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Happy Town (album)

Happy Town is the third album by the American singer-songwriter Jill Sobule, released in 1997. The album contains the singles "Bitter" and "When My Ship Comes In".

Music and lyrics
In 1997, The Washington Times labelled the album as having "smart, funny, quirky pop songs", and considered it to be building on the sound of her 1995 self-titled album. They believed that album to be a noticeable departure from her 1990 debut Things Here Are Different, which they said had more of a typical, serious female singer-songwriter sound. In 1998, The New York Daily News considered her lighthearted female singer-songwriter sound to be similar to newer artists such as Amy Rigby and Kim Fox, who released their debuts in the wake of Sobule's self-titled album. The album incorporates a variety of instruments, including cornets, flutes, hurdy-gurdys, organs, harmoniums, saxophones, steel pedal guitars, synthesizers, tubas, vibraphones and wurlitzers. The track "Soldiers of Christ" is a satirical social commentary, where Sobule sings from the point of view of a Christian Conservative to illustrate the existence of homophobia in religion. The music on the track itself is earnest, contrasting the satirical lyrics. "Underachiever" is one of the album's more melancholic tracks, and lyrically is a character sketch about a social outcast high school girl. AllMusic described the song as being a "poignant tale of an oversensitive high school history student who loves to gaze the hour away at her teacher without thought to her declining grades". ==Commercial performance and promotion==
Commercial performance and promotion
The album only sold 24,000 copies in the US within the first year of its release, which was then a low number for an artist on a major record label. It did not manage to chart in the United States, and Sobule was dropped by Atlantic after the release of Happy Town. Sobule said she was "proud" of the record and its honesty and experimentation, even though it got her dropped from Atlantic. She said that it went in even more of a strange direction than her previous record, which the label didn't think was a good idea. "Bitter" was released as a single a few months after the album came out, and had a music video. The song was relatively successful in Australia, peaking at No. 74 on the Australian ARIA singles chart in June 1997, "Bitter" also received some radio airplay in Germany and Switzerland during June 1997. ==Critical reception==
Critical reception
The Spokesman-Review called the album "a bold step forward for a creatively expansive artist." The Deseret News gave it three out of four stars, deeming it "fun, liberal, spunky and sarcastic." ==Track listing==
Track listing
• "Bitter" (Richard Barone, Sobule) – 3:30 • "Happy Town" (Goldenberg, Sobule) – 3:46 • "Barren Egg" (Eaton, Sobule) – 3:37 • "Half a Heart" (DeMain, Sobule) – 3:47 • "When My Ship Comes In" (Eaton, Marvin Gaye, Ivy Jo Hunter, Sobule, William Stevenson) – 3:50 • "Clever" (Eaton, Sobule) – 3:18 • "I'm So Happy" (Eaton, Sobule) – 2:43 • "Little Guy" (Sobule) – 3:24 • "Underachiever" (Sobule) – 3:42 • "Love Is Never Equal" (Eaton, Sobule) – 3:15 • "Soldiers of Christ" (Eaton, Sobule) – 3:20 • "Attic" (Sobule) – 2:10 • "Sold My Soul" (Eaton, Sobule) – 3:35 • "Super 8" (Galdston, Sobule) – 2:26 ==Personnel==
Personnel
Musicians • Jill Sobule – vocals, acoustic guitar, bass guitar, guitar, percussion, drums, keyboards, ebo, vibraphone • Sam Bacco – percussion • George Bradfute – electric guitar • Louis Brown – tuba, cornetChris Carmichael – strings • Steve Earle – electric guitar, vocals • Robin Eaton – guitar • Phil Galdston – keyboards • Mark Goldenberg – guitar, keyboards, vocals • Mickey Grimm – percussion, drums • Jim Hoke – clarinet, flute, harmonica, autoharp, bass clarinet, soprano saxophone • Byron House – upright bass • Brad Jones – organ, bass guitar, piano, harmonium, keyboards, Moog synthesizer, vibraphoneViktor Krauss – upright bass • Roger Moutenot – Moog synthesizer • Al Perkinspedal steel • Ross Rice – bass guitar, piano, drums, harmonium, Wurlitzer Production • Producers: Robin Eaton, Mark Goldenberg, Brad Jones • Engineers: Brad Jones, Dominick Maita, Elijah Shaw • Mixing: Roger Moutenot • Mixing assistants: Rich Cohan, Sandy Jenkins, Chris Stone • Programming: Mark Goldenberg • Photography: Annette Aurell • Arranger: Phil Galdston • Production Coordination: Barbara Moutenot • Cover design: Brad Talbott • Illustrations: Brad Talbott • Background vocals: Bob, Jim, Mary Ellen and Matthew Sobule ==Charts==
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