Get the Knack
Get the Knack is the debut studio album by the American rock band the Knack, released on June 11, 1979, by Capitol Records.[1] Produced by Mike Chapman and recorded in April 1979, the album showcases the band's power pop style, drawing from 1960s influences like the British Invasion bands.[2] Featuring tight songwriting, jangling guitars, and driving rhythms, it propelled the Los Angeles-based quartet—vocalist Doug Fieger, guitarist Berton Averre, bassist Prescott Niles, and drummer Bruce Gary—to international prominence following their formation in 1978.[3] The album's lead single, "My Sharona," became a massive hit, topping the Billboard Hot 100 chart for six consecutive weeks and driving Get the Knack to number one on the Billboard 200 for five weeks.[4] Commercially, it achieved gold certification in under two weeks and sold over one million copies in less than two months, marking one of the fastest-selling debuts in rock history at the time.[2] A second single, "Good Girls Don't," also charted successfully, contributing to total U.S. sales exceeding two million units.[5] Despite its blockbuster sales, Get the Knack drew sharp critical backlash, with reviewers accusing the band of lyrical sexism, musical derivativeness, and overhyping their image as Beatles-esque revivalists.[6] The intense media frenzy and comparisons to earlier rock eras fueled perceptions of the Knack as a manufactured act, leading to rapid fatigue and setting the stage for their subsequent albums' diminished reception.[7] Over time, the album has been reevaluated for its craftsmanship and role in revitalizing concise, hook-driven pop-rock amid the late-1970s punk and disco landscape.[8]
Background and Formation
Band Origins
The Knack formed in Los Angeles in May 1978, initiated by vocalist-rhythm guitarist Doug Fieger and lead guitarist Berton Averre, who had been writing songs together since the mid-1970s after Fieger relocated from Detroit with his prior band Sky in 1971.[3][9] Drummer Bruce Gary, known to Fieger from earlier years, joined soon after, followed by bassist Prescott Niles as the final core member, completing the quartet just prior to their live debut.[1][10] The band played its inaugural show on June 1, 1978, at the Whisky a Go Go, where the performance created an immediate sensation through high-energy delivery and tight musicianship, drawing enthusiastic crowds without any promotional support.[3][10] Follow-up gigs at venues like the Starwood and Doug Weston's Troubadour sustained momentum via grassroots word-of-mouth in the competitive Los Angeles club circuit, fostering a dedicated local following amid the era's punk and new wave scenes.[10][11] This organic buzz from approximately six months of consistent live appearances prompted overtures from multiple record labels, leading to a contract with Capitol Records in January 1979, secured by A&R executive Bruce Ravid after witnessing their shows.[8][12] The signing positioned the band for studio work, capitalizing on their established repertoire developed during the club phase.[3]Pre-Album Development
Doug Fieger and Berton Averre, the creative nucleus of The Knack, initiated their songwriting partnership in 1973, generating early demos that supplied foundational material for the band's eventual debut album, including concise, riff-driven compositions emphasizing tight structures and immediate hooks.[13] Fieger's encounter with Sharona Alperin in 1978, at a Los Angeles restaurant where she worked as a receptionist, catalyzed the writing of "My Sharona," a track co-authored with Averre that drew directly from Fieger's infatuation and featured a stuttering guitar riff developed to evoke rhythmic urgency.[14][15] The full lineup coalesced in June 1978 with the addition of drummer Bruce Gary and bassist Prescott Niles, prompting rigorous rehearsals to hone a repertoire of live-tested songs aimed at replicating onstage intensity on record, as evidenced by early performances at venues like the Troubadour that packed crowds and showcased tracks like "My Sharona" and "Let Me Out."[16][17] This pre-studio phase prioritized power pop's melodic precision and rock-rooted energy, consciously diverging from the disco saturation of the late 1970s by reviving 1960s influences such as the Beatles' harmonic drive and the Who's explosive dynamics, favoring broad appeal through familiar verse-chorus forms over the era's punk abrasiveness or new wave abstraction.[18][19]Musical Influences and Style
Power Pop Context
