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Sweet Guy

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Wikipedia article




"'Sweet Guy'" is a song by Australian rock group Paul Kelly and the Messengers released in June 1989 as the lead single from the studio album, 'So Much Water So Close to Home'. The song was written by Kelly his first from a woman's point of view. He co-produced the track with Scott Litt. The single was released in June 1989 on the Mushroom Records label. It reached No. 53 on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart and the Top 40 in New Zealand. The song was later covered by Rene Geyer on 'Difficult Woman' (1994), Adalita Srsen on 'Before Too Long'.

Background



Paul Kelly had formed Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls in 1985, named for Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side". The line-up of the Coloured Girls was Michael Barclay on drums and backing vocals, Peter Bull on keyboards, Steve Connolly on lead guitar and Jon Schofield on bass guitar. For international releases from 1987 they used the name Paul Kelly and the Messengers to avoid possible racist interpretations. The group released 'Gossip' in 1986 on Mushroom Records in Australia and in 1987 on A&M Records for international release. A second album, 'Under the Sun', was issued in 1987 in Australia and in 1988 internationally.

Their next album, 'So Much Water So Close to Home' was released in August 1989 as by Paul Kelly and the Messengers in all markets, it peaked at No. 10 on the ARIA Albums Chart. The entire album was recorded in the United States with Scott Litt, best known for his work with R.E.M., co-producing with Kelly. Litt had re-mixed some of Paul Kelly and the Coloured Girls' tracks from 'Gossip' for its US release as by Paul Kelly and the Messengers. 'So Much Water So Close to Home' was released on Mushroom/White Records in Australia and A&M Records in the US and Europe. "Sweet Guy" was the first single from the album, which reached No. 53 on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart and in September 1989 it peaked in the Top 40 in New Zealand.

The video for "Sweet Guy" was directed by Claudia Castle, who had earlier directed Kelly's "To Her Door", which won 'Best Video' at the ARIA Music Awards of 1988. The video is shot in black and white and switches between Kelly and his band, and a couple fighting and making up. Kelly later wrote that he was disappointed in the video, "this one looked like an ad for coffee or sheets... [Castle] had worked with us on a couple of videos previously ... that had turned out really well. We'd talked this one through and made a plan ... but when I saw the rough cut my heart sank. And there wasn't much I could do to change it".

In 2004 Paul Kelly and the Boon Companions performed the track for the DVD, 'Ways & Means', in the section subtitled 'Live in Boston'. Kelly and his nephew Dan Kelly recorded the song as part of Kelly's A Z Tours from 2004 to 2010, it was issued on the 8 CD album, 'The A Z Recordings' (2010). It was later covered by Rene Geyer on 'Difficult Woman' (1994) Kelly produced her album, also wrote the title song, "Careless" and "Foggy Highway". Adalita Srsen (ex-Magic Dirt) sang both "Sweet Guy" and "Everything's Turning to White" for the Kelly tribute show and related album, 'Before Too Long' (2010). Peter Bull's daughter, Vika Bull performed "Sweet Guy" on the RocKwiz National Tour which was recorded on a DVD and CD of the same name (2010).

Composition



"Sweet Guy" is a song with a length of three minutes and forty seconds. The song is set in the key of C major and has a medium fast tempo 128 beats per minute with a piano range of C2G5 and a vocal range of E4G5. Kelly is credited with both lyrics and music. The lyrics are written in the first person perspective, with the narrator, a female, reflecting on the violent nature of her relationship and broods over the Jekyll and Hyde transformation of her partner from being loving and attentive into a violent man. Typical of the 'battered woman syndrome', she adopts a victim's view claiming that it is her problem, and is happy to forgive the man after he has bashed her. According to 'Rolling Stone's Clinton Walker the song is about Ian Rilen, where "his friend Paul Kelly sang in a song that was always understood to be about him, 'What makes such a sweet guy turn so mean?' He could be his own worst enemy". Rilen (Rose Tattoo, X) had supplied bass guitar for Kelly's first solo album, 'Post' (1985), and was married to Stephanie Falcolner (Sardine v) at the time.

This was the first song that Kelly had penned from a woman's point of view he was initially hesitant to sing it himself fearing that it would not sound "honest". Kelly had tried to persuade female singers to adopt it but his band encouraged him to keep it for themselves, "'Don't give 'this' one away', said [Schofield], 'we can do it.' 'Yeah,' chipped in [Connolly] '...What's to stop you cross-singing?'". Paul Kelly and the Messengers first performed it at a Leagues Club on the central New South Wales coast after several gigs Kelly felt perfectly normal singing it. Kelly liked Barclay's backing vocals as they "sounded sweet" and Connolly "had written a killer guitar riff to kick things off". Kelly enjoyed cross-singing and wrote both "Everything's Turning to White" and "South of Germany" from a woman's perspective these tracks also appear on 'So Much Water So Close to Home'.

The B-side, "Ghost Town" was also written by Kelly, but did not appear on an album until Kelly's 1994 release, 'Hidden Things', which also included a slower version of "Sweet Guy", re-titled as "Sweet Guy Waltz".

Reception



Allmusic's Mike DeGagne liked "Everything's Turning to White" and "Sweet Guy" from 'So Much Water So Close to Home', he calls the latter "a disturbing piece" and observed that "[b]oth songs are true to Kelly's intriguing knack of fiction telling, making some of the other tunes seem a little weak in the content department". While for his review of 'Hidden Things', DeGagne wrote that "the slower version ... 'Sweet Guy Waltz' ... presents an even eerier feel than the quicker version".

Track listing



# "Sweet Guy" (Paul Kelly)  3:40

# "Ghost Town" (Kelly)  2:51

Personnel



'Paul Kelly and the Messengers'

* Michael Barclay  drums, backing vocals

* Peter Bull  keyboards

* Steve Connolly  lead guitar

* Paul Kelly  guitar, vocals, harmonica

* Jon Schofield  bass guitar

'Additional musicians  "Sweet Guy"'

* Steve Berlin  saxophone (baritone)

'Recording details  "Sweet Guy"'

* Producer  Scott Litt, Paul Kelly

* Engineer– Scott Litt

** Assistant– Clif Norrell, Jim Dineen

* Studio  Ocean Way Studios, Los Angeles

** Mastered  Precision Lacquer

** Mixed  The Grey Room

'Recording Details  "Ghost Town"'

* Producer  Paul Kelly

* Mixing Engineer  Tim Ryan

* Recording Engineer  Ross Muir

* Studio  C.A.A.M.A. Music, Alice Springs

* Mixed  Trackdown Studios, Sydney

Charts



References



;General

* Note: Archived [online] copy has limited functionality.

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* Note: [online] version established at [https://web.archive.org/web/20120229232852/http://www.whiteroom.com.au/howlspace/whoswho/aboutww.htm White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd] in 2007 and was expanded from the 2002 edition.

;Specific

{{Reflist|25em|refs=

McFarlane, entry. Archived from [http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=978 the original] on 30 September 2004. Retrieved 21 February 2012.



































McFarlane . Archived from [http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=796 the original] on 27 February 2004. Retrieved 17 March 2012.





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Category:1989 singles

Category:Paul Kelly (Australian musician) songs

Category:1989 songs

Category:Mushroom Records singles

Category:Song recordings produced by Scott Litt

Category:Songs written by Paul Kelly (Australian musician)

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