Eat to the Beat
Eat to the Beat is the fourth studio album by American rock band Blondie, released on September 28, 1979 by Chrysalis Records. The album spent a year on the US Billboard 200, peaking at and was one of Billboards top 10 albums of 1980. It also reached on the UK Albums Chart in October 1979, becoming the band's second top album there that year. It has been certified Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry and the Recording Industry Association of America.
Musical style
The primarily pop album includes a diverse range of styles in its songs: rock, disco, new wave, punk, reggae and funk, as well as a lullaby. "Atomic" and "The Hardest Part" fused disco with rock. Blondie's first two albums were new wave productions, followed by Parallel Lines which dropped the new wave material, exchanging it entirely for rock-infused pop. Eat to the Beat continued in this pop direction.History
Three singles were released in the UK from this album. "The Hardest Part" was released as the second single from the album in the USA instead of "Union City Blue". According to the liner notes of the 1994 compilation The Platinum Collection, the song "Slow Motion" was originally planned to be the fourth single release from the album and producer Mike Chapman even made a remix of the track but following the unexpected success of "Call Me", theme song to the movie American Gigolo, these plans were shelved and the single mix of "Slow Motion" remains unreleased. An alternate mix of the track entitled The Stripped Down Motown Mix did however, turn up on one of the many remix singles issued by Chrysalis/EMI in the mid-1990s.Eat to the Beat was also released as a video album, one of the earliest to be issued. Most of the videos were filmed in and around New York. One of the exceptions was the "Union City Blue" music video, which was filmed at Union Dry Dock, Weehawken, New Jersey. Each video was directed by David Mallet and produced by Paul Flattery. The video was initially available as a promotional VHS in 1979 and subsequently released on videocassette and videodisc in October 1980.
Unlike the rest of Blondie's original albums, Eat to the Beat was not remastered in 1994. It was later digitally remastered and reissued by EMI-Capitol in 2001 with four bonus tracks and candid sleeve notes by Mike Chapman:
The 2001 remaster was again reissued in 2007 without the four bonus tracks. Included instead was a DVD of the long-since deleted Eat to the Beat video album, marking the first time it had been made available on the DVD format.
Critical reception
Reviewing Eat to the Beat in 1979, Village Voice critic Robert Christgau felt that the record was not "a tour de force" like Blondie's previous album Parallel Lines and expressed reservations about "the overarching fatalism" of its lyrics, but noted that he liked "the way the lyrics depart from pop bohemia to speak directly to the mass audience they're reaching. And Debbie just keeps getting better." Debra Rae Cohen of Rolling Stone found the album "not only ambitious in its range of styles, but also unexpectedly and vibrantly compelling without sacrificing any of the group's urbane, modish humor." A review in People observed that the band sounded "less raw but still fresh." David Hepworth, writing in Smash Hits, praised it as a "brasher, more rocking follow-up... as hard and shiny as glass and I love it." Eat to the Beat was voted the 17th best album of 1979 in The Village Voices year-end Pazz & Jop critics' poll.In a retrospective review, William Ruhlmann of AllMusic viewed Eat to the Beat as a "secondhand" version of Parallel Lines, finding that its similar attempts at "rock/disco fusion" were less effective, while "elsewhere, the band just tried to cover too many stylistic bases." In contrast, BBC Music writer Chris Jones opined that Blondie had successfully expanded on the sound of Parallel Lines with Eat to the Beat, which he said "still sounds box fresh today", praising Mike Chapman's production expertise and the album's musical diversity.
Track listing
Video album (12-inch [LaserDisc] format)
- "Eat to the Beat"
- "The Hardest Part"
- "Union City Blue"
- "Slow Motion"
- "Shayla"
- "Die Young Stay Pretty"
- "Accidents Never Happen"
- "Atomic"
- "Living in the Real World"
- "Sound-A-Sleep"
- "Victor"
- "Dreaming"
- "Heart of Glass"
- "Picture This"
- " Presence, Dear"
- "Hanging on the Telephone"
Personnel
Blondie
- Clem Burke – drums
- Jimmy Destri – keyboards, backing vocals on "Die Young Stay Pretty" and "Victor"
- Nigel Harrison – bass guitar
- Deborah Harry – vocals
- Frank Infante – guitars, backing vocals on "Die Young Stay Pretty" and "Victor"
- Chris Stein – guitars
Additional musicians
- Ellie Greenwich – backing vocals on "Dreaming" and "Atomic"
- Lorna Luft – backing vocals on "Accidents Never Happen" and "Slow Motion"
- Donna Destri – backing vocals on "Living in the Real World"
- Mike Chapman – backing vocals on "Die Young Stay Pretty" and "Victor", count-in vocal on "Living in the Real World"
- Randy Hennes – harmonica on "Eat to the Beat"
Technical
- Mike Chapman – production
- Dave Tickle – engineering
- Peter Coleman – engineering
- Steve Hall – mastering at MCA Whitney Studios
- Kevin Flaherty – production
Artwork
- Norman Seeff – photography, design
- John Van Hamersveld – typography, design
- Billy Bass – art direction
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
| Chart | Position |
| Australian Albums | 56 |
| Canada Top Albums/CDs | 67 |
| UK Albums | 40 |
| US Billboard 200 | 8 |