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The Happiest Days of Our Lives

 
Album Review: The Happiest Days of Our Lives

  • Artist: My Favorite
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: November 04, 2003
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

"The ghosts of dead teenagers sing to me while I am dancing/And they'll be sad and young forever." Sound familiar? It does if you grew up in the 1980s, when chilly and lovelorn Sarah Records pop transformed traditional teen angst into a mortal issue, and made loneliness a badge of clammy-skinned honor. The line above -- from album standout "Homeless Club Kids" -- is just one of the clever My Favorite couplets that illustrate the NYC band's throwback mix of dreamy and dreary, of burbling basslines, chiming guitars, and cold synth lines lifted from the era in their entirety. But while those references and the familiarly foggy moods they create are utterly inescapable, My Favorite's music is still somehow wholly its own. This is likely due to the strength of songwriting, which Happiest Days of Our Lives displays over the 16 tracks compiling the band's out of print "Joan of Arc" material. (The liners include a wild-eyed essay imagining that titular heroine as the absolute of teenage fatalism.) Andrea Vaughn's pretty lilt is the perfect foil to Favorite principal Michael Grace's deadpan detachment, and each paean to star-crossed youth lovin' ("Cathedral at Night") or dormitory melodrama ("L=P") seems perfectly realized and nuanced, like an illuminated manuscript imagineered into journal form. It was only a matter of time before America's teen rebel ideal was mixed up in this scenario, and his ghost finally wafts forth for "James Dean (Awaiting Ambulance)," which is sort of a fantasmical dream pop version of J. Frank Wilson's "Last Kiss." The aforementioned "Homeless Club Kids"'s puttering drum programming is punctuated by keyboard trills and washes of Johnny Marr guitar, while "Burning Hearts" manages to shimmer with sugary melody while telling a tale of young lovers caught in the Hiroshima blast. "All of this snow has made us glow in the dark," Vaughn and Grace harmonize over plaintive guitar and keys -- it would all be hopelessly, horribly overwrought if the song wasn't so damned beautiful. Happiest Days of Our Lives is augmented with a remix disc, wherein underground types like Flowchart, Soviet, and Leisure Enthusiast patch My Favorite's C-86 update into glitch and IDM soundscapes. Soviet's choppy, coolly professional take on "Badge" is a highlight, as is Leisure Enthusiast's "Suburbs Are Killing Us," which probably has the Pet Shop Boys kicking themselves that they didn't create its decadent dancefloor hush. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Tracks



CD 1

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Happiest Days of My Life [#] Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite My Favorite (3:02)
Homeless Club Kids (Lyrics) My Favorite, Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (5:12)
The Suburbs Are Killing Us Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite My Favorite (3:45)
L=P Michael Grace, Jr., Darren Amadio, My Favorite My Favorite (3:22)
Burning Hearts (Lyrics) Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite, Darren Amadio My Favorite (5:42)
A Cathedral at Night [#] Darren Amadio, My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (4:53)
White Roses for Blue Girls Darren Amadio, My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (4:04)
John Dark (Goodnight, Major Tom) My Favorite, Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (3:15)
Half There and Dancing [#] Darren Amadio, My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (3:51)
The Black Cassette Darren Amadio, My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (3:21)
Badge (Grace Under Pressure) Darren Amadio, Eric Clapton, Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite, George Harrison My Favorite (3:45)
Le Monster My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr., Darren Amadio My Favorite (4:58)
The Radiation Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite, Darren Amadio My Favorite (3:56)
James Dean (Awaiting Ambulance) [#] Don Henley, Jackson Browne, Glenn Frey, Darren Amadio, My Favorite, J.D. Souther, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (3:48)
Rescue Us (Lyrics) Darren Amadio, My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (4:17)
The Lesser Saints My Favorite, Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (3:21)


CD 2

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Suburbs Are Killing Us [Double Agent Remix] Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite, Darren Amadio My Favorite (4:32)
Homeless Club Kids [Future Bible Heroes Remix] Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite My Favorite (8:22)
Badge [Soviet Remix] My Favorite, Darren Amadio, George Harrison, Michael Grace, Jr., Eric Clapton My Favorite (3:48)
Le Monster [Phofo Remix] Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite My Favorite (5:15)
John Dark [Leisure Enthusiast Remix] Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite, Darren Amadio My Favorite (3:18)
Rescue Us [Kitch Remix] Michael Grace, Jr., Darren Amadio, My Favorite My Favorite (3:13)
Homeless Club Kids [Alexander Perls Remix] My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr., Darren Amadio My Favorite (6:41)
Le Monster [Flowchart Remix] Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite My Favorite (5:06)
Badge [San Serac Remix] George Harrison, My Favorite, Darren Amadio, Eric Clapton, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (4:44)
The Suburbs Are Killing Us [Leisure Enthusiast Remix] My Favorite, Darren Amadio, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (3:44)
Rescue Us [Chuck Blake Remix] Darren Amadio, My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr. My Favorite (3:37)
Le Monster [Chuck Blake Remix] Michael Grace, Jr., My Favorite, Darren Amadio My Favorite (4:28)
John Dark [Brother Frost Remix] My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr., Darren Amadio My Favorite (6:46)
Homeless Club Kids [Double Agent Remix] My Favorite, Michael Grace, Jr., Darren Amadio My Favorite (5:34)