Power pop, a genre rooted in the concise, melody-rich guitar pop of mid-1960s British Invasion bands, gained definition in the early 1970s through acts like the Raspberries, formed in Cleveland in 1970 with a lineup mirroring the Beatles' instrumentation of dual guitars, bass, and drums.[20] Alongside Memphis-based Big Star, these precursors solidified power pop's sound—characterized by crunchy guitars, tight harmonies, and hook-laden structures—amid a rock landscape shifting toward the sprawling suites of progressive acts and the repetitive grooves of disco.[21] By the late 1970s, power pop served as a causal antidote to the excesses of arena rock's bombast, exemplified by bands like Styx and Kansas with their multi-part epics often exceeding 10 minutes, and disco's formulaic four-on-the-floor beats dominating airplay.[22] Get the Knack, released on June 11, 1979, embodied this resurgence by prioritizing brevity and replayability, with 12 tracks totaling 41 minutes and many songs under three minutes, such as "That's What the Little Girls Do" at 2:37.[23] This stylistic choice directly countered the progressive era's indulgence in lengthy solos and conceptual sprawl, fostering a format that emphasized immediate, youthful energy through punchy riffs and verse-chorus efficiency rather than technical display.[24] The album's arrangements thus reflected a deliberate causal mechanism: shorter durations enhanced catchiness and listener retention, aligning with power pop's empirical edge in delivering digestible bursts of excitement over the era's prevailing verbosity. The genre's capacity to harness this vigor yielded verifiable commercial traction for similar 1970s acts, underscoring its market resonance. The Raspberries' 1972 single "Go All the Way" reached number five on the Billboard Hot 100, while Cheap Trick's 1978 live album At Budokan sold over a million copies in the U.S., attaining platinum certification and proving demand for power pop's high-octane accessibility amid disco's saturation and arena rock's scale.[22][25] Get the Knack extended this trajectory, its rapid chart ascent validating power pop's resurgence as a viable counter-narrative to late-1970s musical bloat.[26]Beatles and Retro Elements
The album cover of Get the Knack featured a black-and-white band portrait that intentionally mirrored the stark, high-contrast style of the Beatles' Meet the Beatles! (1964), Capitol Records' U.S. release of their second album.[8] The back cover depicted the band in a staged scene echoing a publicity still from the Beatles' 1964 film A Hard Day's Night, reinforcing an aesthetic nod to the early British Invasion era.[27] Band photography and promotional imagery similarly adopted modish suits and moptop-inspired haircuts, evoking the Beatles' 1963-1964 visual identity as a deliberate stylistic revival.[28] In their arrangements, The Knack drew on Beatles-derived techniques such as jangly, Rickenbacker-like guitar tones and multi-tracked vocal harmonies built on thirds and sixths, as heard in tracks like "My Sharona" and "Good Girls Don't."[29] These elements—crisp rhythmic strumming patterns and melodic interplay between lead and rhythm guitars—homaged the mid-1960s rock formula refined by the Beatles on albums like A Hard Day's Night (1964), prioritizing tight, verse-chorus structures over the era's prevailing experimentation.[30] Rather than verbatim imitation, such borrowings adapted proven harmonic progressions (e.g., I-IV-V cadences with added sevenths) to power pop's energetic drive, yielding concise songs averaging under three minutes.[31] The adoption of these retro components stemmed from a strategic response to the 1970s music market's fragmentation, where punk's raw minimalism, disco's repetitive grooves, and arena rock's bombast left limited space for unpretentious, guitar-led pop with immediate appeal.[22] Power pop acts like The Knack filled this niche by resurrecting 1960s rock's causal emphasis on melody and rhythm as direct drivers of listener engagement, contrasting the decade's trend toward conceptual excess and subcultural silos.[32] This approach proved viable commercially, as evidenced by the album's rapid ascent amid diverse genre competition.[8]Recording Process
Studio Sessions
