives a fuck. All the best Replacements recordings are primarily the constructs of him and Bob. Unfortunately, Bob couldn't hang and was too big a fuckup for the biggest fuckup band of the time to record on this or the the previous one. Don't get me wrong. I fucking love the Stinson boys, but this is Paul's band--even if Bob gets that credit.

  7. ROCK · 1989. Don’t Tell A Soul has been unfairly maligned by Replacements fans. Even though the album was clearly the beginning of the end for one of the best bands of the Eighties, Don’t Tell A Soul is as poignant as anything the ‘Mats ever recorded. The band had lost founding member Bob Stinson — the loose cannon guitarist who ...