How Dare You!

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How Dare You!
How Dare You! cover
Studio album by 10cc
Released January 1976
Recorded 1975, Strawberry Studios, Stockport, Cheshire, England
Genre Rock
Length 42:53
Label Mercury Records 534 975-2
Producer(s) 10cc
Professional reviews
10cc chronology
The Original Soundtrack
(1975)
How Dare You!
(1976)
Deceptive Bends
(1977)


How Dare You! is often considered to be 10cc's finest album, and included UK hit singles "I'm Mandy Fly Me" and "Art For Art's Sake". Released in 1976, it was also the last 10cc album to feature the classic line-up of Eric Stewart, Graham Gouldman, Kevin Godley, and Lol Creme, with the latter two departing to work on their own musical projects, and eventually becoming music video pioneers. The album was the band's first to feature cover artwork by the Hipgnosis creative team.

In a BBC Radio Wales interview, Stewart recalled the origins of the song "I'm Mandy Fly Me":

   
How Dare You!
American Airlines used to have this beautiful poster that they displayed of this gorgeous stewardess inviting you onto the plane. Now her name wasn't Mandy actually, it was something like, er, oh gosh knows, "I'm Cindy", a very American name. "I'm Cindy, fly me" which was a quite sexual connotation as well, but I remember seeing in Manchester this beautiful poster and just below it was this tramp, I mean a serious tramp, quite a raggedy guy, looking up at this girl, and I thought God, do you know, there's a song there. Look at that guy looking up at Cindy-fly-me and I know he's never gonna get on an aeroplane, I don't think, except in his dreams.

So I brought it back, the idea back to the studio, where we were writing for the How Dare You! album, and put it to the guys: "Anybody interested in this 'I'm Mandy Fly Me'". I'd switched it to Mandy. And Graham said "yeah, that sounds like a good idea. I've got some ideas, I've got some chords. Let's slot those things in, try it, mess it around". We wrote it, and we didn't like it. We, we scrapped it. It just wasn't going anywhere.

But, enter from stage left, ha ha, the "wicked villain" Kevin Godley, twiddling his moustache, says "I know what's wrong with it. Let's sit down again." He said "I think it just gets too bland, it just goes on, on one plane, your verses and your middles and your der-der-der, they're all going on the one plane. What it needs is someone to go 'Bash' on the side of your head". So we changed the rhythm completely, and we put two whacking great guitar solos in there, in the middle of this quiet, soft, floaty song. Once we'd got that idea in, it, it just gelled into something else. Again, impossible to dance to, as a lot of 10cc tracks were, but once Kevin had put that in, he became the third writer in the song so we were quite democratic in that way.

   
How Dare You!

[edit] Track listing

  1. "How Dare You" (Kevin Godley, Lol Creme) – 4:14
  2. "Lazy Ways" (Creme, Eric Stewart) – 4:20
  3. "I Wanna Rule The World" (Godley, Creme, Graham Gouldman) – 3:57
  4. "I'm Mandy Fly Me" (Stewart, Gouldman, Creme) – 5:24
  5. "Iceberg" (Gouldman, Godley) – 3:43
  6. "Art For Arts Sake" (Stewart, Gouldman) – 4:19
  7. "Rock 'n' Roll Lullaby" (Gouldman, Stewart) – 3:58
  8. "Head Room" (Godley, Creme) – 4:21
  9. "Don't Hang Up" (Godley, Creme) – 6:16

[edit] Miscellanea

The intro to "I'm Mandy Fly Me", a song (as possibly a fantasy or dream sequence) about being rescued following an airplane crash, features one of the bridge sections of the band's 1973 song "Clockwork Creep". The section, whose lyrics go "Oh, no you'll never get me up in one of these again / 'Cause what goes up must come down", is rendered soft and tinny, as if heard playing from a portable transistor radio. The song is regarded by some fans as a continuation of the story within "Clockwork Creep", whose subject was a bomb hidden on an airliner.

[edit] Personnel

  • Lol Creme — vocals, rhythm guitars, 12 string guitar, lead guitar, clavinet, moog, marracas, sleigh bells, piano, tambourine, organ, vibes, gizmo, electric guitars, recorder, electric piano, hand claps
  • Kevin Godley — vocals, drums, congas, cow bell, bongos, triangle, timpani, marracas, temple, blocks, tambourine, cabasa, castanets, hand claps
  • Graham Gouldman — vocals, bass, rizo-rizo, acoustic guitars, tambourine, zithers, double bass, six string bass, electric guitars, cow bell, dobro, slide steel guitar, glockenspiel, Spanish guitar, hand claps
  • Eric Stewart — vocals, steel guitar, lead guitar, six string bass, piano, whistle, Levi zip, electric piano, fuzz bass, pedal steel guitar, slide guitars
  • Mair Jones — harp