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List Price: $13.98 | | Label: Hip-O Records
Salesrank: 22572
Released: May 1, 2007 |
| Our Price: $8.59 |
| Used Price: $8.40 |
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| Media: Audio CD |
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Get Happy!! Track Listing:
1. Love For Tender
2. Opportunity
3. The Imposter
4. Secondary Modern
5. King Horse
6. Possession
7. Men Called Uncle
8. Clowntime Is Over
9. New Amsterdam
10. High Fidelity
11. I Can't Stand Up For Falling Down
12. Black And White World
13. Five Gears In Reverse
14. B-Movie
15. Motel Matches
16. Human Touch
17. Beaten To The Punch
18. Temptation
19. I Stand Accused
20. Riot Act
Editorial Review:
Costello continued his most-prolific-man-alive act with the 20-track Get Happy!!, his fourth album in 30 months. He says what he has to say and shuts up--only a small handful of cuts approach or go over the three-minute mark--often in a pile-driving style inspired by Stax/Volt. (Sometimes loosely inspired; his version of the Sam & Dave ballad "I Can't Stand Up for Falling Down" is played in a rush.) Costello's wordplay is at a height here, but it doesn't divert the eye from the emotional wreckage behind the scenes: as he sings on "Human Touch," "What the makeup hides can't be made up with a kiss." --Rickey Wright
Get Happy!! Reviews:
One of the best ever 
2009-06-12 - Get Happy by Elvis & the Attractions is up there with Abbey Road as one of the greatest rock albums ever made, from the first cut to the last. Incredible wordplay floating in a stew of crunchy, tight, sparkling rockin' new wave rhythm country & ska. This one album contains enough golden nuggets to make careers for 4 or 5 lesser artists. I listened to it constantly 25 years ago - it's just as stunning today.
Get Happy,Get Going! 
2009-04-06 - Getting caught up in non stop recording can have very mixed results.All one has to do is eyeball the catalog of people like Prince or Todd Rundgren in their prime to figure that out. One of the main issues I tend to have with Elvis Costello during this time. His first few albums with the Attractions have this tendancy to sound a bit........well alike. The songwriting hugely strong across this but pretty much everything is,for example is done very speedily.There is no question that,especially when the tempo is upped that he is just really rushing everything.His version of "I Stand Accused",along with "Love For Tender","Opportunity"...pretty much everything here just bleeds into a whole:the speedy tempos,the Stax/Motown organs and basslines,which are particularly strong here and a lot of....slightly unintelligable singing at times. Some tunes like "High Fidelity" and "B Movie" are even a little cluttered up.It's great,reckless and rocks like nobody's business but it all but totally lacks that combination of focus and diversity Costello would achieve as the 80's wore on. Oddly enough something very interesting happens when the album gets into the ballad side of things. "Motel Matches" and "Riot Act" both have this genuine release of tention and great musical build,probably because even at the manic pace at which he kept his music Costello realized you had to keep the style of the ballad as it was so...on these the tunes themselves have more focus,the playing sounds better and Elvis shows us what he has in him as a singer. I would'nt say by any means this is a retro 60's soul album by any means:it has that flavor but producer Nick Lowe still gives everything that....revved up British New Wave sound so there kind of a musical cultural clash here,not all that different then would appear on The Jam's final recording The Gift.However I must point out on a soul/new wave kind of project like this,it's best kept short and sweet.And maybe this one runs on a bit long (about 50 minutes) to really hit it's point home. But it will sure cook at a party both in the backround and especially on your rock lobster era dancfloor!
Get Happy all over it 
2009-03-11 - Got this album upon release in 1980. It is a brilliant album filled with very short songs. 'Five Gears In Reverse' was played on FM radio in South Florida.
'I Can't Stand Up For Falling Down' kicks off the album in high gear.
'Beaten To The Punch' is a favorite. 'Riot Act' is one of the most under rated songs in the whole Costello catalog.
This album is not only must have for any Elvis Costello fan, it's also a must for any fan fan of pop or rock music. A must!
C'mon Get Happy 
2009-01-15 - After three brilliant albums of tart, taut albums fueled by incessant touring and the excesses of rock living, Elvis Costello made the headlines with a single regrettable drunken utterance. Before anyone knew what was happening, he became better known than most pop artists of the day, and for all the wrong reasons. It forced him to a place that made him reevaluate his career to that point, and "Get Happy" began to emerge. He immersed himself in a stack of his old favorite soul records (Booker T, Four Tops, Stax/Volt albums), and emerged a different songwriter. "Get Happy" was the album where EC challenged himself to move beyond a public's expectation and led to his forth five star record.
While Elvis and the Attractions weren't completely r'n'b and alcohol saturated, some of Elvis' songs here do show the frenzy that they were recorded in. He once said that Nick Lowe's attitude toward production was "a fader in one hand an a vodka bottle in the other." The result was that these songs were frequently written and recorded in canon blasts, like the boast of "Possession" being written in five minutes after an afternoon's infatuation with a cocktail waitress. The band was challenging itself to pound out as much music as possible, as if every idea could be turned into a song. It created a wealth of material, as evidenced by the original album's sonic blast of twenty songs.
It also meant that EC's vocal performances were sometimes given all the nuance of a party reveler standing astride the jukebox ("I Stand Accused" and "Possession" being two obvious violators). On the other hand, there are some stunners here that point at the upcoming "Trust" and EC's vocal growing sophistication, as in the brilliant "Riot Act." It didn't stop the compositions from frequently striking the bull's-eye, and to this day I am amazed that the twenty multiple genre hook heavy songs on "Get Happy" somehow couldn't produce one radio single. (Also of interest is that "The Sopranos" lifted "High Fidelity" as one of the songs for an episode about Tony and Carmella's marital dysfunction.)
All told, Elvis, along with the invaluable input of The Attractions and Nick Lowe, rose to the occasion to make an album that shattered boundaries. Soul, ska and country (as well as the trademark "new wave" sound) still effortlessly roll from the grooves of "Get Happy."
Get Happy Indeed 
2009-01-04 - Stripped down sound most like their live shows, few overdubs and layers make this an album that the Attractions could play live note for note. Steve Nieve, Bruce and Pete Thomas rock on this homage to classic rock and roll that influenced Elvis's songwriting for the first part of his career. "B Movie" transports you to a damp alleyway, "Almost Beaten to the Punch" and "5ive Gears In Reverse" (note the spelling) feature Elvis screaming his head off, the cover of "I Can't Stand Up For Falling Down" swings at a faster tempo than the Sam and Dave version, "High Fidelity" showcases Elvis's moody whisper, "Riot Act" is a classic. The album also features different versions of two songs, "Black and White World" and "Clowntime is Over" than appeared earlier. Again, Elvis' word play stand out, especially on "Temptation" (a direct homage to Booker T's "Tide is Tight"). Get Happy Indeed!!!!!