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All I Ever Wanted (Kirsty MacColl song)

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"All I Ever Wanted"
Single by Kirsty MacColl
from the album Electric Landlady
B-side"There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis (Live)"
ReleasedOctober 1991[1]
Length3:30
LabelVirgin
Songwriter(s)Kirsty MacColl
Marshall Crenshaw
Producer(s)Steve Lillywhite
Kirsty MacColl singles chronology
"My Affair"
(1991)
"All I Ever Wanted"
(1991)
"Angel"
(1993)

"All I Ever Wanted" is a song by English singer-songwriter Kirsty MacColl, released in 1991 as the third and final single from her third studio album, Electric Landlady. The song was written by MacColl and Marshall Crenshaw, and was produced by Steve Lillywhite.[2] It peaked at number 91 in the UK Singles Chart.

Background

[edit]

In a promotional video on the making of Electric Landlady, MacColl commented, "'All I Ever Wanted' is a song I wrote with Marshall Crenshaw some time ago. We actually wrote it by post. He sent me a cassette from New York of some chord patterns that he'd put down. Then I put down some vocals and got the lyrics together, and sent it back to him. And he was like 'Well I can't sing this, this is a girl's song', so we put it on hold and now I've finally done it. I recorded it in New York with the Latin band. It sounds great, it sounds like Buddy Holly and Acapulco."[3]

Crenshaw later submitted the song when asked to provide a song for the film That Thing You Do! but it was not selected.[4]

Release

[edit]

The song was remixed for its release as a single. Three live tracks were included across the single's different formats: "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis", "Walk Right Back" and "A New England". The tracks were recorded live for BBC Radio 1's Into the Night on 26 June 1991.[5]

The song failed to enter the top 75 of the UK Singles Chart and reached its peak at number 91 on 19 October 1991.[6] It also reached number 35 in the Music Week Playlist Chart on 19 October 1991.[7]

Music video

[edit]

A music video was filmed to promote the single. It was directed by Jeff Baynes, produced by Michael Brown and features Rowland Rivron.[8][9]

Critical reception

[edit]

On its release as a single, Andrew Hirst of the Huddersfield Daily Examiner described "All I Ever Wanted" as a "flighty folk number", but added that it was a "strange single choice when far better tunes lay dormant on her excellent Electric Landlady album".[10] Andrew Collins of NME felt it "sounds like an album track" as well as "a kid's TV theme made out of 'American Pie'". He added, "However, I hope it goes to number one for 14 weeks so that Virgin feel shit about refusing to fund Kirsty's first tour. How much did the Paris Angels' limo cost?"[11]

In a review of Electric Landlady, Steve Pick of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch commented how "All I Ever Wanted" "implicitly connects the early Beatles with the bossa nova that had to influence them".[12] Mike Curtin of The Post-Star described the song as "the best 10,000 Maniacs song that the Jamestown, N.Y., folk-rock band never wrote".[13] Casey Seiler of the Jackson Hole Guide noted the song's "rock-guitar twang".[14]

John Kovalic of the Wisconsin State Journal wrote, "The solid, catchy pop of 'All I Ever Wanted' may be the [album]'s strongest selling point".[15] Barbara Jaeger of The Record noted, "The collection has its share of folk-rock tunes, the catchiest of which are 'All I Ever Wanted' and 'He Never Mentioned Love'. The delightful melodies of both are the springboards from which MacColl's voice soars."[16] In The Trouser Press Guide to '90s Rock, Ira A. Robbins said of MacColl's 1995 compilation Galore, "Galore gives Electric Landlady short shrift by omitting the pure pop delight of 'All I Ever Wanted'."[17]

Track listing

[edit]
7" and cassette single
  1. "All I Ever Wanted" - 3:30
  2. "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis" (Live) - 3:49
CD single (UK #1)
  1. "All I Ever Wanted" - 3:30
  2. "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis" (Live) - 3:49
  3. "Walk Right Back" (Live) - 3:38
  4. "A New England" (Live Acoustic Duet with Billy Bragg) - 3:27
CD single (UK #2)
  1. "All I Ever Wanted" - 3:30
  2. "What Do Pretty Girls Do?" - 2:38
  3. "Walk Right Back" (Live) - 3:38
  4. "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis" (Live) - 3:49
CD single (US promo)
  1. "All I Ever Wanted" - 3:30
  2. "All the Tears That I Cried" - 3:31

Personnel

[edit]

All I Ever Wanted

Production

  • Steve Lillywhite – producer ("All I Ever Wanted", "What Do Pretty Girls Do?"), mixing on single version of "All I Ever Wanted"
  • Jon Fausty – engineer and mixing on album version of "All I Ever Wanted"
  • John Brough – engineer on album version of "All I Ever Wanted"
  • Alan Douglas – engineer on album version of "All I Ever Wanted"
  • Pete Lewis – mixing on album version of "All I Ever Wanted"
  • Howard Gray – mixing on single version of "All I Ever Wanted"
  • Trevor Gray – mixing on single version of "All I Ever Wanted"
  • Paul Williams – producer (BBC live tracks)
  • Paul Roberts – engineer (BBC live tracks)

Other

  • Kirsty MacColl – sleeve design
  • Bill Smith Studio – sleeve design
  • Charles Dickins – photography

Charts

[edit]
Chart (1991–92) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[18] 154
UK Singles Chart (OCC)[6] 91
UK Music Week Playlist Chart[7] 35

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "All I Ever Wanted". Kirsty MacColl. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  2. ^ Stewart Mason (1991-06-25). "Electric Landlady - Kirsty MacColl | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  3. ^ Kirsty MacColl (2005). From Croydon to Cuba... The Videos [The Making of Electric Landlady] (Motion picture). Virgin, EMI.
  4. ^ Call, Len Righi Of The Morning. "'Walk Hard' songwriter Marshall Crenshaw gets serious". mcall.com. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
  5. ^ "All I Ever Wanted (CD single 2)". Kirsty MacColl. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  6. ^ a b "Singles - Positions 76 to 200". Charts Plus. Spotlight Publications. 19 October 1991. p. 2.
  7. ^ a b "Playlist Chart". Music Week. 19 October 1991. p. 14. ISSN 0265-1548.
  8. ^ "Kirsty MacColl - All I Ever Wanted". YouTube. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  9. ^ From Croydon to Cuba... The Videos [All I Ever Wanted] (Motion picture). Virgin, EMI. 2005.
  10. ^ Hirst, Andrew (19 October 1991). "Reviews: Singles". Huddersfield Daily Examiner. p. 29.
  11. ^ Collins, Andrew (12 October 1991). "Singles". New Musical Express. p. 23.
  12. ^ Pick, Steve (28 June 1991). "Kirsty MacColl has some new tricks". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
  13. ^ Curtin, Mike (6 October 1991). "MacColl's eclectic 'Electric'". The Post-Star.
  14. ^ Seiler, Casey (17 July 1991). "MacColl's 'Landlady' takes charge with grab-bag pop". Jackson Hole Guide.
  15. ^ Kovalic, John (8 September 1991). "Kirsty MacColl cool and catchy". Wisconsin State Journal.
  16. ^ Jaeger, Barbara (8 August 1991). "MacColl's signs of progression". The Record.
  17. ^ Robbins, Ira A. (1997). The Trouser Press Guide to '90s Rock: The All-new Fifth Edition of The ... - Ira A. Robbins - Google Books. ISBN 9780684814377. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  18. ^ "Kirsty MacColl ARIA chart history, received from ARIA on 17 March 2020". Imgur.com. Retrieved 4 April 2020.