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Welcome to Plus 6 [Extra tracks, Import]

Beautiful South Audio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Audio CD (23 Feb 1999)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Extra tracks, Import
  • Label: Imports
  • ASIN: B00000DMQH
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,216,525 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Song for whoever
2. Have you ever been away
3. From under the covers
4. I'll sail this ship alone
5. Girlfriend
6. Straight in at 37
7. You keep it all in
8. Woman in the wall
9. Oh Blackpool
10. Love is
11. I love you
12. You and your big idea
13. You just can't smile it away
14. Its instrumental
15. But 'til then
16. I'll sail this ship alone (Orchestral mix)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

The Housemartins used crazily bouncing melodies to sweeten their political pop. After they broke up (after just two albums), P.D. Heaton tried a similar technique with the Beautiful South--lush melodies, rolling piano, and beautiful voices sugar-coating delightfully subversive lyrics. Only where the Housemartins railed against bankers and unthinking sheep, the Beautiful South moved from the political to the personal (except for some delicious swipes at the music biz), writing gorgeous love songs to dull partners ("I Love You But You're Boring"), gruesome murders ("Woman in the Wall"), and conversation fear ("You Keep It All In"). Funnier still is "Song for Whoever", which reveals the man behind the love song: "Oh Shirley, Oh Deborah, Oh Julie, Oh Jane / I wrote so many songs about you / I forget your name". --David DaleyEND

From Amazon.com

The Housemartins used crazily bouncing melodies to sweeten their political pop. After they broke up after just two albums, P.D. Heaton tried a similar technique with the Beautiful South--lush melodies, rolling piano, and beautiful voices sugar-coating delightfully subversive lyrics. Only where the Housemartins railed against bankers and unthinking sheep, the Beautiful South moved from the political to the personal (except for some delicious swipes at the music biz), writing gorgeous love songs to dull partners ("I Love You But You're Boring"), gruesome murders ("Woman in the Wall"), and conversation fear ("You Keep It All In"). Funnier still is "Song for Whoever," which reveals the man behind the love song: "Oh Shirley, Oh Deborah, Oh Julie, Oh Jane/I wrote so many songs about you/I forget your name." --David Daley

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
This is one of the finest albums I’ve ever had on my CD player. Welcome to the Beautiful South is 50 minutes of pure pop perfection, as Heaton, Corrigan and Co. croon along to infectious jazz beats with literary pop hooks, tales of marital abuse, alcoholisms and the moribund exasperation of modern-day relationships. If this were Radiohead or Lou Reed, the band would have had us reaching for the razor blades by the end of track three. Instead, song-writing duo Heaton and Rotheray take a leaf out of Morrissey’s song book and inject their morbid musing with a satirical wit and comedic depth.

The result is how you would imagine Noel Coward sounding if he’d lived through the eighties recession. Bitter, bile-spewing though utterly charming; lifting the spirits for those unwilling to pay attention, whilst giving the rest of us a lesson in how to create substantial pop. The biggest hits are the best of the bunch, with Song for Whoever and You Keep it all In representing not only two of the finest tracks of 80’s pop music, but two of the finest works of pop music ever. They may be deceptively downbeat and cynical to the full, but still somehow, as romantic and beautiful as music can get. However, it is not just the jazzy piano ballads that impress, oh no, there’s also some wonderful guitar work on display... most notably on the rocking Girlfriend and the somewhat trivial, though always entertaining, Straight in at 37.

The closing numbers are as different as you could possibly get to the majority of pop music being created at the time. Love is... begins in a way not too dissimilar to the rest of the album with it’s melancholic tales of middle-class love; before transforming into a wild and raucous sing a long corker, with more than a passing nod to The Beatles. Whilst the closing number, the wonderfully titled I Love You (But You’re Boring) is truly, unlike anything else on the album. Here a solo acoustic guitar leads us through sound effects, vocal passages, hidden voices and a whole lot of distortion as Heaton screams about a love that was too busy listening to Carousel, to bake a phallic cake.

This really is one of the best albums ever... and a debut to boot. The music is catchy, memorable and always intelligent, whilst the musicianship of the band is absolutely faultless. Though the future line up would change, and the band as a whole would go on to explore further lyrical dimensions and more experimental sonic textures, this is still the greatest example of band’s undiluted creativity. A must own for every household.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
It's hard to believe that the Housemartins would be one of the most influential British groups of all time. Not only did the band give us some classic material, but their break up would give to rise to two of the most talented and successful British acts around namely Norman Cook (a.k.a. Beats International, Freakpower, Pizzaman and Fatboy Slim) and the Beautiful South, who were actually a more laid back version of the Housemartins. The band have built up an impressive catalogue over the years and it all began with their first album and the ballad "Song For Whoever". The album features soft pop at its best and really includes a style that is a mix of folk rock, pop and the blues with the songs all being given a distinctly British feel to them. The album includes some of the best British songs of the last twenty years and is far and away the best album the band have released to date. The album includes the standout tracks "Have You Ever Been Away", "You Keep It All In", "I Love You (But You're Boring)" and "Straight In At 37". Overall it's a great album and is highly recommended.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Victor HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD
Following from the format laid down in the Housemartins, jaunty bouncy tunes which belie the seriousness of the lyrics, and really eye catching album covers, the Beautiful South's debut record is a corker.

Opening with the witty `Song for whoever', then trawling through subjects as disparate as loneliness (I'll Sail This Ship Alone) and murder (The Woman In The Wall) with a distinctly jazzy tinge and always with a literate style and a sense of humour, this is a collection of eleven fine songs with no filler. Perfect pop, these can be listened to intently or as background music, but however you chose to listen you will be tapping your foot and humming along in no time. A thoroughly entertaining record, one of the finest offerings available from the early nineties.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
A Classic
A band that were criminally overlooked by critics of the day largely due to their anti-fashion aesthetic. This album is a classic. Gorgeous, witty, ironic pop songs. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Aidan G
Welcome to the Wonderful North
This is a great album. It is in fact my second copy. There should be a law passed in the UK that everyone must own a copy or else they could face a custodial sentence. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Mr. R. Edwards
pictures on album cover
Who is the girl with pistol in her mouth!.Or the photographer/artist,could anyone HELP with this information,I'd love a larger copy of picture.THANKS for LISTENING!!!
Published 24 months ago by W. Waterman
Stands the test of time....
This album is almost unique; lyrically it will make you laugh,wince,cry or even shock. This is often incongrous given the backdrop of joyful uplifting musicality that abounds. Read more
Published on 20 May 2009 by D. L. Young
Welcome to the Liars Bar....
Something from the pen of Paul Heaton is always a cause for interest and this debut from the six-peice from Hull is certainly an album of interest. Read more
Published on 29 Aug 2006 by Merry Terry
An excellent intro
An excellent introduction to The Beautiful South. Check out Paul Heaton's earlier incarnation in the Housemartins too... Read more
Published on 30 Jan 2006 by PJ Online
Welcome to.. this band's best!
A magnificent album - this is the first long player from The Beautiful South. The production quality is raw, there is a great edge to it and itholds some of the best work the band... Read more
Published on 21 Jan 2003 by B. Mullan
good but not the best Beutiful south I have bought
This is an awful cd the worst one i have bought of the beautiful south collection but is still wonderful as beutiful south are the best. Read more
Published on 26 Feb 2000
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