The recording sessions for Get the Knack occurred in April 1979 at MCA Whitney Studios in Glendale, California, a facility equipped with a 36-input Neve console and MCI 24-track tape machine.[33][2] Mike Chapman, selected as producer for his recent success with Blondie's Parallel Lines (1978), oversaw the project with engineers David Tickle on recording and Peter Coleman on mixing.[33][34] The band captured basic tracks over seven days, emphasizing live-room performances that mirrored their concert energy, with most songs requiring only one or two takes and few subsequent overdubs.[33] Mixing followed over four additional days, completing the album in a total of 11 days.[33][34] This expedited approach kept costs below $18,000, far lower than the extended, high-budget sessions of peers like Fleetwood Mac, whose Rumours (1977) required six months and over $500,000 amid interpersonal tensions and repeated reworkings.[33][34] The Knack's efficiency stemmed from their rehearsal-honed precision, avoiding the layered production excesses common in late-1970s rock albums.[33]Production Techniques
The production of Get the Knack emphasized a raw, energetic sound achieved through minimal processing and live-room techniques, aligning with the band's desire for unadorned power pop authenticity. Producer Mike Chapman oversaw sessions at MCA Whitney Studios in Glendale, California, utilizing a 36-input Neve console and MCI 24-track recorder to capture the band's performances with few overdubs, often completing tracks in one or two takes.[33] Drums were recorded using a Gretsch maple kit with multiple Neumann microphones, including room mics positioned 25 feet away and 12 feet high to introduce natural liveliness and reverb, compressed via Urei 1176 units to enhance punch without artificial deadening common in contemporary recordings.[33][35] Guitars featured Fender Stratocasters amplified through Vox AC30s, miked closely with Neumann U67 and Shure SM57 combinations to retain clarity and bite, while bass was tracked via an Ampeg BA115 cab in an isolation booth.[33][36] Effects were deliberately sparse to preserve instrumental precision: lead vocals by Doug Fieger were captured dry using a Neumann U47 and doubled for thickness, with only subtle EMT 250 plate reverb applied sparingly to vocals and snare during mixing. Engineer David Tickle noted, "There were no effects on anything. That’s what they wanted," underscoring the avoidance of studio gimmicks in favor of direct signal paths.[33] Guitar solos, such as in "My Sharona," incorporated two-part layering for added intensity, but the core riff relied on amp-driven tone and performance energy.[33] Mixing, handled by Pete Coleman over four days on an adjacent Neve setup, prioritized snare-keyed compression on room mics to link drum attack causally to overall groove propulsion. Post-recording edits included lyric alterations for radio versions to temper explicit content while maintaining thematic edge; in "Good Girls Don't," phrases like "Wishin' you could get it on with me" became "Wishin' and a-hopin' that you'd get it on with me," and "Gettin' it on" shifted to "But I do," broadening commercial viability without softening the song's provocative intent.[33][37] These choices collectively favored empirical capture of band interplay over embellishment, contributing to the album's crisp, immediate sonic profile.[38]Release and Promotion
Marketing Strategy
Capitol Records pursued a promotional strategy for Get the Knack that prioritized mystique and controlled scarcity over broad media exposure, aiming to cultivate organic interest through radio and live buzz rather than image-driven hype. The label focused on the lead single "My Sharona," released on June 18, 1979, with emphasis on DJ airplay to generate listener demand ahead of the album's launch.[1][7] This limited pre-release single rollout avoided flooding the market, instead leveraging the track's catchiness to build momentum via organic radio rotation. The band's management enforced a strict no-interview policy and declined television appearances, including American Bandstand, during the initial rollout to heighten intrigue and encourage word-of-mouth promotion.[8][39] This tactic, intended to position The Knack as an enigmatic act emerging from the Los Angeles club scene, contrasted with typical major-label pushes and directed attention toward the music itself over personality profiling.[40] The album's release on June 11, 1979, was strategically timed for the start of summer, aligning with heightened radio programming cycles to maximize airplay potential without additional advance singles.[2] Capitol's overall campaign, reportedly budgeted at around $50,000, supported this restrained approach by channeling resources into targeted radio outreach and regional distribution to amplify grassroots demand.[7]Initial Launch
