Subtotal:$0.00
 
 
 
 
 

John Cunningham - Happy-Go-Unlucky

john cunningham cover art

Artist:John Cunningham
Title: Happy-Go-Unlucky
Catalog#: Parasol-CD-083
Price: $12.00 buy

Tracks on this CD:
Losing Myself Too
Here It Is
Way To Go
Can't Get Used To This
It Isn't Easy
You Shine
Invisible Lives
Welcome To The World
Take Your Time
It Goes On
Rings by Absinthe Blind (Mud Records)


"With his...baroque production touches, Cunningham hews closely and superbly to the balladic side of Revolver-era Fabs."-UNCUT, Jim Allen

"One of the best pure pop records of 2002."-MAGNET, Patrick Berkerey

"Happy Go-Unlucky is a rainy-day album for pop dreamers who are chasing that elusive smile through strawberry fields (forever)."-SOUND & VISION, Parke Puterbaugh


"(John Cunningham's) Homeless House was my record of the year for 1998. It was my record of the year for 1999, and 2000. If you're lucky enough to own a copy, hide it from your thieving bastard friends."-Joe Pernice

"There is a train leaving Penn Station at 10:00 in the morning and I'm on it, I think. I am the guy slouched over in his seat, as defeated as a lower case question mark. This could be exactly the wrong time to start a business or family or a relationship with any kind of legs. Could be the right time. The world is coming apart like a disgustingly ornate wedding cake gone stale, and here I am, seated backwards and hung over on good booze, escaping to Massachusetts in first class.

An undeniable sense of real lossmuch greater than that associated with our failure to get the girl or house or job, if you can believe it is the conductor of this train. The train with its cars barreling into the crocodile enriched water like antelope made stupid by the clock's tick. What right do I have to hope there is a meal of grilled duck and fish soup waiting at the table of my host? Is it simply because I am hungry? Maybe.

Like I said, I'm seated backwards, and from this angle, yes, John, everyone is getting young. People left standing on the platforms shrink in the distance like New York City. And you're absolutely goddamn right, even from the other side of the ocean, that the memories fade like rainfall after snow, whether we want them to or not. That's precisely how they go. When I was more afraid I would have looked you in the eyes and said, "You're full of shit." But things are in fact as delicate as you make them out to be, and I'd turn around and face forward if there were a seat.

We are cursed with opportunity, so much so that we screw the pooch harder daily and without permission, and it's taking the place of love. Things could be so good, and life be what it should: A sentiment so simple, you'd think we'd get it."

- Joe Pernice, NYC, Feb. 11, 2003
(from the liner notes to the British edition of Happy-Go-Unlucky)


Click here for the NPR’s All Songs Considered feature on “Happy Go-Unlucky”

Overcast, bittersweet, spectacularly English pastoral pop from UK native John Cunningham. An unconsciously cosmic sense of songcraft riding the delicate swells of inconsolable melodies, dreamy chords and fragile finger-picked guitars, lush strings, weeping organs and subtle woodwinds, led by a frail but magically warm voice. Akin to the esteemed work of artists like Nick Drake, Robert Wyatt, Mark Hollis (Talk Talk), Kevin Ayers, The Beatles, and those sad, sad Beach Boys ballads from the late 60s/early 70s. Moody and often morose but with a newfound gleam of hope, 'Happy-Go-Unlucky' will beckon to fans of modern-day troubadours like Richard Davies, Elliott Smith, Joe Pernice, and Kevin Tihista. In 1998 the delicate and discreet mini-album 'Homeless House' (Les Disque Mange-Tout) garnered rave reviews. In the States "Homeless House' saw limited distribution but attracted a faithful following, the general consensus was that John's "next" album would be the breakthrough. Here you are then…

John Cunningham photo

John Cunningham photo

Press for John Cunningham's "Homeless House":

"Fourth album from neglected Brighton singer-songwriter… Luminous voice, effortless band, and a short but sweetly melancholy collection of understated pop pitched somewhere between Robert Wyatt at his most accessibly fragile and The Beatles at their most quietly winsome." Sylvie Simmons for MOJO Magazine

