| Katrina and the Waves | ||||
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| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | March 22, 1985 | |||
| Recorded | November 1984−January 1985 | |||
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| Genre | ||||
| Length | 37:19 | |||
| Label | Capitol Attic (Canada) | |||
| Producer |
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| Katrina and the Waves chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Katrina and the Waves | ||||
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Katrina and the Waves is the thirdstudio album by American/Englishnew wave bandKatrina and the Waves, released in March1985 byCapitol Records. It was their first album on a major label, and a Top 30 hit in the US and the UK.[4][5] The majority of tracks werere-mixed andoverdubbed versions of songs that had appeared on their first two albums; the tracks "Walking on Sunshine" and "Going Down to Liverpool" were entirely re-recorded versions of songs from their first independently released album.
This version of "Walking on Sunshine" became a top-ten pop hit in both theUS and theUK.[6][7]
Between 1983 and 1984, English-based Katrina and the Waves released their first two albums on theCanadianAttic label and enjoyed someairplay success in Canada[8] as well as a chart position on theUK Singles Chart with "Que Te Quiero" (#84).[7] Helped by intensive touring and the added mystique of their releases being on import inEngland and theUnited States, the band's reputation was growing. And whenthe Bangles covered "Going Down to Liverpool", a song from Katrina and the Waves'first album, major record labels started to take an interest.[8] This eventually led to signing a deal withCapitol Records inLos Angeles.
It was decided to re-record, overdub or remix ten tracks from the two Canadian albums for their Capitol debut.[9] The label wanted to make some of the songs more single-worthy, particularly "Going Down to Liverpool" and "Walking on Sunshine", so the band did some recording and mixing inLondon with producerPat Collier, who had worked on their first two albums. "We did loads of versions [of "Walking on Sunshine"]," Collier said in 2017. "We just kept going round and round in circles. We kept redoing it nonstop."[1] They also added a horn section, which the original 1983 version didn't have.Katrina Leskanich said in 2015, "As we were recording it, an arranger wandered in and said: "You should put horns on that." And he hummed what became that pumping melody. But the horn section we got in whinged so much about how hard it was to play that we had to drop the key just for them."[10]
Ultimately, Capitol decided to outsource a remix, and the tracks were given to engineerScott Litt atthe Power Station inNew York. The band arrived from London with Collier to meet with their new label and to be in New York while Litt mixed the album. Due to a problem with the drum tracks for "Walking on Sunshine", Litt had to re-record the drums at the Power Station. When drummer Alex Cooper had finished his work in a couple of takes, "it was phenomenal," Litt said in 2017. "All of a sudden the song exploded. As soon as the drums were done, that spurred us on to do more. I was flying guitars around."[1] Talking withGoldmine magazine in 2021 about working with Litt on "Walking on Sunshine", Leskanich said, "Boy did he wave a magic wand over it, because it was his idea to start with the drums and said that the DJs will go crazy with that sound and it will wake up America. That was a stroke of genius. He was a great producer, getting the sound right."[9] Litt also re-arranged parts in the song, like holding the horns out of the first chorus, and Leskanich's "Woo," which was somewhere else in the song, was put in after the drum intro. "Scott absolutely made that track," Collier said. "He took it in hand and made it what it is."[1]
According to Leskanich, "Walking on Sunshine" was never meant to be the album's first single, as Capitol originally wanted to go with "Do You Want Crying". "Capitol sent out a sampler of four tracks and all the DJs said, "It's the "Sunshine" song because we can talk over the intro and it's got the right energy for summer," she said.[11] When the song was released as a single in March 1985, it charted all over Europe, the US, Canada and Australia.[1] By July 1985,Katrina and the Waves had sold more than 300,000 copies worldwide.[12]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Robert Christgau | A−[14] |
| The Rolling Stone Album Guide | |
In two contemporary reviews forVillage Voice andPlayboy, criticRobert Christgau wrote, "For a while I thought the only thing Capitol had done right was sign them, but between the exuberant Katrina Leskanich and the surefire Kimberley Rew this band would be hard for any label to fuck up: not one of the twenty songs on the band's two Attic LPs ... is a loser." Christgau felt that, as a songwriter, Rew has an "unerring knack for up-to-the-minute Sixties-style hooks" and writes "rock-outsider lyrics that never get obtrusively specific," while Leskanich has "a voice so big and enthusiastic she could makeBarry Manilow's songs sound likeHolland-Dozier-Holland." The "tricky" new version of "Machine Gun Smith" makes up for the "Motown horns" added to "Walking on Sunshine," Christgau said, and the re-recorded "hyped-up" drums on the latter "don't really hurt anything."[14][16]
Commenting on the songs being re-recorded or remixed,Trouser Press wrote, "In most cases, it's an improvement, exposing untapped realms of both pop and power, but the second "Going Down to Liverpool" obliterates the atmosphere and the hooky melody of the original in an absurdly overheated arrangement. With that one caveat,Katrina and the Waves is otherwise a delight."[17]
In a review forAllMusic, David Cleary wrote that re-recording ten songs from their first two albums made a lot of sense, given the "criminal" lack of attention the albums received. Recorded in what Cleary described as "an aggressive power pop style", most of the songs "hold up extremely well under this approach," he said. He singled out "Red Wine and Whisky" and "Do You Want Crying", describing them as "desperately driven and urgent tuneful rockers," while "Cry for Me" and "The Sun Won't Shine" "regenerate as blues-like shouting numbers of apocalyptic intensity." Cleary called the album "an essential purchase."[13]
All tracks are written byKimberley Rew, except where noted.
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Red Wine and Whisky" | 3:43 | |
| 2. | "Do You Want Crying" | Vince de la Cruz | 3:35 |
| 3. | "Que Te Quiero" | 3:20 | |
| 4. | "Machine Gun Smith" | 3:03 | |
| 5. | "Cry for Me" | 4:58 |
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6. | "Walking on Sunshine" | 3:59 | |
| 7. | "Going Down to Liverpool" | 4:30 | |
| 8. | "Mexico" | de la Cruz | 3:17 |
| 9. | "The Sun Won't Shine Without You" | 3:38 | |
| 10. | "The Game of Love" | 3:16 | |
| Total length: | 37:19 | ||
Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[18]
| Chart (1985) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australian Albums Chart[19] | 39 |
| CanadaRPM100 Albums[20] | 18 |
| German Albums Chart[21] | 43 |
| New Zealand Albums Chart[22] | 38 |
| Swedish Albums Chart[23] | 6 |
| UK Albums Chart[24] | 28 |
| USBillboard 200[25] | 25 |
Singles -Billboard (United States)[6]
| Year | Single | Peak position | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Billboard Hot 100 | Adult Contemporary | Hot Dance Music/Club Play | Mainstream Rock Tracks | ||||||||||||
| 1985 | "Walking on Sunshine" | 9 | 21 | 19 | 21 | ||||||||||
| "Do You Want Crying" | 37 | — | — | — | |||||||||||
| "Que Te Quiero" | 71 | — | — | — | |||||||||||
| "—" denotes items that did not chart or were not released in that territory. | |||||||||||||||
| Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
|---|---|---|
| Canada (Music Canada)[26] | Platinum | 100,000^ |
| Sweden (GLF)[27] | Gold | 50,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. | ||