Get the Knack was released on June 11, 1979, by Capitol Records, quickly achieving gold certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) after shipping over 500,000 units in just 13 days—the label's fastest-selling debut album since the Beatles' Meet the Beatles! in 1964.[3][8] This rapid shipment reflected intense early demand, driven by word-of-mouth buzz and radio airplay in Los Angeles, where the band had built a local following prior to national exposure.[41] The album's lead single, "My Sharona," issued on June 18, 1979, debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 the following week and ascended to the number-one position, holding it for six consecutive weeks starting August 25.[42][43] This chart dominance, fueled by the song's infectious riff and punk-infused energy, directly amplified album purchases, with Get the Knack reaching platinum certification (1 million units shipped) in under seven weeks.[3] Early promotional efforts, including limited Capitol marketing budgeted at around $50,000, were supplemented by the band's high-energy live shows across the U.S. in summer 1979, which showcased tracks from the album and sustained momentum from the single's radio saturation.[8] These performances, emphasizing tight musicianship and audience engagement, contributed to the debut's explosive initial velocity before broader market saturation set in.[7]Commercial Success
Sales Figures
Get the Knack achieved platinum certification from the RIAA in less than seven weeks after its June 1979 release, signifying one million units shipped in the United States.[3] U.S. sales surpassed two million copies within the first year, reflecting strong initial commercial demand fueled by hit singles such as "My Sharona" that drove consumers to purchase the full album in an era dominated by physical formats.[44] [45] Worldwide, the album has sold over five million copies, with some estimates reaching six million, underscoring its global appeal despite a short-lived peak in popularity.[5] Capitol Records issued a double platinum award internally for two million units, aligning with reported U.S. figures, though this was distinct from RIAA metrics.[46] The rapid sales velocity positioned it among the fastest-selling debuts of its time, attributable to effective promotion and the infectious hooks of its tracks prompting bulk purchases before digital alternatives emerged.[8]Chart Performance
Get the Knack reached number one on the US Billboard 200 album chart, holding the position for five weeks in late summer and early fall 1979.[41][47] It ranked 16th on the Billboard 200 year-end chart for 1979.[48] The album's lead single, "My Sharona", topped the Billboard Hot 100 for six weeks beginning August 25, 1979.[49] The follow-up single, "Good Girls Don't", peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 in November 1979.[50][51] Internationally, Get the Knack achieved a year-end ranking of fourth on Canada's RPM Albums chart in 1979.[48] Both "My Sharona" and "Good Girls Don't" reached number one on the Canadian RPM singles chart.[52]| Chart (1979) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 1 |
| Canada RPM Albums | 1 (implied by year-end performance) |
| Australia Kent Report | Top 20 (year-end 19) |
Certifications
The album Get the Knack by The Knack has been certified 2× Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in the United States, denoting shipments exceeding 2,000,000 units.[48] In Canada, Music Canada awarded it 4× Platinum status on January 1, 1980, for combined shipments and sales of 400,000 units, following earlier Gold (October 1, 1979), Platinum, and Double Platinum certifications.[53][54] These thresholds reflect verified industry data on physical album sales during the late 1970s, providing empirical substantiation of the record's commercial endurance beyond initial promotional buzz. New Zealand's Recorded Music NZ certified it Gold for 7,500 units.[48] No verified certifications from bodies such as the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) or the former Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique (SNEP) in France appear in official records for this title.Reception and Controversies
Early Positive Reviews
