The release of
Zen Arcade inspired SST label-mates
Minutemen to record their own double album,
Double Nickels on the Dime in 1984. By spring of 1985
Zen Arcade had sold 20,000 copies, and in subsequent years it has maintained a high critical status regardless of commercial success.
AllMusic says in its review of the album that "Hüsker Dü try everything" and while "that reckless, ridiculously single-minded approach does result in some weak moments," it is "also the key to the success of
Zen Arcade." The
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has placed "Turn On the News" on its list of "
500 songs that shaped rock and roll." It was ranked No. 4 on
Spins list of top 100 Alternative music albums, ahead of
Nirvana's
Nevermind (No. 5), and
Patti Smith's
Horses (No. 6).
Slant Magazine listed the album at No. 73 on its list of "Best Albums of the 1980s".
Andy Cairns, from the Northern Irish alternative band
Therapy?, listed the album as his seventh favourite album of all time on an article for the online music publication
Louder Than War. In the article, Cairns said "I got this at a time when [I] needed to hear fearsome music that wasn't just boneheaded rage. An album to completely lose yourself in, a punk headphone album. After sitting through the whole album the world takes on a different colour and taste. The first time [I] heard it [I] thought it sounded like The Byrds with a
fuzzbox. I love not only the tunes but all the little interludes and backwards masking that goes on. The whole thing just shimmers from start to finish."
Covers Zen Arcade was the subject of two tribute albums,
Du Huskers: The Twin Cities Replays Zen Arcade (Synapse Recordings, 1993) and the fan-compiled
Something I Learned Today: An International Tribute to Zen Arcade (Krapp, 2004). ==Track listing==