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Sound Opinions

#730 Songs That Make You Cry, Opinions on The Replacements & FKA twigs

Sound Opinions

Sound Opinions

Music, Society & Culture, Arts

4.32K Ratings

🗓️ 22 November 2019

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For one reason or another, everyone has got a handful of songs that make them cry. Hosts Jim DeRogatis and Greg Kot share some of the songs that bring tears to their eyes. They also review something old and something new: they revisit The Replacements' album Don't Tell a Soul 30 years later and share their thoughts on the new record from FKA twigs.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

So now, ladies and gentlemen, it is star time. Are you ready for star time? Oh, yeah. From W bez Chicago and PRX, this is sound opinions. I'm

0:35.0

Greg got us and I'm Greg Kot. Now everybody's got a few songs that when they hear them

0:38.0

they can't help but get a little misty eye and we're no exception.

0:41.0

We'll share some songs that make us cry.

0:44.0

Plus, we'll review the new album from genre-bending artist

0:47.2

FCA Twigs and the 30th anniversary reissue box set of the replacements Don't Tell a Soul.

0:54.0

That's all coming up on Sound Opinions.

0:57.0

You are listening to Sound Opinions, and in a bit we're going to share some of the songs that make us cry.

1:06.0

But first, we're going to review something old and something new.

1:10.0

Oh yeah, I'll tell you what we could do.

1:17.0

You'll be me for a while I'll be you.

1:22.0

That is I'll be you from the new old replacement album.

1:28.0

Yeah. It is a box set called Dead Man's Pop which is basically a reissue of their 1989 album Don't Tell a Soul,

1:36.0

a very controversial album among replacements fans as it is seen as the beginning of the end in many

1:42.0

ways, Jim, their third record for a major

1:44.0

label they got the big spiffy remix job on that record for maximum commercial

1:50.8

radio impact it didn't go. It did not become a huge hit. But now

1:55.9

we have a remix by the original producer of the record, Matt Wallace, who worked on the

2:02.4

record very closely with the band. They felt very happy. the record

2:03.0

very closely with the band.

2:04.0

They felt very happy with the record they had made

2:07.0

until it got to the major label remix stage.

...

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