Hats (album)

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"We pretty much put the record [A Walk Across the Rooftops] out, promoted it and then the next thing we knew we were back in the studio. That whole gestation period had gone missing. We didn't really have the songs. We laboured away in the studio trying to generate the material there, which just didn't work. We recorded but we just didn't believe in what we'd recorded ... I think people perceived it as it was all to do with us sort of being in the studio for five years, but of course you couldn't be in the studio for five years, you'd lose your mind. There was a two year period where we would have gone back in but we couldn't get back in! So when we got back we actually finished Hats quickly. The period when we got bumped out the studio we had nothing else to do, so we packed up and went home. Which is what we should have done in the first place, because when we went back home we reverted to our old routines—practise, play and sit about each other's little flats and talk things through. We should have done that to begin with, really." [7]

Release

Hats was released in October 1989 simultaneously in both the United Kingdom and the United States: since the Blue Nile was essentially unknown in the US in 1989, the cover artwork for the US release of the album was slightly modified for marketing reasons, with the band's name in larger letters. As a promotional tool, A&M Records—who distributed Hats in North America—took out a full-page advertisement in Billboard magazine offering a free copy of the CD to anyone who called a toll-free number which was provided. [8]

Hats peaked at number 12 on the UK Albums Chart. [9] Three singles were released from the album: the first, "The Downtown Lights", was released in September 1989 and peaked at number 67 on the UK Singles Chart, followed by "Headlights on the Parade" in September 1990 which reached number 72, and "Saturday Night" in January 1991, which reached number 50. [9]

In the US, Hats peaked at number 108 on the Billboard 200. [10] "The Downtown Lights" reached number 10 on the Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart in early 1990, becoming the group's only single chart entry in that country. [10]

In November 2012 Virgin Records released two-CD "Collector's Edition" versions of Hats and its predecessor A Walk Across the Rooftops in the UK and Europe, each containing a remastered version of the original album plus a second CD of bonus tracks. The remastering process was overseen by original engineer Calum Malcolm, along with Paul Buchanan and Robert Bell, who chose the songs for the bonus CD.

Critical reception

Hats
TBN-HatsUK.jpg
Studio album by
Released16 October 1989 (1989-10-16)
Recorded1984–1989
StudioCastlesound Studios, Pencaitland, East Lothian, Scotland
Genre
Length38:26
Label
Producer The Blue Nile
The Blue Nile chronology
A Walk Across the Rooftops
(1984)
Hats
(1989)
Peace at Last
(1996)
Singles from Hats
  1. "The Downtown Lights"
    Released: 18 September 1989
  2. "Headlights on the Parade"
    Released: 10 September 1990
  3. "Saturday Night"
    Released: 14 January 1991
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar half.svg [11]
Chicago Tribune Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar half.svg [12]
Mojo Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svg [13]
NME 9/10 [14]
Pitchfork 8.8/10 [15]
Q Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svg [16]
Record Mirror 4/5 [17]
Rolling Stone Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [18]
Sounds Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [19]
Uncut 10/10 [20]

On its initial release in 1989, Hats received highly positive reviews from music critics. Describing the album as "absolutely superb", David Cavanagh of Sounds found that Hats differed significantly from A Walk Across the Rooftops in both its recording technology and aspired moods. [19] Johnny Black of Q noted the more stripped-down nature of the album's songs and praised the band's new direction, stating that "if Hats has a flaw, it's only that it's too perfect, too considered." [16] NME 's David Quantick felt that the album demonstrated the band's flair for writing "incredibly simple-sounding, emotional records about the stuff that fascinates them." [14] Simon Reynolds, writing in Melody Maker , stated that "only the laziest ear would confuse this crystalline perfection with the hygiene and polish of plastic pop" and described the album as "big music, that leaves you feeling very small, very still and very close to tears." [21] In a more lukewarm assessment, David Thigpen of Rolling Stone complimented the band's use of instrumentation to convey emotions, but felt that Paul Buchanan's singing range was limited and the album occasionally veers "into sticky melancholy." [18]

