Public Image Ltd.
Happy?

Virgin    90642-2  (1987)

Rock/Pop
CD, 8   Tracks, 35:11  Length
01 Seattle Public Image Ltd. 03:40
02 Rules and Regulations Public Image Ltd. 04:32
03 The Body Public Image Ltd. 03:11
04 Save Me Public Image Ltd. 04:49
05 Hard Times Public Image Ltd. 03:42
06 Open and Revolving Public Image Ltd. 04:01
07 Angry Public Image Ltd. 04:13
08 Fat Chance Hotel Public Image Ltd. 07:03
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals John Lydon
Bass Allan Dias
Guitar John McGeogh
Drums Bruce Smith
Musician Public Image Ltd.
Producer Gary Langan; Public Image Ltd.
Cover by Richard Evans
Personal Details
Index # 2734
Owner Dave
Tags Alternative Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Happy? benefits from some relative stability in PiL's lineup, not to mention the undeniable fact that the band members' allegiance makes sense (in contrast to that of Album's crew). Keyboardist Lu Edmonds (the Damned and 3 Mustaphas 3), guitarist John McGeoch (Magazine and Siouxsie & the Banshees), drummer Bruce Smith (the Pop Group and Rip Rig & Panic), and muscular Yank bassist Allan Dias are a solid unit, forming something of a post-punk supergroup. The Blind Faith of the '80s? Even more radio friendly than Album, Happy? is increasingly entrenched in dancefloor-type fare. Lydon isn't his full-blown postal self, but he's still continents away from being rosy. Though the music might be too dated for most ears years later, Lydon's riffing on unplanned pregnancy ("The Body"), sheep mentality ("Angry"), and false national pride ("Hard Times") still holds together lyrically. McGeoch and Edmonds' sparkling work comes a little too close to stadium-bound for comfort (paging Mr. Edge...), but it's a good turn away from Album's brainy metal-wank fireworks. Just when the band sounds as if it's approaching standard issue 1987 chart fare, it fiddles with the arrangements and structures enough to make sure the songs don't qualify as such. If PiL was trying to remain accessible and challenging at the same time, the band fell just short of its goal; given the conspirators involved, Happy? is not quite as distinct as it should have been. But as far as PiL outings are considered, it was Lydon's best in six years. -- Andy Kellman (allmusic.com)