"This one comes to us on the recommendation of former Scud Mountain Boy and current Pernice Brother, Joe Pernice. Although this is Cunningham's fourth album, the Brighton artist is a complete unknown both here and in the UK but not so in France, where the influential magazine Les Inrocktuptibles has called him England's most neglected singer songwriter. "Homeless House" is the work of a man whose time in the spotlight might well be approaching. With an ostensibly delicate voice, Cunningham's vocals are most reminiscent of Robert Wyatt and Sean O'Hagan of The High Llamas. On two tracks in particular, the backing borrows heavily from The Beatles "Abbey Road". Paul Potinari's drum roll on "Imitation Time" is a steal from "Something" while the guitars on the title track had me searching for the name George Harrison on the credits. Throughout, the trumpet of Sam Hayden adds wonderful splashes of colour while Cunningham's lyrical ability is not dissimilar to that of Elliott Smith. If only to give you a recommendation of its quality, fans of Pernice, Wyatt, The Beatles, Nick Drake, O'Hagan and Smith will fall in love with this, while we hope that his next album is the one that finally takes Cunningham overground." Dave Roberts for MUSE/Tower Records

"This 8 song EP struck me hard. As I described to a few people, Mr. C reminds me of a very depressed Paul McCartney if he decided to write very literate, poetic, "heavy meaning" lyrics. Sounds like a CD you would buy? Well, I would. The songs are melodic, patient tapestries of sound with deep meaning. Homeless House is strong. "Taming the Family" is one of the best songs I've heard this year. The vocal is very personal, and Cunningham waits in the structure of the song, creating a very push-pull affect, releasing us in the end. The outro goes: "...oh, look what you've done to me, I'm dyin' for dispossession." It repeats over and over. I'm not sure what the song is about, but if you read the lyrics and listen to the song, it might give you chills. I know I'm still shivering. Artists to whom I might compare Cunningham, in addition to McCartney, are Emitt Rhodes (who released a great debut CD on Dunhill in the early '70s) or post-Raspberries Eric Carmen (All By Myself-yes; Hungry Eyes-no). He also has a bit of an Elliott Smith feel, although Elliott really is on another level than the pack right now with his latest release Figure 8. He even approaches a Chris Bell (of the great '70s band Big Star) vibe." David Fufkin for POPMATTERS


"A couple of years back, Joe Pernice bent my ear about Cunningham being the freshest blast of pop air he'd heard in aeons. On his fifth album it's easy to see why. Those his early-90s career was kickstarted by ex-Housemartin Stan Cullimore, 1998's beautiful Homeless House was the first inkling of star-on-the-up. Happy-Go-Unlucky come similarly draped in velvety pop smarts, those this time fuller and tonally richer. Set atop woodwinds, gently dipping strings, stabbing pianos and reedy guitars, JC's voice owes as much to McCartney as contemporaries Kevin Tihista and Richard Davies, with arrangements worthy of Curt Boettcher. A latterday chaser to Emitt Rhodes' eponymous 1970 debut." -UNCUT
 
SEARCH
Advanced Search
QUICK LINKS
New Release Update
New Arrivals
Join Our Mailing List
Free Downloads
Parasol Blog
Overstock Sale List
Specials
Parasol Bands ON TOUR
Videos
Site Map
THIS WEEK'S TOP TEN
01 Tractor Kings -- Homesick (ON SALE)(more)
02 Sweet, Matthew -- Sunshine Lies (ON SALE)(more)
03 Disciplines, The -- SMOKiNG KiLLS (ON SALE / LiMiTED STOCK)(more)
04 Q65 -- Nothing But Trouble: The Best Of...(more)
05 Tallest Man On Earth, The -- Shallow Grave (PRE-ORDER: DELAYED, SALEABLE TBA)(more)
06 Cristal -- Re-Ups(more)
07 Haigh, Robert -- Written On Water(more)
08 Triffids, The -- The Black Swan [expanded re-issue, import](more)
09 Stereolab -- Chemical Chords(more)
10 Brazzaville -- 21st Century Girl (ON SALE)(more)