In a retrospective review of Hats, Jason Ankeny of AllMusic praised the album as "a triumph of personal vision over the cold, remote calculations of technology" and stated that in spite of general lack of live instrumentation, "it is nevertheless an immensely warm and human album." [11] Following the release of the album's 2012 remastered version, D. M. Edwards of PopMatters wrote that Hats sounded "richer, fuller, more layered and produced" than A Walk Across the Rooftops and provided a "pretty unrelenting opportunity to really wallow in gorgeous, sublime, melancholy." [8] Reviewing the remastered versions of both albums in Mojo , James McNair cited them as "superior, elegant examples of masterful craftmanship", noting elements of soul and classical minimalism in the albums' "electro-acoustic mood pieces", and described them as "exquisite music for the small hours in which little is said but much is revealed". [13]

Accolades

Hats featured strongly on the end of year critics' lists, making number eight on Melody Maker's albums of the year list, [22] and number 18 on NME's list. [23] "The Downtown Lights" was also placed at number 15 on Melody Maker's singles of the year list. [24]

Hats was voted number 345 in the third edition of Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums (2000). [25] Q placed Hats at number 92 on its list of the "100 Greatest British Albums Ever" in 2000 and at number 38 on its list of "40 Best Albums of the '80s" in 2006. [26] [27]

Legacy

Rickie Lee Jones, a fan of the band, personally selected the Blue Nile as her opening act for her US tour in 1990. She later recorded a duet with them, a cover of their own "Easter Parade" from A Walk Across the Rooftops , which was featured as a B-side to the single "Headlights on the Parade". "The Downtown Lights" was covered by two artists in 1995: by Annie Lennox (with whom The Blue Nile worked on her debut album Diva ) on her second solo recording Medusa and by Rod Stewart on his album A Spanner in the Works . In 2018, Pure Bathing Culture released a cover of the entire album, as part of Turntable Kitchen 's Sounds Delicious series of artists covering their favourite albums in full. [28]

In 2016, the 1975's lead singer Matty Healy stated that Hats was his favorite album of the 1980s. [29] Healy cited Hats as an influence on the band's 2018 single "Love It If We Made It". [30] In 2024, in the opening and closing lyrics to her song "Guilty as Sin" from the album The Tortured Poets Department , Taylor Swift included a reference to a person sending her "The Downtown Lights" to listen to. Swift had previously had a relationship with Healy. [31]

Black Midi lead singer Geordie Greep named Hats one of his ten favorite albums of all time. [32]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Paul Buchanan.

Side one

  1. "Over the Hillside" – 5:03
  2. "The Downtown Lights" – 6:26
  3. "Let's Go Out Tonight" – 5:12

Side two

  1. "Headlights on the Parade" – 6:11
  2. "From a Late Night Train" – 3:59
  3. "Seven A.M." – 5:09
  4. "Saturday Night" – 6:26

2012 remastered edition bonus disc [33]

  1. "Seven A.M." (live in the studio) – 4:48
  2. "Christmas" – (previously unreleased outtake) 5:05
  3. "Let's Go Out Tonight" (vocal 2) – 5:17
  4. "Saturday Night" (vocal 2, early mix) – 6:06
  5. "Headlights on the Parade" (live in Tennessee with Larry Saltzman, Steve Gaboury and Nigel Thomas) – 6:20
  6. "The Wires Are Down" (B-side of "The Downtown Lights" single) – 5:41

Personnel

Credits are adapted from the liner notes for Hats. [34]

The Blue Nile
Additional personnel

Release history

RegionDateLabelFormatCatalog
United Kingdom and Europe16 October 1989 Linn Records LPLKH2
cassetteLKHC2
CDLKHCD2
United States A&M Records LPSP-5284
cassetteCS-5284
CDCD 5284
United Kingdom19 November 2012 Virgin Records Remastered 2CD collector's editionLKHCDR 2
Europe5099901730029
United Kingdom20 January 2013Virgin Records180 gram vinylLKHR 2
United Kingdom, Europe & United States1 March 2019Confetti RecordsRemastered 2CD collector's edition (same content as 2012 reissue)BLUECD2/5052442014942

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