Yes Please!

For the Fourplay album, see Yes, Please!
Yes Please!
Studio album by Happy Mondays
Released 22 September 1992
Genre Madchester
Length 48:59
Label Factory - FACT 420
Producer Chris Frantz, Tina Weymouth
Happy Mondays chronology
The Peel Sessions 1991
(1991)
Yes Please!
(1992)
Double Easy - The U.S. Singles
(1993)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Yes Please! was the last studio album that the British band Happy Mondays recorded before leaving Factory Records. Generally seen as their poorest work, it was released in 1992 and was produced by Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth of Talking Heads. The album is most famous for driving independent label Factory Records to bankruptcy, having cost too much to record.

Sound

It is reasoned by many, including Shaun Ryder in his autobiography,[2] that one of the reasons for the album's failure was the change of producer between the third album, 1990's Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches and this one. Paul Oakenfold, the third album's producer was unavailable to produce Yes Please! The new production team, Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth, drastically changed the band's sound from that of the previous album. Whilst before, Happy Mondays' sound had been grounded in a fusion of Rock and Acid House music, here it was changed to a more out-of-date style of '80s synthpop combined with Caribbean influences.

While the band had previously enjoyed almost universal critical approval for their music, the change of sound on this album garnered a huge critical backlash against the band. Music critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine writes of the album: "In the hands of Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth, the group's music loses much of its distinctive, thuggish edginess, as well as its reliance on current dance trends, becoming faceless, undistinguished dance-pop sludge." [3] The UK music paper Melody Maker dismissed the album with a two-word review: "No thanks." The album was included in Pitchfork Media's 2010 list of "ten career-killing albums" of the 1990s.[4]

Recording in Barbados

The band along with their families went to Barbados to record the album. It was recorded in the studio at Eddy Grant's house, where they bumped into Mick Jagger on a few occasions, who was staying nearby. This trip was nothing short of a disaster; although the band were sent there so that Shaun Ryder and his brother would not take heroin, they ended up taking crack cocaine. Shaun Ryder did bring enough methadone to last him for four weeks, but inadvertently smashed the case at Manchester Airport. After running out of money, they then took extreme measures such as selling the furniture from Eddy Grant's studio (to fund the drugs) and creating "crack dens" out of sun-loungers in Eddy's own swimming pool. Bez ended up breaking his arm after overturning a hire car, while Shaun had failed to write any lyrics.

When the band returned to the UK, Shaun got hold of the master tapes for the album, threatening to destroy them if Tony Wilson and Factory Records did not cough up any money for them. When Factory did finally get hold of them (for £50), the recordings contained no vocals (since Shaun failed to write any lyrics while in Barbados), which meant the whole exercise was a waste of time and money for Factory. Shortly after the album was finally released, Factory Records was officially declared bankrupt.[5]

On a more humorous, but bizarre note, Shaun attempted to "kidnap legendary guitarist Johnny Marr to join them on their excursion to Barbados. Marr says he was a member of Happy Mondays for "about 25 minutes".[6]

Cowboy Dave

The final song of the album, "Cowboy Dave", was written in reference to Dave Rowbotham, former guitarist of The Durutti Column who was murdered in 1991. The lyrics alluded to the group's suspicions about the circumstances of his death.[7]

Track listing

All tracks written by Happy Mondays.

  1. "Stinkin' Thinkin'" – 4:17
  2. "Monkey in the Family" – 4:41
  3. "Sunshine & Love" – 4:46
  4. "Dustman" – 3:44
  5. "Angel" – 5:51
  6. "Cut 'em Loose Bruce" – 4:26
  7. "Theme From Netto" – 4:13
  8. "Love Child" – 5:12
  9. "Total Ringo" – 3:38
  10. "Cowboy Dave" – 7:43

Singles

Personnel

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Ryder, Shaun (October 17, 2011). Twisting My Melon. Bantam Press. ISBN 0593068270.
  3. Allmusic.com Review
  4. "Staff Lists". Pitchfork. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  5. "Factory Records – The Rise And Fall of UK's Legendary Indie Label". Live4ever. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  6. Johnny Marr's Happy Mondays Kidnap. 19 October 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2016 via YouTube.
  7. Simmonds, Jeremy (2008). The Enciclopedia of Dead Rock Stars. Chicago Reviews Press. pp. 279–280. ISBN 1-55652-754-3.

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