Jump to content

Getting Away with It

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Beatleswhobeachboys (talk | contribs) at 08:04, 1 October 2023. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

"Getting Away with It"
Cover of UK 7-inch single
Single by Electronic
from the album Electronic (1994 reissue)
B-side"Lucky Bag"
Released4 December 1989 (1989-12-04)[1]
Recorded1989
Genre
LabelFactory (UK) FAC 257
Virgin (Europe)
Warner (Australia, Canada, U.S.)
Songwriter(s)Bernard Sumner,
Johnny Marr,
Neil Tennant
Producer(s)Bernard Sumner,
Johnny Marr,
Neil Tennant
Electronic singles chronology
"Getting Away with It"
(1989)
"Get the Message"
(1991)
Official Video"Getting Away with It" on YouTube

"Getting Away with It" is the first single by the English band Electronic, which comprised Bernard Sumner of New Order, ex-Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, and guesting vocalist Neil Tennant of Pet Shop Boys. It was first released in 1989.

Composition

Musically, Bernard Sumner wrote the verse and Johnny Marr wrote the chorus.[3] The lyrics, co-written by Tennant with Sumner, are a parody of Marr's Smiths partner Morrissey, and his public stereotyping as morose and masochistic (Pet Shop Boys would further satirise this trend on their 1990 song "Miserablism").[4] Morrissey, for his part, criticized the song in a 1991 interview, calling it "totally useless" and joking that the song had a "very apt title".[5]

In a 2021 interview with Music Radar, Marr revealed that Chris Lowe also worked on the track, citing the bassline as his work. ABC and The The Drummer David Palmer programmed the track's drums.[6]

The fluid, rich production incorporates a full orchestra (conducted by Art of Noise's Anne Dudley) and a rare guitar solo by Marr, while the three remixes that appeared on the two UK 12-inch releases take in disparate musical styles like disco and acid house.

Single

"Getting Away with It" was first issued by Factory Records in the United Kingdom in December 1989, and released the following year in the rest of the world. It appeared on 7-inch, 12-inch, CD and cassette. The primary B-side was an instrumental called "Lucky Bag", the only unadulterated reflection of Marr and Sumner's early, shared enthusiasm for Italo house. This song was also remixed and released on the UK maxi single.

As well as the single edit and three 12-inch remixes, "Getting Away with It" was released as an instrumental; as an unedited, longer version; and in its early form before Dudley's strings were added (this is the only version of the song which has yet to be released on Compact Disc; the 7-inch edit was included on both the US and UK CD singles despite being labelled "Full Length Version"). The Full Length Version on the 12" vinyl version is 5:14 - as used on the 1994 CD re-issue of the album. The 7" mix is just the "Full Length Version" faded out before the strings outro.

Artwork

The single's cover was designed by Peter Saville, who used an elegant stock photo of a glass of whisky.[7] The title was originally written in sentence case, just as Pet Shop Boys songs are. The photograph was inverted for the second UK 12-inch, with the typeface from the Panasonic logo appropriated for the band's name.[7] This arrangement was used for the US editions of the single in 1990.

Music videos

Two music videos were made for "Getting Away with It". The first, directed by Chris Marker and produced by Michael Shamberg for European use in 1989, featured Sumner, Marr and Tennant in a studio environment miming to the single edit of the song. Additional footage of Marker's muse Catherine Belkhodja, strolling among peacocks through Paris Zoo and also singing to the track, was left out.[8] The second video, shot in 1990, was made for the US release. Sumner and Tennant appeared, alternately, against a series of coloured background, with artistic effects superimposed. Two women's faces are also panned in close-up. The later version is available on the 2006 Get the Message DVD.

Reception

Ben Thompson in the NME wrote "The most complete pop record of the week, by an infinite margin...A lovely airy melody drifts in and out of the song; gently weighted with obtuse, lovelorn one-liners...The record somehow manages to be much more than the sum of its parts and stubbornly refuses to give up its element of mystery".[9]

In Sounds Damon Wise wrote: "It's nothing shocking, nothing that surprising, it's just that every time you think you're tired of it you can't help flipping back the stylus to catch that chorus".[10]

Today the song remains well-known due to its commercial success (it reached number 12 in the UK[11] and number 38 in the USA[12]), the calibre of its performers, and the fact that it was Electronic's debut single (and was thus anticipated by both the music press and fans of New Order, The Smiths and Pet Shop Boys at the time).

