So why is The Mighty Mighty Bosstones’ Question the Answers on this best 1,000 albums ever thing?
It’s funny, the way that time can play with memory and our perception of It’s funny, the way that time can play with memory and our perception of events.
Music is a potent force in conjuring memories from our pasts, of course.
For example, I discovered The Mighty Mighty Bosstones through college friends. I vividly remember a square of plaid pinned to my man Dave’s corkboard. When I asked him about it, he said that he ripped it off lead singer Dicky Barrett’s pants at a live show after Barrett dove into the mosh pit.
I was intrigued.
In short order, I wore out my copies of the Bosstones’ first two full length albums: Devil’s Night Out and More Noise and Other Disturbances (loud, raucous, and brilliant — and yes, still waiting for their Moments of Honor on this madcap best 1,000 albums ever project).
I mention this because it took me some time to get around to checking out Question the Answers, which was released in 1994, only a few short years after More Noise. Why? To paraphrase the depressive, neurotic Mikey from the iconic movie Swingers, when asked how he was able to obtain a girlfriend, he replied, “I don’t know… it was college, there was drinking.”
Since I came to it late, Question the Answers always felt like a later-era MMBT album, even though it really wasn’t. But that sense does bear out too from the standpoint that the band, while still fairly loud and raucous at times, tones things down overall — a trend that would continue on Let’s Face It in 1997.
It’s a very solid sweet spot, in other words, even if the early albums do show off the band’s energy and wild ska core-meets-ska punk charisma at its very peak.
“Hell of a Hat” displays this sensibility perfectly, kicking off with a loud, horn-driven barrage before simmering down to a chill and even elegant ska groove. The lyrics back up the more refined tone, which is a clever entreaty to dress up all you like when you hit the scene, but there’s no need to bring guns and violence into the equation.
“Kinder Words” has a “classic” MMTB feel to it, like it could have been removed from being included on Devil’s Night Out for being just a touch too toned down. I also love the use of organ to back up Barrett and the band’s ska punk attack.
“Dogs and Chaplains” continues the tradition of remaking the song that started out as “Drunks and Children” on Devil’s Night Out, and it’s one of my overall favorite Bosstones songs of them all. It has that incredibly exciting and visceral feel of being at a MMBT live show, which is a singular if occasionally harrowing experience.
Some stats & info about The Mighty Mighty Bosstones – Question the Answers
- What kind of musical stylings does this album represent? Boston Bands, Rock Music, Ska Punk, Third Wave Ska Revival, Alternative Rock
- Rolling Stone’s greatest 500 albums ranking – not ranked!
- All Music’s rating – 4.5 out of 5 stars
- When was Question the Answers released? 1994
- My ranking, the one you’re reading right now – #557 out of 1,000
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones’ Question the Answers on Spotify
A lyrical snippet from The Mighty Mighty Bosstones’ Question the Answers that’s evocative of the album in some way, maybe
We question one accessory: don’t think the piece is necessary. We agree you’re dressed to kill, but wonder if you will.
What does the “best 1,000 albums ever” mean and why are you doing this?
Yeah, I know it’s audacious, a little crazy (okay, maybe a lot cray cray), bordering on criminal nerdery.
But here’s what it’s NOT: a definitive list of the Greatest Albums of All-Time. This is 100% my own personal super biased, incredibly subjective review of what my top 1,000 albums are, ranked in painstaking order over the course of doing research for nearly a year, Rob from High Fidelity style. Find out more about why I embarked on a best 1,000 albums ever project.
