Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Steve McQueen (album)

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Released
  
June 1985

Length
  
45:18

Release date
  
1988

Label
  
Epic/Sony Records

Recorded
  
1984–85

Artist
  
Prefab Sprout

Producer
  
Thomas Dolby

Steve McQueen (album) httpsimgdiscogscombp8G9U2Q6uYErHvGFNCsmd90ax

Studio
  
Nomis Studios in West London

Steve McQueen (1985)
  
From Langley Park to Memphis (1988)

Genres
  
Pop music, Pop rock, Sophisti-pop, Indie pop

Similar
  
Prefab Sprout albums, Pop music albums

Prefab sprout steve mcqueen full album 1985


Steve McQueen is the second studio album by English pop band Prefab Sprout, released in June 1985. The album peaked at number 21 on the UK Albums Chart and number 180 on the US Billboard 200. The album was released in the United States as Two Wheels Good due to a legal conflict with the estate of American actor Steve McQueen.

Contents

The cover of the album is a reference to Steve McQueen's lifelong passion for Triumph motorcycles and the 1963 film The Great Escape, starring McQueen and featuring prominent motorcycle chase scenes (with stunts performed by himself on a Triumph motorcycle).

On 2 April 2007 it was reissued as a "legacy edition" double CD, featuring a remastered version of the original album and a bonus disc featuring acoustic versions of the songs recorded by the band's frontman Paddy McAloon in 2006.

Recording

On an episode of the BBC Radio 1 program Roundtable, noted musician and producer Thomas Dolby, a panelist on the program, spoke favorably of Prefab Sprout's "Don't Sing", a track from their 1984 Swoon. The band subsequently contacted Dolby, who met with their frontman and primary lyricist Paddy McAloon in the latter's County Durham home. McAloon presented Dolby with a number of songs he had written, "probably 40 or 50" by Dolby's estimate, some written as far back as 10–12 years prior. Dolby then picked his favorites and asked McAloon to make demo recordings of them; these recordings served as the basis for Dolby's initial process of planning the album's recording.

In the autumn of 1984, Dolby and Prefab Sprout began working on the album's songs in rehearsals at Nomis Studios in West London; after these sessions had commenced, they moved to Marcus Studios for proper recording. The sessions were of a mutually-amicable atmosphere, with the band being respectful of Dolby's edge over them in recording and musical experience and Dolby himself keeping into account the band's wishes, knowing that McAloon "wouldn't want to be diluted" by his additions to the album. Subsequent mixing was carried out at Farmyard Studios in Buckinghamshire.

Music and lyrics

The bulk of Steve McQueen's sound is dominated by Dolby's lush, jazz-tinged production. McAloon's songs touch on a number of themes, including love, infidelity, regret, and heartbreak, and are lyrically "literate and humorous without being condescending in the slightest."

Singles

'When Love Breaks Down' was first released as a single in October 1984, before the album was released, but failed to chart in the top 40, peaking at number 89 on the UK Singles Chart. It was reissued as a new single in March 1985, but again failed to chart, peaking at number 88. It was only after the album's release and on the single's third issue, in October 1985, that it finally broke through the singles chart and reached a peak of number 25 for two weeks in November/December 1985.

Between the second and third releases of 'When Love Breaks Down', two further singles were released. These were 'Faron Young', in July 1985, peaking at number 74, and 'Appetite', in August 1985, peaking at number 92.

'Goodbye Lucille #1' was renamed 'Johnny Johnny' for the final single release from the album in January 1986, peaking at number 64.

Critical reception

Critically acclaimed at the time of its release, Steve McQueen reached number 4 in the 1985 NME end-of-year poll for best albums, as well as number 28 on The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop critics' poll for best albums.

Chris Heath of Smash Hits called frontman Paddy McAloon one of the best songwriters of "depressingly precise song about the joys, fears and disappointments of love" to emerge in the wake of The Smiths' rise and lamented his suspicion that "too many people" would be put off by the obscurity and complexity of Prefab Sprout's songs. Richard Gehr of Spin cited Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Lennon–McCartney and Elvis Costello, among other figures, as some of the "many ghosts lurking" in McAloon's lyrics and wrote: "I confess that the usual sensitive singer-songwriter crap almost always makes me squeal with boredom, but McAloon delivers the bacon here." Robert Christgau, writing in The Village Voice, called McAloon "a type we've met many times before—the well-meaning cad," and was reminded of "the justly obscure, unjustly forgotten Jo Mama—or of Aztec Camera if Roddy Frame were a cad."

Subsequent retrospective reviews of the album have also been favorable. Jason Ankeny of AllMusic described Steve McQueen as "a minor classic, a shimmering jazz-pop masterpiece sparked by Paddy McAloon's witty and inventive songwriting." Alex Robertson of Sputnikmusic praised it as "a nearly flawless convergence of gorgeous, smart pop songwriting and immediately pleasurable production that divides itself into eleven songs that are both distinct and also separated by a common thread of excellence." Q's Gareth Grundy called Steve McQueen the most succinct expression of McAloon's skills as a songwriter, while Will Hermes, writing in Spin, described the album as "elegant" and found it to be Thomas Dolby's supreme achievement as a producer.

Legacy

Steve McQueen has subsequently featured in a number of all-time lists of greatest albums, including number 47 in a 1993 poll by The Times, number 90 in a 1995 poll by Mojo and number 61 in a 1997 poll by The Guardian. Stephen Troussé of Pitchfork Media cites it as "the defining record of 1985 sophisto-pop". The A.V. Club's Noel Murray writes that Steve McQueen and preceding album Swoon "are considered classics of the mid-'80s post-punk/new-wave era, even though they don't sound like they belong to any particular movement," while PopMatters' Russ Slater describes them as "great indie pop." Terry Staunton of Record Collector writes that "more than 20 years on, [McAloon's] dissertations on love, loss and uncertainty are just as affecting, the intelligence of the lyrics matched by the sophistication of the chord structures and the musical arrangements." Steve McQueen was selected for inclusion in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.

Track listing

All songs written by Paddy McAloon.

  1. "Faron Young" – 3:50 (titled 'Faron' on the US release)
  2. "Bonny" – 3:45
  3. "Appetite" – 3:56
  4. "When Love Breaks Down" – 4:08 (UK and US releases have different mixes of the song)
  5. "Goodbye Lucille #1" – 4:31 (renamed 'Johnny Johnny' for single release)
  6. "Hallelujah" – 4:20
  7. "Moving the River" – 3:57
  8. "Horsin' Around" – 4:39
  9. "Desire As" – 5:19
  10. "Blueberry Pies" – 2:24
  11. "When the Angels" – 4:29
US bonus tracks
  1. "The Yearning Loins" – 3:38
  2. "He'll Have to Go" – 3:06
  3. "Faron" (Truckin' mix) – 4:45
Legacy Edition second disc
  1. "Appetite" – 3:57
  2. "Bonny" – 5:58
  3. "Desire As" – 7:08
  4. "When Love Breaks Down" – 4:24
  5. "Goodbye Lucille #1" – 3:54
  6. "Moving the River" – 3:39
  7. "Faron Young" – 3:47
  8. "When the Angels" – 4:08

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes for Steve McQueen.

Songs

1Faron Young3:50
2Bonny3:46
3Appetite3:57

References

Steve McQueen (album) Wikipedia