The album Get the Knack, released on June 11, 1979, garnered early acclaim for its vigorous power pop energy and precise musical execution, qualities that resonated with audiences seeking a return to rock's core elements during a period of disco dominance.[55] Music critic Jeff Burger highlighted the band's skillful craftsmanship, describing tracks such as "My Sharona," "Good Girls Don't," and "Oh, Tara" as "tightly knit odes to teenage lust" that provided compelling hooks and drive, forming "at least half a dozen" strong reasons to embrace the record.[56] This praise emphasized the album's revival of straightforward rock fundamentals, including tight rhythms and guitar-driven propulsion, over more experimental trends.[56] Audience reception further validated these strengths through rapid commercial uptake, serving as empirical evidence of approval for the album's infectious hooks and playing proficiency. Get the Knack attained gold certification from the RIAA in under two weeks of release and surpassed one million units sold within two months, a feat that underscored fan enthusiasm for its high-energy tracks amid broader cultural pushback against disco's prevalence.[2] In Creem magazine's 1979 readers' poll, the album ranked tenth among the year's top releases, reflecting grassroots endorsement of its rock-rooted vigor and melodic craftsmanship by music enthusiasts.[57] These metrics and poll results prioritized listener-driven validation over select critical dissent, highlighting the record's immediate appeal as a catalyst for rock's resurgence.[2]Critical Backlash
Following the album's release on June 11, 1979, and its swift ascent to number one on the Billboard 200 for five consecutive weeks, critical coverage shifted abruptly from intrigue to dismissal, reflecting resentment toward its unprecedented commercial velocity—500,000 copies sold in just two weeks.[58][7] This reversal stemmed largely from perceptions of manufactured hype, with outlets like Rolling Stone initially fueling excitement through endorsements, only for the band's rapid dominance to provoke accusations of inexperience and overexposure amid relentless radio play of lead single "My Sharona," which topped the Billboard Hot 100 for six weeks and induced widespread listener fatigue.[58][7] Capitol Records' promotional budget, totaling a relatively modest $50,000, was nonetheless blamed for engineering an artificial frenzy, exacerbating a media narrative that portrayed The Knack as an overhyped novelty rather than a substantive rock outfit.[7] Amid the punk and new wave era's valorization of raw, forward-looking innovation and anti-commercial rebellion, the band's refined power pop—rooted in mid-1960s influences—was lambasted by purists as retrograde and antithetical to punk's ethos of unpolished authenticity, manifesting in fan-driven backlash like "Knuke the Knack" t-shirts that equated their polish with sellout status.[58][7] The Knack's deliberate opposition to punk's DIY desperation, favoring instead structured, hook-driven songs evocative of earlier rock eras, positioned them as cultural outliers in a scene prizing edge over accessibility, with critics decrying their sound as a diluted facsimile lacking punk's visceral urgency.[58] Compounding this, the band's management-imposed restrictions on interviews alienated journalists, fostering perceptions of aloofness and fueling a post-peak dismissal that prioritized snobbery against populist success over artistic merit.[7] Internal strains, including novice management missteps and subsequent substance abuse pressures in the early 1980s, later amplified the overhype storyline but were empirically reactive to the external scrutiny rather than causal precursors.[58] Frontman Doug Fieger later expressed astonishment at the attacks' intensity, noting they were "blamed for everything short of Jonestown," underscoring how commercial triumph inverted elite cultural biases against unadulterated pop appeal.[58][6]Accusations of Misogyny and Sexism
Critics, including Rolling Stone contributor Dave Marsh, accused The Knack's frontman Doug Fieger of displaying a misogynistic attitude through lyrics that objectified women and portrayed adolescent male fantasies in tracks like "My Sharona" and "Good Girls Don't."[59][39] In "My Sharona," lines such as "She's got the knack" and descriptions of physical fixation were interpreted as reducing the subject to sexual allure, while "Good Girls Don't" warned against promiscuity with refrains implying moral judgment on female behavior, drawing charges of sexist double standards.[2] These elements echoed earlier rock conventions but were singled out amid 1979's rising feminist scrutiny of pop culture, with some reviewers labeling the content as arrogant and reductive.