Credits

Michael Grace, Jr. (Vocoder), Raffi Yegparian (Vocals (Background)), Darren Amadio (Piano), Brian Unger (Producer), Raffi Yegparian (Producer), Darren Amadio (Percussion), Raffi Yegparian (Additional Production), Michael Grace, Jr. (Piano), Darren Amadio (Vocals), Raffi Yegparian (Engineer), Andrea Vaughn (Melodica), Darren Amadio (Producer), Brian Unger (Engineer), Michael Grace, Jr. (Synthesizer), Michael Grace, Jr. (Vocals), Andrea Vaughn (Vocals), Andrea Vaughn (Synthesizer), My Favorite (Producer), Raffi Yegparian (Guitar (Bass)), Darren Amadio (Synthesizer), Michael Grace, Jr. (Producer), Andrea Vaughn (Producer), Darren Amadio (Guitar), Michael Grace, Jr. (Melodica)
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Wikipedia: The Happiest Days of Our Lives
Top
"The Happiest Days of Our Lives"
Song by Pink Floyd

from the album The Wall

Released 30 November 1979 (UK), 8 December 1979 (US)
Recorded April-November, 1979
Genre Progressive rock
Length 1:46
Label Harvest Records (UK)
Columbia Records (US)/Capitol Records (US)
Writer Waters
Producer Bob Ezrin, David Gilmour and Roger Waters
The Wall track listing
"Another Brick in the Wall, Part I"
(3 of disc 1)
"The Happiest Days of Our Lives"
(4 of disc 1)
"Another Brick in the Wall, Part II"
(5 of disc 1)
Echoes: The Best of Pink Floyd track listing
"See Emily Play"
(2)
"The Happiest Days of Our Lives"
(3)
"Another Brick in the Wall, Part II"
(4)

"The Happiest Days of Our Lives" is a song by band Pink Floyd. It was released on The Wall album in 1979.

Contents

Composition

The song is approximately 1 minute, 52 seconds in length, beginning with 24 seconds of a helicopter approaching followed by shouting from the schoolmaster. When Kate Bush tried to add a similar helicopter to the fadeout of her single "Experiment IV", her recording engineers were unable to duplicate the overwhelming sound, so she asked Roger Waters for the original tape, and he obliged as long as it was mentioned in the credits. After that the sound effects abruptly cut out for the lyrical portion. Throughout the most of the song, the lead instrument is the bass guitar with an added delay effect and during the bridge to "Another Brick in the Wall, Part II", there are intense drums and backing vocals. Due to the smooth transition from this song to Another Brick in the Wall Pt. II, many people think this song is part of Another Brick.

On the album, "The Happiest Days of Our Lives" segues into "Another Brick in the Wall, Part II" with a loud, high-pitched scream by Roger Waters (this sound is later reprised on Run Like Hell). Because of this segue, many radio stations play one right after the other.

In the film based on the album, the sound at the beginning of the song is depicted as coming from a train entering a large tunnel, rather than a helicopter heard on the album. According to Gerald Scarfe, there was supposed to be a puppet of the teacher at the end of the tunnel in the film. Alan Parker made shots of it, but it didn't work out, so they used Alex McAvoy, who played the schoolteacher, to do the scene instead. Before the cut in the middle for the Schoolmaster to mock Pink, somewhat quiet hysterical laughter is heard, extremely similar to the Schoolmaster's voice.

Plot

As with the other songs on The Wall, "The Happiest Days of Our Lives" tells a portion of the story of "Pink", the album's protagonist. Pink is sent to a school run by strict and often violent teachers who pour derision on anything the pupils do.

According to Waters, the lyrics were a reflection of his own negative experience in school. He described this in an interview with Tommy Vance of BBC Radio One.

"'The Happiest Days of Our Lives' is, er, a complete condemnation, as I see it, as I've heard it in the album, of somebody's scholastic career." - Tommy Vance

"Um. My school life was very like that. Oh, it was awful, it was really terrible. When I hear people whining on now about bringing back Grammar schools it really makes me quite ill to listen to it. Because I went to a boys' Grammar school and although... I want to make it plain that some of the men who taught (it was a boys school) some of the men who taught there were very nice guys, you know I'm not... it's not meant to be a blanket condemnation of teachers everywhere, but the *bad* ones can really do people in--and there were some at my school who were just incredibly bad and treated the children so badly, just putting them down, putting them down, you know, all the time. Never encouraging them to do things, not really trying to interest them in anything, just trying to keep them quiet and still, and crush them into the right shape, so that they would go to university and 'do well.'" - Roger Waters - 1979 [1]

Film version

Pink and his two friends go down to a railway track to lay bullets on the rails and watch them explode as the passing train runs over and ignites the ammunition. Pink, putting himself up against the tunnel wall, sees that the train cars are packed with faceless people, and sees his teacher at the other end of the tunnel, yelling at Pink and ordering him to stand still. In the next scene, which takes place in Pink's school, the teacher discovers Pink writing a poem, which contains lyrics from "Money" from The Dark Side of the Moon, and, as punishment, ridicules Pink by reading his poem out loud to the entire class and slaps his hand with a ruler. The scene after shows the teacher in his own home, being forced to eat a piece of hard meat during dinner at his wife's silent command. To relieve himself of this frustration, the teacher spanks a child with a belt the next day. In the film it seems the Schoolmaster is not so vicious as in the album, but Pink views him in a negative way.

Personnel

References

Notes

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Fitch, Vernon and Mahon, Richard, Comfortably Numb - A History of The Wall 1978-1981 (2006)
  3. ^ a b c d e Ibid, p.74

 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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