Pleased to Meet Me is the fifth studio album by the American rock band the Replacements, released in 1987 by Sire Records. The album was acclaimed by music critics.
Pleased to Meet Me is the only album recorded by the band as a trio. After their previous album Tim, guitarist Bob Stinson was no longer with the band. Stinson was still a member when the album's demos were recorded in August 1986; however, he only showed up for one recording session.
The main recording sessions for the album took place at Ardent Studios in Memphis between November 1986 and January 1987, under the supervision of producer Jim Dickinson.
Guitarist Bob "Slim" Dunlap joined the band soon after the recording sessions.
Music and lyrics
While the punk roots of the group were still apparent on Tim, by Pleased to Meet Me they were there more in spirit as the band delved into other genres, such as soul and cocktail jazz, alongside tracks featuring their customary hard rocking sound. Perhaps due to the album's recording in soul music center Memphis, Tennessee, or the influence of producer Jim Dickinson, the band augmented its sound with saxophone on the tracks "I Don't Know" and "Nightclub Jitters" and a horn section on "Can't Hardly Wait", which features Big Star vocalist Alex Chilton on guitar.
A music video was made for "The Ledge", but it was banned from airplay on MTV due to its lyrical content about suicide.
Artwork and release
The album's cover art mocks the band's transition from young punks to successful musicians with a major record deal, depicting a handshake between one person clad in a suit, starched white shirt, glitzy watch and diamond ring and the other wearing a ripped workshirt. Westerberg was the man in the ripped shirt, but his face was not shown in the shot used on the cover. The self-mocking tone continues on the song, "I Don't Know", with its chorus, "One foot in the door/The other one in the gutter."
On September 23, 2008, Pleased to Meet Me was remastered and reissued by Rhino Entertainment with 11 additional tracks consisting of studio demos, B-sides, and alternate takes.[5] New liner notes were written by Peter Jesperson.
In 2020, Rhino Entertainment released a deluxe edition that contained 3 CDs and 1 LP.[6]
Pleased to Meet Me was acclaimed by music critics. Writing for Rolling Stone, David Fricke described it as "an album alive with the crackle of conflicting emotions and kamikaze rock & roll fire."[17] In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic felt that Pleased to Meet Me "was the last time [The Replacements] could still shoot for the stars and seem like their scrappy selves and, in many ways, it was the last true Replacements album".[7] The album appeared at number three in The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop critics' poll for 1987.[18] In 2012, Paste placed the record at number 70 on its list of "The 80 Best Albums of the 1980s".[19]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Paul Westerberg, except where noted
All tracks are written by Paul Westerberg, except where noted
LP Track Listing Side A
No.
Title
Writer(s)
Length
55.
"Valentine" (Rough Mix)
3:41
56.
"Never Mind" (Rough Mix)
2:50
57.
"Birthday Gal" (Rough Mix)
4:26
58.
"Alex Chilton" (Rough Mix)
Paul Westerberg, Tommy Stinson, Chris Mars
3:15
59.
"Election Day" (Rough Mix)
2:46
60.
"Kick It In" (Rough Mix)
3:30
All tracks are written by Paul Westerberg, except where noted
LP Track Listing Side B
No.
Title
Writer(s)
Length
61.
"Red Red Wine" (Rough Mix)
3:22
62.
"The Ledge" (Rough Mix)
4:14
63.
"I.O.U." (Rough Mix)
3:00
64.
"Can't Hardly Wait" (Rough Mix)
3:07
65.
"Nightclub Jitters" (Rough Mix)
2:47
66.
"Skyway" (Rough Mix)
2:08
67.
"Cool Water" (Rough Mix)
Bob Nolan
2:40
Personnel
Paul Westerberg – lead and background vocals, electric and acoustic guitars, piano (on "Nightclub Jitters"), six-string bass (on "Skyway", "Can't Hardly Wait"), harmonica (on "Can't Hardly Wait")
Tommy Stinson – bass guitar (except "Skyway"), background vocals, upright bass (on "Nightclub Jitters"), acoustic guitar and guitar fills (on "Can't Hardly Wait")
Chris Mars – drums, background vocals, cowbell (on "Alex Chilton"), foot tap (on "Skyway")
Jim Dickinson (credited as East Memphis Slim) – keyboards (on "I.O.U.", "The Ledge", "Can't Hardly Wait"), background vocals (on "I.O.U."), organ (on "Valentine"), vibes (on "Skyway")
James "Vito" Lancaster – background vocals (on "I.O.U.", "Alex Chilton", "Shooting Dirty Pool")