Get Happy

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Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 48:13

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

12.27.10
The Attractions' most impressive work as a group
2007 | Label: Hip-O Records

After a drunken quarrel on the Armed Forces tour turned into a disaster that left Costello looking like a dick at best and a racist at worst (in retrospect, it was definitely "dick"), he took solace in old soul records — the deep Southern soul of Stax most of all — and somehow ended up cranking out even more amazing songs than he had been over the previous few years. The album that subsequently came out of a frantic recording session in Holland speeds through 20 songs in 48 minutes, and it's the Attractions' most impressive work as a group: flexible, powerful, psychically synched-up, and above all fast. They effortlessly pull off one soul groove after another (keyboardist Steve Nieve cops licks from Booker T. and the M.G.s all over the place), as well as tear-in-my-beer country ("Motel Matches"), ska ("Human Touch") and garage rock ("Beaten to the Punch"). Those last three, by the way, all happen in a seven-minute span.

If some of these songs are formal exercises, they're fantastically entertaining formal exercises: The opener "Love for Tender," for instance, is the riff from "You Can't Hurry Love" taken at bottle-of-amphetamines speed, wrapped around approximately five thousand puns about money… read more »

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Get Happy!

EMUSIC-0298A9DC

"After a drunken quarrel on the Armed Forces tour turned into a disaster that left Costello looking like a dick at best and a racist at worst (in retrospect, it was definitely "dick"), he took solace in old soul records — " I remember when the press tried to do a number on EC for using the N word. I am sure we've all said things we regretted when we had a few too many adult beverages. I bought "Get Happy" when it was released in 8-Track (yes, I'm old) and completely wore it out. "Get Happy" will make you "Get Happy." BLUECHAIR is right; it is an awesome, timeless record.

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A Rock N Soul Masterpiece

bluechair

This is Elvis' most underappreciated record as it is probably his best overall work. It is a rapidfire onslaught of 2-3 minute gems with only brief pauses. If you're going to get one E.C. cd, this is the one. Awesome, timeless record.

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new pricing

Emby

nice one emusic I thought you said the new pricing would resolve not available for download issues

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Boom!

madformusic

A terrific race to the finish. Incidentally, I have Armed Forces on the CD player right now. Must be an EC kind of day. His Nick Lowe produced albums are his best.

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Absolutely brilliant.

zambodog

I'm a huge Elvis fan going back to nearly the beginning and this is my favorite. His tribute to Stax/Motown holds up as well as anything he's done. The essentials for me are "Riot Act," "Clowntime is Over," "King Horse" and "I Can't Stand Up for Falling Down," but really, the whole freakin' thing is fantastic. If I were to create a "Desert Island Discs" list, this is the first one I think of.

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His First Left Turn

MadDogM13

This album sure sounded weird after the dense, paranoid "Armed Forces"--Nick Lowe mixed it to sound like an old Stax soul album, though the songs themselves are closer to Motown. I really like almost all of them, too, though "New Amsterdam" (his farewell to groupie goddess Bebe Buell) is the only one that really strikes me in the heart. Good party album, too.

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Elvis is King

Latch

20 examples of pop perfection in 3 minutes or less (roughly) with his usual lyrical genius . . . always one of my EC faves

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eMusic Features

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Icon: Elvis Costello

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

Smart, angry and mercurial, Elvis Costello is one of the greatest living songwriters; for better or worse, he knows it. The man with the big spectacles (born Declan MacManus) is an exile everywhere he goes: an Englishman whose strongest work owes its greatest debts to American country and R&B; a new wave star who hated the term and the scene and has spent a lot of the latter half of his career working with classical… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Get Happy!! was born as much from sincere love for soul as it was for Elvis Costello’s desire to distance himself from an unfortunate verbal faux pas where he insulted Ray Charles in an attempt to get Stephen Stills’ goat. Either way, it resulted in a 20-song blue-eyed soul tour de force, where Costello doesn’t just want to prove his love, he wants to prove his knowledge. So, he tries everything, starting with Motown and Northern soul, then touching on smooth uptown ballads and gritty Southern soul, even finding common ground between the two by recasting Sam & Dave’s “I Can’t Stand Up (For Falling Down)” as a careening stomper. What’s remarkable is that this approach dovetails with the pop carnival essayed by Armed Forces, standing as a full-fledged Costello record instead of a genre exercise. As it furiously flits through 20 songs, Costello’s cynicisms, rage, humor, and misanthropic sensibility gel remarkably well. Some songs may not quite hit their targets, but that’s part of the album’s charm — it moves so fast that its lesser songs rush by on the way to such full-fledged masterpieces as “New Amsterdam,” “High Fidelity,” and “Riot Act.” 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. [The Japanese edition includes bonus material.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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