Get Happy!! (Elvis Costello album)
Get Happy!! is a studio album by Elvis Costello and the Attractions. The fourth album by Elvis Costello, his third with the Attractions, it is notable for being a dramatic break in tone from Costello's three previous albums, and for being heavily influenced by R&B, ska and soul music. The cover art was intentionally designed to have a "retro" feel, to look like the cover of an old LP with ring wear on both front and back.
Like its predecessor Armed Forces, it was commercially successful, charting at number 11 in the US and number 2 in the UK, where it went gold. It was placed at No. 11 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 greatest albums of the 1980s. In 2000 it was voted number 298 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.
Background
During the American concert tour for Armed Forces in April 1979, Costello engaged in a drunken argument with Stephen Stills and Bonnie Bramlett in a Columbus, Ohio, Holiday Inn hotel bar, during which he referred to James Brown as a "jive-assed nigger," then upped the ante by pronouncing Ray Charles a "blind, ignorant nigger." Costello apologised at a New York City press conference a few days later, claiming that he had been drunk and had been attempting to be obnoxious to bring the conversation to a swift conclusion, not anticipating that Bramlett would bring his comments to the press.It has been suggested that the R&B influence on the album was an attempt to atone for his comments, but as Costello writes in the liner notes for the 2003 Rhino version,
The band had played some of the songs during the "Armed Funk Tour" and had rehearsed them for the record, but were dissatisfied with the sound, feeling it was too "new wave." They then went back and re-arranged many of the songs using an R&B sound. On their US tours, Costello had been able to find a number of R&B records of his favourite artists and having been listening to them during the rehearsals, decided to emulate the feel of those songs.
The band recorded the album at Wisseloord Studios in Hilversum, Netherlands, in an attempt to isolate themselves from distractions, but they were still able to keep themselves drunk during the recording sessions. The exception to this was "New Amsterdam," which was recorded solo by Costello in a small studio in Pimlico.
With 20 songs on the original album, the vinyl cutting and pressing process had to be precise to fit all of them on the two sides of the record. A commercial for the album, added as a hidden track on the Rhino Records remaster, jokes about the album's length and number of songs.
Packaging and artwork
The Get Happy!! sleeve was designed by F-Beat art director Barney Bubbles, who had worked with Costello at Stiff and Radar. He does not receive a credit in line with his insistence on anonymity.The original album sleeve reversed the two sides; side one began with "I Can't Stand Up for Falling Down" and ended with "Riot Act". The second side started with "Love for Tender" and ended with "High Fidelity". Only on the record labels themselves was the true running order revealed.
Original vinyl release
The original release of the album was on 12-inch vinyl and cassette. It was unusual for a single vinyl record to contain as many as twenty songs because it was thought that what was known in the industry as "groove cramming" would result in a loss of sound quality. Get Happy's producer, Nick Lowe, mentions this issue on the album's back cover:Reception
Although Get Happy!! received generally positive reviews upon its release, praise was not as unconditional for the album as it had been for its predecessors. Robert Christgau of The Village Voice wrote that Get Happy! establishes "not his fecundity but his fallibility", noting the presence of "lotsa duds", but observed some memorable "tropes and hooks". Red Starr, writing in Smash Hits, remarked that it was "short on memorable songs" but added that "repeated plays reveal hidden depths". Rolling Stones Tom Carson felt that "if the new album is hard to get into, it's also difficult to ignore", concluding: "He's succeeded in making his obsessions belong to us. For better or worse, we'll all ride them out together to the end." Sounds Dave McCullough was highly positive, writing that the album "soars to a pinnacle of Costello's combined creative force, by the end leaving the listener quite breathless." In its year-end list, the NME named Get Happy!! the second best album of 1980, while the album placed seventh on The Village Voices annual Pazz & Jop music critics' poll, beating out such better selling releases as Michael Jackson's Off the Wall, Stevie Wonder's Hotter than July and Pete Townshend's Empty Glass.Retrospective reviews have been much more positive, and Get Happy!! has since been considered to be one of Costello's greatest albums, as well as one of the best of the 1980s. On the website Acclaimed Music, it is currently ranked as the 76th most acclaimed album of the 1980s. In 1989, Rolling Stone placed Get Happy!! at number 11 on its list of the 100 best albums of the 1980s, and it has also ranked on other publications' lists of the 1980s' best albums, including a 2002 list by Pitchfork Media at number 26, as well as a 2012 list by Slant Magazine at number 68. In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic wrote that Get Happy!! "bursts with energy and invention, standing as a testament to how Costello, the pop encyclopedia, can reinvent the past in his own image". Critic Rob Sheffield, writing in The New Rolling Stone Album Guide, dubbed it a "tour de force". In 2008, Chris Jones of the BBC gave it a rave review, calling it "Elvis' greatest album" and writing: "Get Happy!! can still be considered the greatest coherent statement he ever created."
Track listing
All songs written by Elvis Costello unless otherwise indicated.- Note the record sleeve does not match what's on the actual record. The sides are reversed.
Bonus tracks (1994 Rykodisc)
- "Girls Talk" – 1:55
- "Clowntime Is Over" – 3:44
- "Getting Mighty Crowded" – 2:09
- "So Young" – 3:23
- "Just a Memory" – 2:16
- "Hoover Factory" – 1:43
- "Ghost Train" – 3:05
- "Dr. Luther's Assistant" – 3:27
- "Black & White World" – 1:50
- "Riot Act" – 2:48
- "Love for Tender" – 1:39
Bonus Disc (2003 Rhino)
- "I Stand Accused" – 3:10
- "So Young" – 3:28
- "Girls Talk" – 1:56
- "Human Touch" – 2:20
- "Temptation" – 2:28
- "Motel Matches" – 2:27
- "Clowntime Is Over" – 3:46
- "B Movie" – 2:26
- "Girls Talk" – 2:03
- "Getting Mighty Crowded" – 2:09
- "From a Whisper to a Scream" – 2:30
- "Watch Your Step" – 2:02
- "Dr Luther's Assistant" – 3:28
- "Ghost Train" – 3:07
- "New Lace Sleeves" – 3:47
- "Hoover Factory" – 1:45
- "Just a Memory" – 2:17
- "I Can't Stand Up for Falling Down" – 2:45
- "New Amsterdam" – 2:31
- "Black & White World" – 1:51
- "Riot Act" – 2:50
- "5ive Gears in Reverse" – 2:33
- "Love for Tender" – 2:07
- "Man Called Uncle" – 2:06
- "King Horse" – 2:45
- "Seven O'Clock" – 2:00
- "High Fidelity" – 3:17
- "Opportunity" – 2:33
- "The Imposter" – 2:11
- "Don't Look Back" – 4:41
Personnel
- Elvis Costello – vocals, guitar, organ on "Possession"
- Steve Nieve – piano, organ
- Bruce Thomas – bass, harmonica on "I Stand Accused"
- Pete Thomas – drums
- Roger Bechirian - engineer
- Barney Bubbles as VAT 245 4945 42 - artwork
- Keith Morris as VAT 239 7568 14 - photography
Charts