[6] Band members defended the lyrics as extensions of rock's longstanding bravado, comparable to The Rolling Stones' "Under My Thumb" or The Who's explorations of youthful desire, arguing that singling out The Knack ignored genre precedents.[40] Original demo versions of songs like "My Sharona" contained more explicit phrasing—such as "humpin'" altered to "jumpin'" for release—which the group viewed as playful rather than malicious, rooted in the raw energy of garage rock traditions rather than targeted hostility.[39] Despite these accusations, no organized boycotts or significant commercial disruptions materialized; "Get the Knack" topped the Billboard 200 for six weeks in 1979, selling over four million copies in the U.S. by year's end, indicating audience reception prioritized musical appeal over ideological concerns.[6] This resilience suggested the claims resonated more within critical circles than with broader listeners, who embraced the album's hooks amid a post-disco market shift.[39]Beatles Imitation Claims
Critics accused The Knack of imitating the Beatles through deliberate visual and sonic parallels on Get the Knack, released June 20, 1979. The album's black-and-white cover photograph evoked With the Beatles (1963), featuring the band in matching suits and bowl haircuts reminiscent of the early Beatles' mod aesthetic, while the record's center label replicated the Capitol Records design from Meet the Beatles! (1964).[27][60][7] These similarities fueled claims of derivativeness, with detractors labeling the band Beatles copycats or "the next Beatles" in a pejorative sense, dismissing their power-pop riffs and harmonies as unoriginal revivals of 1960s British Invasion formulas amid the late-1970s punk and disco dominance.[28][61] Such criticism intensified due to Capitol Records' packaging and promotion, the same label that released the Beatles' U.S. albums, positioning The Knack's no-synthesizer, guitar-driven sound as a nostalgic throwback rather than innovation.[7] The band acknowledged influences but framed them as homage to proven structural elements, with frontman Doug Fieger noting their intent to recapture the raw energy of pre-psychedelic rock without modern excesses like disco beats.[62] This aligns with historical patterns where successful acts, including the Beatles, borrowed liberally—evident in riffs like the Chuck Berry-inspired opening of "Come Together" (1969) or "Back in the U.S.S.R." (1968)—demonstrating that selective revival of causal mechanisms (tight songcraft, hook-driven melodies) is normative rather than disqualifying.[32] Purists maintained the imitation undermined authenticity, viewing The Knack's approach as opportunistic amid hype, yet empirical outcomes counter this: the album's rapid ascent to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and "My Sharona"'s six-week chart-topping run validated the formula's market efficacy, suggesting criticisms reflected aesthetic prejudice over functional success.[7][26]Legacy and Influence
Long-Term Cultural Impact
"My Sharona," the album's lead single, has endured in popular media, prominently featured in the 1994 film Reality Bites during a spontaneous dance sequence that captured the era's Gen X angst and nostalgia for 1970s rock simplicity.[63] The track also appeared in later productions such as the 2011 science-fiction film Super 8 and episodes of television series including The Carrie Diaries, demonstrating its versatility as a shorthand for youthful rebellion and high-energy escapism across decades.[64] Get the Knack served as a commercial bridge between late-1970s punk and New Wave experimentation and the polished rock of the 1980s, achieving No. 1 status on the Billboard 200 for five weeks and selling over four million copies in the U.S. alone, which underscored the audience demand for unadorned, hook-driven power pop amid rising arena rock dominance.[26] This peak performance illustrated the genre's potential to penetrate mainstream markets without reliance on progressive complexity or disco trends, influencing perceptions of rock's accessibility in subsequent years. The swift critical backlash against the band's perceived hype and Beatles-esque styling, peaking by late 1979, ironically sustained long-term interest by framing the album as a cultural flashpoint, fostering retrospective appreciation as a "problematic pop landmark" that challenged elitist dismissals of commercial pop craft.[26] Over 30 years later, its tight musicianship and million-selling debut status continue to affirm its role in validating power pop's structural rigor against transient fads, evidenced by enduring radio play and music journalism retrospectives.[65]Influence on Subsequent Artists
