Music Review: Tommy Keene - Tommy Keene You Hear Me: A Retrospective 1983-2009

Has it really been 25 years since Tommy Keene’s major label debut, Songs From The Film? Along with The Replacements and Husker Dü, Keene seemed poised to bring a new type of power pop into the mainstream.

Of the three, he actually seemed to have the upper hand. Whereas Husker and the ‘Mats music came from a harder-edged punk perspective, Tommy Keene has never been shy about claiming The Raspberries as his major inspiration. The heavy duty promotional push from Geffen Records counted for a lot also.

So what happened? For one thing, Geffen dropped him like a hot potato shortly after his second album, Based On Happy Times (1989). But my guess is that the real reason is that his type of music has just never been very popular with the masses. Sure, The Raspberries had a big hit with “Go All The Way,” but it took them four albums to get there. Legends like Big Star never even got that far.

Keene's power pop may inspire rhapsodies from critics and a fanatical cult audience, but for the most part the general public couldn't care less. And that is a shame, because this is music that would appeal to a broad spectrum of listeners, if only anyone ever heard it.

Second Motion Records has assembled a stellar two-disc collection of Keene’s best, titled Tommy Keene You Hear Me: A Retrospective 1983-2009. It features some unreleased, some alternate, and some live tracks among the 41 songs included. But the bulk of it comes from his studio recordings over the years.

Fans of his two Geffen albums will appreciate disc one. Fifteen of its twenty-one tracks come from them, while the remaining six are previously unreleased cuts from those same sessions. Disc two is much more of a mixed bag. Tommy has bounced around a bit over the past 20 years or so, recording for labels such as Matador, Alias, and Eleven Thirty.

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Article Author: Greg Barbrick

Greg Barbrick is a Seattle native who was first published in 1988, in his hometown music magazine, The Rocket. Since then his work has appeared in print and online for numerous sources. He Googles himself so often that his mother told him it would make him go blind.

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