Knockin' Em Back

Album: Come Feel Me Tremble (2003)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Knockin' Em Back" is about returning to booze after a long bout of sobriety. In it, Paul Westerberg sings about defiantly hitting the bottle and releasing his inner demons.

    I want to scream and shout
    Want to let the bad guys win, let 'em out


    The subject matter is heavy and the lyrics celebratory (on the surface, at least), but the sound is jangly and irreverent. Part of that sound stems from Westerberg recording this and every song on Come Feel Me Tremble, his fifth solo album, by himself at home. Another part comes from Westerberg's black humor and talent for avoidance.

    Westerberg, music, and alcohol have been intertwined since he got his start in 1979 as frontman for The Replacements, a band whose influence outshone their sales. Since their 1991 breakup, many have observed that the band's drunken debauchery stalled their broader success just as much as it appealed to their hardcore fanbase. They were as unpredictable and unruly in the studio as they were onstage, making it difficult for anyone to work with them.
  • Replacements fans mythologized the band's drunken antics, and young Westerberg fed into the hype, but he revealed a more complex reality as he matured. His heavy drinking started mostly as a way to deal with stage fright and other negative emotions. He wasn't partying on tour so much as he was self-medicating.

    In 1990, around the time he started writing material for The Replacements' sixth and final studio album, All Shook Down (which he planned to be his solo debut before executives talked him back to the band), Westerberg's marital troubles made him realize he had a problem. He'd started drinking heavily at home even after tours ended, and the emotions the booze was masking had become deeper. He'd worked hard to be a rock star, but upon achieving that status realized he didn't like it very much. "It wasn't so much that I needed alcohol to face the audience," he says in Bob Mehr's Trouble Boys: The True Story of the Replacements. "I needed the alcohol to mask the disillusionment."

    Westerberg achieved 13 years of sobriety before drinking again during a 2013 tour the year he wrote and recorded this song. The boredom and stress of touring drove him to it, but in Trouble Boys he also blames his legacy: "I have no solid answer other than the fact that every article on me would usually start with 'The former hard-drinking frontman...' And it's like, I might as well do what I want to do 'cause I'm never gonna live that down."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Chris Robinson of The Black Crowes

Chris Robinson of The Black CrowesSongwriter Interviews

"Great songwriters don't necessarily have hit songs," says Chris. He's written a bunch, but his fans are more interested in the intricate jams.

Timothy B. Schmit of the Eagles

Timothy B. Schmit of the EaglesSongwriter Interviews

Did this Eagle come up with the term "Parrothead"? And what is it like playing "Hotel California" for the gazillionth time?

Marc Campbell - "88 Lines About 44 Women"

Marc Campbell - "88 Lines About 44 Women"They're Playing My Song

The Nails lead singer Marc Campbell talks about those 44 women he sings about over a stock Casio keyboard track. He's married to one of them now - you might be surprised which.

Producer Ron Nevison

Producer Ron NevisonSong Writing

Ron Nevison explains in very clear terms the Quadrophenia concept and how Heart staged their resurgence after being dropped by their record company.

Elton John

Elton JohnFact or Fiction

Does he have beef with Gaga? Is he Sean Lennon's godfather? See if you can tell fact from fiction in the Elton John edition.

P.F. Sloan

P.F. SloanSongwriter Interviews

P.F. was a teenager writing hits and playing on tracks for Jan & Dean when he wrote a #1 hit that got him blackballed.