The Modern Lovers

Released

For the rest of his career, Richman leaned into his “First time I’m hearing of this!” charm and goofy-ass striped shirts that looked too young on him when he was twenty-one, when the Modern Lovers debut was recorded in 1972. He said “bye bye, old world,” and the band, very specifically drummer David Robison of future Cars fame, gave him a machine heft his stand-up philosophy never had again. Richman worshiped the Velvet Underground, but I hear Neu! and The Stooges, without knowing what Richman and the band thought of either. It is a rare blend of raw and direct and gentle and rock hard. Richman is very hard to dismiss as a singer. How could he not mean it? His combo of naivete and relentlessness is too annoying to fake, and too winning to be annoyed by.

Sasha Frere-Jones

Suggestions
Everybody’s Here cover

Everybody’s Here

Lost And Found
Coast to Coast cover

Coast to Coast

River City Tanlines
Vol. 1 cover

Vol. 1

Uncle Acid & the Deadbeats
Vol. 2: High and Inside cover

Vol. 2: High and Inside

The Baseball Project
Ragged Glory cover

Ragged Glory

Crazy Horse, Neil Young
Turn Ons cover

Turn Ons

The Hotrats
Diamond Dogs cover

Diamond Dogs

David Bowie
1969: Velvet Underground Live with Lou Reed cover

1969: Velvet Underground Live with Lou Reed

The Velvet Underground, Lou Reed
King of America cover

King of America

Elvis Costello
Dead Man’s Pop cover

Dead Man’s Pop

The Replacements