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Released: Sept. 10, 1996


Rating: 3.260 (average of 5 ratings)


Genre: heartland rock


Quotable: --


Album Tracks:

  1. Overture
  2. Jerry
  3. Key West Intermezzo (I Saw You First)
  4. Just Another Day
  5. This May Not Be the End of the World
  6. Emotional Love
  7. Mr. Bellows
  8. The Full Catastrophe
  9. Circling Around the Moon
  10. Large World Turning
  11. Jackamo Road
  12. Life Is Hard


Sales:

sales in U.S. only 1 million
sales in U.K. only - estimated --
sales in all of Europe as determined by IFPI – click here to go to their site. --
sales worldwide - estimated 1 million


Peak:

peak on U.S. Billboard album chart 9
peak on U.K. album chart --


Singles/Hit Songs:

  • Key West Intermezzo (I Saw You First) (8/17/96) #14 US, #10 AR, #15 AC
  • Just Another Day (11/30/96) #46 US, #13 AR, #24 AC


Mr. Happy Go Lucky
John Mellencamp
Review:
“John Mellencamp responded to his massive heart attack and close-call with death with Mr. Happy Go Lucky, the most overtly ambitious album in his career. Mellencamp has always been a bit of a fatalist, so it isn’t any great surprise that there is an undercurrent of dark mortality running through most of his songs” (Erlewine).

“What is a surprise is his musical approach. Although he hasn’t abandoned the essential elements of his music – the rootsy instrumentation, the violins, the simple song structures, the gritty folk-rock – he has augmented it with the help of Junior Vasquez, a noted dance producer. Vasquez doesn’t push Mellencamp into dance, but he adds certain dynamics and techniques from club music to Mr. Happy Go Lucky which ocasionally gives the album a greater depth. It’s a gentle change, not a forceful one – nothing sounds like dance music, but there are deeper rhythms and bass throughout the album, which breathes life into well-crafted songs like Key West Intermezzo” (Erlewine).

“Since he doesn’t pursue dance completely on Mr. Happy Go Lucky, Mellencamp doesn’t end up alienating his fans, but the reluctance to give himself over to dance makes the album uneven. Ironically, the tracks that exhibit Vasquez’s influence the least are the least successful – they simply sound like Mellencamp is going through the motions. Nevertheless, Mr. Happy Go Lucky proves that Mellencamp has more surprises in him than many listeners would have expected and suggests that he is in the process of revitalizing his career” (Erlewine).


Review Source(s):


Related DMDB Links:

previous album: Dance Naked (1994) next album: John Mellencamp (1998)


Last updated January 20, 2009.