Review
Tommy Stinson
One Man Mutiny

Done To Death Music (2011) Loren

Tommy Stinson – One Man Mutiny cover artwork
Tommy Stinson – One Man Mutiny — Done To Death Music, 2011

In the long-honored tradition of solo records from Guns N’ Roses members, Tommy Stinson delivers One Man Mutiny. Of course, Stinson has an intriguing back story—he joined the legendary Replacements at age 13, playing with them and even getting manager Peter Jesperson to sign off as a legal guardian for touring’s sake. But that was thirty years ago. The purpose here is his second solo outing.

The record starts off with bluesy rock that, thankfully, doesn’t continue throughout. While “Don’t Deserve You” and “It’s a Drag,” definitely pull from this style, the record runs, essentially, in three varied parts. The first is full blown rock with swagger. The middle tier is built around Replacements-styled pop, and the end draws an alt country feel. Overall, it’s a bit disjointed and doesn’t seem to stick with any one style. After the first couple songs, the gears shift toward jangly pop, with a healthy dose of Paul Westerberg channeling in the vocal textures. It’s a lazy, yet semi-aggressive, style with a crisp sense of melody that really defines the songs. While this batch of songs, roughly from “Meant to Be” through “Seize the Moment,” are all decent songs, they really don’t jump out from the pack. They sound like Replacements/Westerberg, but minus the memorable pieces. It’s a solid enough two minute pop song, but it fades when the next one begins.

The record’s strongest tracks are the ones that bear more of a solo feel. The country “Zero to Stupid” mines familiar sad-about-a-girl subject matter with a forlornness that makes it among the more memorable tracks. His voice carries a world weary tone of resignation and wear and tear, and in the title track it wouldn’t be much of a stretch to say his voice is as ragged as Dylan (though less nasal). It portrays an honest, humble sense in the songs, and their charm lies mostly in the everyman sense behind them than in any of the hooks or melodies.

As a whole, the record will appeal to fans of The Replacements, of course, and should also have some pull for straight-up pop rock musicians like Tom Petty or mid-era Springsteen. It’s largely rock’n’roll minus the splash, wearing its working class hero proudly on its sleeve and without the self-indulgence. While none of the ten tracks here are true clunkers, none really rise above either.

6.0 / 10Loren • December 12, 2011

Tommy Stinson – One Man Mutiny cover artwork
Tommy Stinson – One Man Mutiny — Done To Death Music, 2011

Related news

Tommy Stinson in Cowboys in the Campfire

Posted in Bands on March 25, 2023

Bash & Pop live dates

Posted in Records on December 11, 2016

Advertisement

DCxPC 2025

Recently-posted album reviews

The Cure

Songs of a Lost World
Capitol, Fiction, Lost Music, Polydor/Universal (2024)

It's been sixteen years since The Cure released their last album. I don't know if anyone really knew what to expect, but it's one of the most influential bands in history so expectations were high. The Verdict? Those expectations were met. It'd be silly to say Songs of a Lost World is a "return to form" as the band and … Read more

City Mouse

So Far Out
Brassneck Records, It's Alive (2024)

There are few bands that hit with the mix of raw emotion and musical talent as a live City Mouse show. There are even fewer bands that can capture that live feeling on a record. It’s been a long 7 years since Get Right, but So Far Out keeps it moving as if no time has passed. Of course, the … Read more

Machine Girl

MG Ultra
Future Classic (2024)

Ideally, I would be a bit more interested in art. In visual art- paintings, sketches, MS Paint monstrosities- whatever. I wish I knew more about the meaning of a brush stroke or even had the desire to know more about the meaning of a brush stroke. I spend a lot of time listening to music and, subsequently, I see a … Read more