Along with "Get the Message" and perhaps "Disappointed", it remains their best known song, and was their biggest selling single, shipping 350,000 copies in the US and reaching the UK Top 20.[13]

Track listings

Charts

Chart Peak
position
Australia (ARIA) 40
Canadian Singles Chart 75
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[14] 12
US Billboard Hot 100[15] 38
US "Billboard" Hot Dance Music[16] 7
US Alternative Airplay (Billboard)[17] 4

In concert

"Getting Away with It" was played live in August 1990 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles — when Electronic supported Depeche Mode on their World Violation Tour for two dates at the venue[18] — at the Cities in the Park event in Manchester a year later,[19] and at Wembley Hall One in December 1991. Pet Shop Boys guested on all these performances.

"Getting Away With It" is a common part of Johnny Marr's live sets, and in July 2013 Sumner joined Marr at Jodrell Bank to perform the song.[20]

Appearances

Although the music was written with their first album in mind — and before their involvement with Neil Tennant[21] — "Getting Away with It" was not included on Electronic's first LP in May 1991 (a reflection of their confidence in the newer material), although it was slotted in between tracks 4 and 5 on the international versions and the subsequent 1994 reissue on Parlophone, to bolster sales. In some territories "Getting Away with It" replaced the album track "Gangster".[22]

"Getting Away with It" also appeared on the Australian "Forbidden City" CD single in 1996, and in two versions on a withdrawn compilation planned for release in Japan three years later.[23] It has also featured on a variety of various artists compilations, sometimes in remixed form, and was the second track on the retrospective set Get the Message – The Best of Electronic in 2006.

Additional information

The song was recorded by British artist Skin for inclusion on the re-release of her debut album Fleshwounds. Unlike the original, the music was updated to a more rock-edged sound. It has since become a fan favourite at her gigs and is never left out of a setlist. A double A-side of the song was to be released with her single "Lost", but due to poor sales of the album and singles it was pulled by EMI at the last minute. No video was shot for the song.

The phrase 'getting away with this' was used in a Spitting Image spoof of Pet Shop Boys in 1993.[24]

References

  1. ^ "This Week: The Next Seven Days in View". Record Mirror. 2 December 1989. p. 28.
  2. ^ Pearis, Bill (24 February 2022). "From Billy Bragg to Billie Eilish: 21 great Johnny Marr collaborations that aren't The Smiths". BrooklynVegan. Retrieved 22 January 2023. Electronic's 1989 debut single, "Getting Away With It," was made with Pet Shop Boys' Neil Tennant and was full-on disco, sweeping strings and all, with Marr laying down a rhythm guitar riff worthy of Nile Rodgers.
  3. ^ Johnny Marr, The Smiths & the Art of Gun-Slinging (2006)
  4. ^ Behaviour / Further Listening 1990–1991 sleevenotes
  5. ^ "Lyrical King". Spin. April 1991.
  6. ^ Draper, Jason (31 May 2021). "Interview: Johnny Marr looks back on Electronic's debut album 30 years on". MusicRadar. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  7. ^ a b FAC461 Factory Records: The Complete Graphic Album (2006)
  8. ^ KINOTECA Archived October 8, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ NME, 9 December 1989
  10. ^ Sounds, 9 December 1989
  11. ^ Official Charts Company
  12. ^ billboard.com archive
  13. ^ Warner Bros. press release, June 1991
  14. ^ "officialcharts.com". officialcharts.com. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  15. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2013). Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles, 14th Edition: 1955-2012. Record Research. p. 271.
  16. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Hot Dance/Disco: 1974-2003. Record Research. p. 88.
  17. ^ "Electronic Chart History (Alternative Airplay)". Billboard. Retrieved 7 August 2017.
  18. ^ "Manchester District Music Archive". Archived from the original on 2007-10-21. Retrieved 2007-10-24.
  19. ^ Cerysmatic Factory
  20. ^ "Johnny Marr responds to chances of an Electronic reunion with Bernard Sumner". NME. 4 November 2016.
  21. ^ Melody Maker, 13 April 1991
  22. ^ Example here
  23. ^ worldinmotion.net
  24. ^ Pet Shop Boys Commentary