Kurt Cobain of Nirvana cited Get the Knack as one of his 50 favorite albums, highlighting its role in shaping the band's raw, hook-laden approach; he famously described Nirvana's sound as akin to "Black Sabbath playing The Knack."[66] This influence stemmed from Cobain's appreciation for the album's energetic, riff-centric power pop, which contrasted with grunge's heavier tendencies yet informed Nirvana's melodic undercurrents, as evidenced by Cobain playing the record for associates to underscore its punchy dynamics.[67] The album's template of concise, guitar-driven songs contributed to the power pop revival among 1990s and 2000s indie acts, where bands emulated its democratizing of accessible rock hooks over elaborate production.[68] Weezer, for instance, echoed Get the Knack's structure in their blend of distorted guitars and pop melodies, reflecting a lineage from late-1970s power pop's commercial peak.[69] While some critiques dismissed the Knack's style as superficial amid punk's ethos, its empirical success in distilling rock essentials—evident in over 6 million U.S. sales by 1980—inspired subsequent artists prioritizing empirical catchiness over thematic depth.[7] In the 2020s, retrospective analyses in music outlets have nodded to the album's foundational role in garage and indie revivals, linking its no-frills attitude to modern acts reviving riff-heavy, unpretentious rock, though direct citations remain sparse compared to its 1990s grunge crossover.[70] This enduring, if selective, lineage underscores Get the Knack's causal impact on prioritizing melodic immediacy, balanced against views of its formula as limiting for long-term innovation.Reissues and Modern Rediscovery
The album has seen multiple reissues in compact disc format since the 1990s, beginning with a standard CD edition released by Capitol Records in 1990.[71] Subsequent CD versions followed, including a 1995 Japanese pressing with an extensive booklet containing lyrics in English and Japanese, and a 2002 remastered edition that adhered closely to the original vinyl sound while adding bonus demo tracks of "My Sharona" and "That's What the Little Girls Do."[72] [73] Later digital remasters appeared in 2016 via the Music On CD label, featuring 24-bit processing.[74] Audiophile editions emerged in the 2010s, with Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab issuing a limited hybrid SACD in June 2017, numbered to 2,000 copies and mastered from the original analog tapes using their Gain 2 Ultra Analog system.[75] [76] The same year, Mobile Fidelity released a 180-gram LP edition, pressed at RTI and limited to 3,000 numbered copies, emphasizing enhanced clarity in harmonies, melodies, and percussion to highlight the recording's production merits.[77] [78] These formats catered to collectors seeking superior fidelity, underscoring the album's technical strengths amid its power pop style. In the 21st century, the album's availability on streaming platforms has facilitated broader rediscovery, with The Knack amassing over 2 million monthly listeners on Spotify as of recent data.[79] The 45th anniversary in 2024 prompted retrospectives that reevaluated its rapid commercial success—over 1 million copies sold in under two months originally—and affirmed its hooks and energy as enduring, countering prior critical dismissals by demonstrating sustained listener engagement through digital metrics and renewed commentary.[8] [80] This revival validates the work's intrinsic appeal, as evidenced by playlist inclusions and streaming plays, rather than fleeting trends.[81]Album Details
Track Listing
All tracks on Get the Knack were written by Doug Fieger and Berton Averre except where noted.[82][83]Side one
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Let Me Out" | Fieger, Averre | 2:20 |
| 2. | "Your Number or Your Name" | Fieger, Averre | 2:57 |
| 3. | "Oh Tara" | Fieger | 3:04 |
| 4. | "(She's So) Selfish" | Fieger, Averre | 4:30 |
| 5. | "Maybe Tonight" | Fieger, Averre | 4:00 |
| 6. | "Good Girls Don't" | Fieger, Averre | 3:07 |
Side two
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "My Sharona" | Fieger, Averre | 4:52 |
| 2. | "Heartbeat" | Fieger, Averre | 2:11 |
| 3. | "Siamese Twins (The Monkey and Me)" | Fieger, Averre | 3:25 |
| 4. | "That's What the Little Girls Do" | Fieger, Averre | 2:55 |
| 5. | "The Hard Way" | Fieger, Averre | 2:55 |
| 6. | "Rosalinda" | Fieger, Averre | 3:14 |