Plan B

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  • Artist: Huey Lewis & the News
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: May 01, 2001
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Most artists who show up on Behind the Music have a tragic tale to tell, whether it's drug addiction, the death of a loved one, or a bitter falling out between longtime bandmates. Not Huey Lewis & the News -- the one time they faced tragedy is when they thought Ray Parker, Jr. ripped off "I Want a New Drug" for his theme to Ghostbusters. Apart from that, everything's been pretty great, because they're a bar band (if they'd been from England, you'd call 'em pub rock) that made good and they've always been grateful for their success. When the hits stopped coming sometime during the first Bush administration, they graciously stepped back from the spotlight; during the '90s, they only released one new album, and that was just a covers record. Ten years later, they finally reemerged with Plan B, a record of original material (barring a cover of one of Nick Lowe's best songs, "When I Write the Book") that helped showcase their new, expanded lineup with a full horn section. Some bands might verge on bloat with a new horn section, but not the News -- it just emphasizes that Plan B is a return to their roots, a lean, soul-inflected, driving rock & roll record. And that "Plan B" in the title certainly alludes to the bandmembers' decision to give up any hopes of chart success in favor of just making a record of music they like, and the gambit pays back better than anyone could have hoped. This is an unpretentious, utterly likeable record, filled with clever, catchy songs that would sound great in a packed club on a Friday night. And these are good songs, songs that could hold their own with "Workin' for a Livin'," "Hope You Love Me Like You Say You Do," and "Some of My Lies Are True" -- they're nearly as memorable and melodic, and easily as fun. It's true that part of the pleasure of Huey Lewis & the News' first three albums was how the records straddled the line between pub rock classicism and post-new wave modernity, and that sound is nowhere to be found here. But the music itself is first-rate, whether it's on the opening track, "We're Not Here for a Long Time (We're Here for a Good Time)" -- which trumps "Couple Days Off" with its casual honesty -- or on the middle-age love duet "I'm Not in Love Yet," which finds Huey and Wynonna trading lines in an absolutely alluring fashion. There's nothing fancy here; as a matter of fact, it's disarming, refreshingly unpretentious, and all the better for it. Even better, this is the first Huey Lewis & the News record that sounds like a Huey Lewis & the News record in ten years, and it's their best since at least Fore!, probably Sports. There's not a chance in hell that it'll burn up the charts like those records, but it's certainly one of their best albums. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

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  • Genres: Electronica

Biography

The German band Plan B modeled itself after such occasionally grandiose social commentators as U2 and the Clash. After two German-only EPs and the 1986 LP Fortune Favors Fools, the quintet saw its first Stateside release with 1990's The Greenhouse Effect. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi
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Plan B
Studio album by Huey Lewis and the News
Released July 24, 2001
Genre Rock
Length 48:16
Label Silvertone Records, distributed by Zomba/Jive
Producer Huey Lewis
Johnny Colla
Huey Lewis and the News chronology
Time Flies... The Best of
(1996)
Plan B
(2001)
Live at 25
(2005)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars[1]

Plan B is the eighth album by American rock band Huey Lewis and the News, released in 2001 (see 2001 in music).

This was the last album to feature founding member/guitarist Chris Hayes, who performed on the album but then left after work was completed. Hayes was replaced by Oakland-born guitarist Stef Burns (Alice Cooper, Vasco Rossi, Pablo Cruise, Y&T). It was also the last News album for Ron Stallings, who died in 2009.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "We're Not Here for a Long Time (We're Here for a Good Time)" (Johnny Colla, Chris Hayes, Huey Lewis) – 3:53
  2. "My Other Woman" (Colla, Lewis) – 4:06
  3. "I Ain't Perfect" (Bill Gibson, Lewis) – 4:33
  4. "When I Write the Book" (Billy Bremner, Dave Edmunds, Nick Lowe) – 3:44
  5. "I'm Not in Love Yet" (Hayes, Lewis) – 4:28
  6. "Thank You, No. 19" (Sean Hopper, Lewis) – 4:52
  7. "Plan B" (Colla, Lewis) – 3:27
  8. "The Rhythm Ranch" (Colla, Lewis) – 4:49
  9. "Let Her Go and Start Over" (Mike Duke) – 4:47
  10. "I Never Think About You" (Hayes, Lewis, John Pierce) – 5:16
  11. "So Little Kindness" (Hayes, Lewis, Rob Sudduth) – 4:21

Bonus track (Japan release)

  1. "Plan B" (Live)

Personnel

Huey Lewis and the News
Additional personnel
  • Wynonna Judd
  • Jack Jacobsen - organ, piano
  • Ric Wilson - guitar
  • Jim Pugh - organ
  • Dallis Craft - background vocals

Production

  • Producers: Huey Lewis, Johnny Colla
  • Engineers: David Boucher, Johnny Colla, Huey Lewis, Merrit Pelkey, Jim "Watts" Vereecke
  • Mixing: Bob Clearmountain
  • Mastering: Robert Hadley, Doug Sax
  • Digital editing: Chris Haggerty
  • Photography: Aaron Rapoport

Charts

Chart (2001)[2] Peak
position
Canadian Albums Chart 22
Norwegian Albums Chart 22
US Billboard 200 165
Billboard Top Internet Albums 19
Singles
Year Single Chart Position
2001 "Let Her Go and Start Over" Billboard Adult Contemporary 23
2001 "I'm Not in Love Yet" Billboard Adult Contemporary 30

References


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