Steady Nerves

Steady Nerves is a 1985 album by Graham Parker and The Shot.[1]

Steady Nerves
Studio album by
Graham Parker and the Shot
Released1985
GenreRock
LabelElektra
ProducerWilliam Wittman, Graham Parker
Graham Parker and the Shot chronology
The Real Macaw
(1983)
Steady Nerves
(1985)
The Mona Lisa's Sister
(1988)

The album was produced by William Wittman, who Parker's record company, Elektra, initially opposed. Parker had originally proposed Squeezing Out Sparks producer Jack Nitzsche, but this had been rejected by Elektra. As a result, Elektra only forwarded the funds for four songs to be recorded before the company gave approval for Wittman; ultimately, the rest of the album was recorded and released.[2] Parker recalled,

"I mentioned that Wittman, who had somehow or other come across my transom, had just engineered C. Lauper's rather brill She's So Unusual LP. Well, truth be told, Bill W. is quite a forceful little fella and I really had no input in the production at all and just gave up and let him get on with it. He obviously knew what he was doing, and that, to me, is the problem with the record. My weakness and laziness let it happen. I was really hoping for a much more unusual sounding collection but didn't have the brains and moxie to accomplish such a feat."[3]

The album contains his only US Top 40 hit, "Wake Up (Next to You)".[4] Parker said of the song, "That breathy voice - I wrote the song like that. It was in my imagination, and when it came to recording, I could do it, with a bit of tuning up and stuff."[5] Of "The Weekend's Too Short", he said, "'Weekend's Too Short' is definitely a song not written from my point of view. I mean, I don't care about the weekends particularly, do I? I don't work 9 to 5 all week and let loose on Friday night."

Track listing

All songs written by Graham Parker.

  1. "Break Them Down"
  2. "Mighty Rivers"
  3. "Lunatic Fringe"
  4. "Wake Up (Next to You)"
  5. "When You Do That To Me"
  6. "The Weekend's Too Short"
  7. "Take Everything"
  8. "Black Lincoln Continental"
  9. "Canned Laughter"
  10. "Everyone's Hand Is On The Switch"
  11. "Locked Into Green"
  12. "Too Much Time To Think" [CD bonus track]

Personnel

  • Graham Parker – lead and backing vocals, rhythm guitar
  • Brinsley Schwarz – lead guitar, backing vocals
  • George Small – keyboards
  • Kevin Jenkins – bass
  • Michael Braun – drums
  • Huw Gower, William Wittman – additional backing vocals
  • Louis Cortelezzi – saxophone on "Wake Up (Next to You)"
  • Jay Leonhart – acoustic bass on "Locked Into Green"
  • Uptown Horns – horns on "Locked Into Green"; arranged by Ralph Schukett
  • Hubert Kretzschmar – album cover, graphic design
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gollark: Does it matter? In most contexts where you *need* to know if something is "alive" there's probably a more specific definition which categorises them better.
gollark: Apparently old pacemakers ran on small RTGs, but people are too uncool to do that nowadays I think.
gollark: > I wonder if it would be possible to engineer a contagious bacteria with rapid reproductive rates to produce a fast acting psychoactive compound when undergoing cellular division, similar to how cholera produces cholera toxin. It would be an interesting non lethal bio weapon that could incapacitate enemy forces in a few hoursIt seems like it's getting cheaper and easier for people to genetically engineer bacteria and stuff, so I worry that within a few decades it will be easy enough that people will just do this sort of thing for funlolz.
gollark: I think I remember this being discussed before? Spirit complained about it.

References

  1. "Steady Nerves - Graham Parker & the Shot | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  2. "`NERVES` STEADIES PARKER`S CAREER". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  3. "GP Answers Your Questions: Part 11". www.grahamparker.net. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  4. "Graham Parker - Chart history | Billboard". www.billboard.com. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  5. ""Parker's Still Pretty Angry," by J.D. Considine". homepages.uni-regensburg.de. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
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