Beauty Stab is the second studio album by English pop band ABC. It was originally released in November 1983, on the labels Neutron, Mercury and Vertigo. The album was recorded over a period of three months between August and September 1983, in sessions that took place at Sarm Studios East and West, Townhouse Studios and Abbey Road Studios. It was a departure from the stylised production of the band's debut album, The Lexicon of Love, and featured a more guitar-oriented sound.
Beauty Stab | ||||
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Released | 14 November 1983 (1983-11-14) | |||
Recorded | August–September 1983 | |||
Studio |
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Length | 42:58 | |||
Label | Neutron | |||
Producer |
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ABC chronology | ||||
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Singles from Beauty Stab | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Smash Hits | 6/10[4] |
The Village Voice | A−[5] |
The album was produced by ABC with Gary Langan, who was the audio engineer on the band's first album. The band employed the rhythm section of Andy Newmark (drums) and Alan Spenner (bass guitar)[1] both of whom had recently recorded and toured with Roxy Music at the time. The cover photography was by Gered Mankowitz.
On release, the album was received negatively by the majority of music critics. In a 1995 article, music journalist Simon Reynolds listed Beauty Stab among "the great career-sabotage LPs in pop history".[6] In retrospect, the band members themselves have been quite vocal in that they were less satisfied with the album with founding member Stephen Singleton leaving the band soon after promotion for the album was completed. Martin Fry later stated that "we were eager to go in a totally different direction [to The Lexicon of Love]. We didn't want to do a sequel. In retrospect, perhaps that is exactly what we should have done".[7] The album was certified Gold by the BPI for shipments in excess of 100,000 copies, but was not as commercially successful as its predecessor. It peaked at No. 12 on the UK Albums Chart and spawned only two Top 40 singles (neither of which made the Top 10).[8]
In 2005, a digitally remastered CD of the album was released with three bonus tracks.
According to Bob Stanley of The Guardian, Beauty Stab was a drastic departure from The Lexicon of Love, and was "their attempt to take on the preconceptions of their fanbase": "The strings were gone, replaced by some tough guitars that sounded weirdly dated – sometimes like Low-era Bowie, sometimes closer to Led Zeppelin. Had it been released two years later, when guitars were voguish once more, it would have kept the ABC boat afloat. Instead, it just sounded confusing."[9] The song That Was Then But This Is Now has appeared in several worst lyrics polls including one held in 2007 by BBC 6Music.[10]
In a list of follow-up albums featuring a change in style, Alfred Soto of Stylus Magazine said that "the band abandoned the marimbas and Mantovani" of their previous album "for rawk power chords and declamatory singing." Although noting that "most of its songs are as politically informed as a can of hair spray", he felt that "Beauty Stab is touching, the sound of young men with too much money and too facile a talent for one-liners getting back at the philistines who dismissed them as nancy boys."[11]
All tracks are written by Martin Fry, Mark White and Stephen Singleton.
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "That Was Then but This Is Now" | 3:34 |
2. | "Love's a Dangerous Language" | 3:40 |
3. | "If I Ever Thought You'd Be Lonely" | 3:55 |
4. | "The Power of Persuasion" | 3:32 |
5. | "Beauty Stab" | 2:06 |
6. | "By Default by Design" | 4:07 |
No. | Title | Length |
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7. | "Hey Citizen!" | 3:55 |
8. | "King Money" | 4:02 |
9. | "Bite the Hand" | 3:06 |
10. | "Unzip" | 2:49 |
11. | "S.O.S." | 4:49 |
12. | "United Kingdom" | 3:23 |
Total length: | 42:58 |
No. | Title | Length |
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13. | "Vertigo" | 1:58 |
14. | "Selections from the Magnificent New ABC Long-Player 'Beauty Stab'" | 5:48 |
15. | "That Was Then but This Is Now" (Unedited) | 5:58 |
ABC
Additional personnel
Chart (1983–1984) | Peak position |
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Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[12] | 58 |
Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[13] | 36 |
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[14] | 29 |
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[15] | 22 |
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[16] | 50 |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[17] | 34 |
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[18] | 42 |
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[19] | 32 |
UK Albums (OCC)[20] | 12 |
US Billboard 200[21] | 69 |
Tusk ranks as one of the great career-sabotage LP's in pop history, alongside the Clash's Sandinista[!], ABC's Beauty Stab and Beastie Boys' Paul's Boutique; one of those albums by bands apparently on a creative and commercial roll who nonetheless wilfully confound their audience, motivated by artistic frustration, or fucked-up/fucked-off confusion, or simply because they've succumbed to a kind of collective death-wish.
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Singles |
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