This is pretty cool:
It’s one of the great caricatures of crotchety old people that they’re always lamenting the effects of inflation.
In our ageist imaginations, they’ll whine about the good old days, when they used to be able to get into a movie theater for a nickel, have a three-course meal for a dime, or get a rim job for a quarter.
But no one from the 78-rpm era could claim that a penny would buy them a minute of recorded music. Even Rudy Vallee records couldn’t have been that cheap.
Paul Westerberg’s latest release, however, is that cheap. Titled 49, the collection might be the biggest format-buster of our digital, format-busting age. It’s a 44-minute album in which all the songs flow, bleed, bump into, and, at times, collide with one another. Westerberg chose to release the set not as an album, but as a single 44-minute mp3, without any divisions, song titles, or anything else to break up the listening process for our deficient attention spans.
Westerberg released 49 through TuneCore, a digital-music delivery service, and since TuneCore charges artists only $9.99 a year per track (and 49 is technically only one track), Westerberg could simultaneously be looking at the lowest sales price and the greatest profit margin in the history of the music industry. Let’s assume that 40,000 people plunk down their Kennedy half-dollars for this album, a pretty realistic estimate, given the small investment that’s required. That would bring Westerberg nearly $20,000, with a profit margin of nearly $2,000 to 1.
[...]
And what about the music? Westerberg issued 49 with the following warning: “Do not listen while operating a motor vehicle. This product is not faulty — all sounds are valid and intentional as a work of art.”
He’s not kidding. While individual tracks (let’s pretend they have titles and call them “Who You Gonna Marry” and “Everyone’s Stupid”) are pleasant in the rough-hewn, one-man-band style of Mono/Stereo, some tunes pop in and out before you can decipher them, and the effect can be like having a hyperactive 4-year-old rapidly flipping radio stations, only to find that Paul Westerberg songs are on every station.
The big 14-car pileup happens near the end, when a bunch of covers, including The Kinks’ “Dandy,” Alice Cooper’s “18,” Elton John’s “Rocket Man,” and the Partridge Family’s “I Think I Love You” all meet at the same intersection.
It's available here. I just downloaded and it's pretty damn good.
For 49 cents how can you go wrong?
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Thanks for the heads up, TBogg. If you haven’t checked out Rhino’s reissues of the Replacement’s Twin/Tone releases, they’re all great. They cleaned up the sound as much as they could, the added tracks are, for the most part, really good, and the packaging/liner notes are well done. Definitely worth getting even if you already have them and, from what I remember, the price is right, too.
I’m 29 minutes into it and already convinced it’s my favorite Westerberg solo album yet.
You owe me 50 CENTS!
Nah, kidding. The Mats were such a touchstone to my life and Westerberg has been such a fucking unbelievable disappointment since All Shook Down (yes, I liked that one for some reason, even though it was basically him) — I blamed sobriety.
But hearing this once, and admiring the hell out of the concept, I might put him in the people who don’t/no longer drink winners circle with TBogg* and Tom Waits.
*I know T doesn’t drink. I assume he rarely if ever did. I know Westerberg used to drink. A lot.
Ever the weary luddite here.. Tbogg blog-winked me into spending 49 cents and finally trying to download music!
Gaaaaah!!! What If I lose it? What if it doesn’t work or my connection fails? I want a hard copy, preferably in vinyl, thank you. *g*
No way I would have tried this for 60 cents!
Thanks T.. back with a review later.
I don’t know, Jay. I’m a big fan of Waits and he actually seemed to get stronger as he got older … up to a point, but his last several releases have left me kinda cold. I agree with you about Westerberg slipping several (thousand?) notches as a solo artist, but 49:00 worked for me in a way his other releases haven’t.
Hell, I pretty much gave up on the ‘Mats after they booted Bob, so it’s been a long time since I’ve had much nice to say about their (or Westerberg’s) releases. That said, I finally listened to Pleased to Meet Me recently for the first time in ages (I loathed it when it came out — “Can’t Hardy Wait” was just fine on The Shit Hits the Fans, thank you) and I found myself enjoying it more than I ever thought possible.
Fuck, where did I put that Drunks With Guns album? This is getting embarrassing.
OK, half way through.. this non CD is worth at least 3.99 in the discount bin.
I hope those little glitchy sounds are a fancy way of denoting changes in tracks.. otherwise I have a problem.