Getting Away with It
"Getting Away with It" is the debut single by the English alternative dance supergroup Electronic, consisting of Bernard Sumner of New Order and Johnny Marr, formerly of the Smiths, with guest contributions from Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe of the Pet Shop Boys. Released on 4 December 1989 by Factory Records, the song blends synth-pop and alternative rock elements, featuring Sumner's lead vocals alongside Tennant's distinctive backing, and explores themes of self-indulgent melancholy through ironic lyrics. It achieved commercial success, peaking at number 12 on the UK Singles Chart and later reaching number 38 on the US Billboard Hot 100, number 4 on the Alternative Airplay chart, and number 7 on the Dance Club Songs chart.[1][2][3] The formation of Electronic stemmed from Sumner and Marr's desire to collaborate outside their primary bands in the late 1980s, beginning as a side project that evolved into a full band. The track originated from a musical idea by Marr for the chorus, with lyrics developed by Sumner and Tennant during a session inspired by a night at Manchester's Haçienda nightclub. Notably, the song serves as a humorous parody of Morrissey's signature persona of perpetual misery, as Tennant explained in the reissue notes for Pet Shop Boys' album Behaviour: “‘Getting Away with It’ is looking at Morrissey’s persona of being miserable… It’s meant to be humorous.” Tennant not only co-wrote the lyrics but also performed vocals, while Lowe contributed additional elements, marking an early intersection of these influential 1980s acts.[3] Although initially issued as a standalone single, "Getting Away with It" was incorporated into Electronic's self-titled debut album upon its release in May 1991, helping to define the band's sound of expansive, guitar-driven electronic music. The song's enduring popularity is evidenced by over 26 million streams on Spotify as of 2025 and its influence on subsequent acts. It has been covered notably by the indie rock band James, who reinterpreted it as "Getting Away with It (All Messed Up)" on their 2001 album Pleased to Meet You, with their version reaching number 22 on the UK Singles Chart and incorporating a more chaotic, brass-infused arrangement. Additionally, Skin covered it in 2003 for their album Fleshwounds, with the album peaking at number 43 on the UK Albums Chart.[3][4]Background
Formation of Electronic
Bernard Sumner, co-founder of Joy Division and New Order, grew increasingly dissatisfied with the band's internal dynamics by the late 1980s, seeking greater creative independence outside the group's established structure.[5] Following Joy Division's dissolution after Ian Curtis's death in 1980, Sumner had navigated New Order's evolution into a synth-pop powerhouse, but the collaborative constraints and pre-conceived expectations left him yearning for a more personal outlet.[6] He began exploring solo projects, drawing on electronic influences like Kraftwerk and Giorgio Moroder, to escape the "group" mentality that dominated his prior work.[6] Meanwhile, Johnny Marr departed The Smiths in 1987 amid creative tensions, at age 24, shifting his focus toward electronic and dance music scenes.[5] Post-Smiths, Marr engaged in session work for artists like the Pretenders and Bryan Ferry while DJing in Manchester clubs, immersing himself in acid house and rave culture that aligned with his evolving interests.[6] Their paths had crossed briefly in 1983 when Sumner produced Quando Quango and enlisted Marr for guitar contributions on tracks like "Atom Rock," but mutual impressions were initially lukewarm—Sumner viewing Marr as aloof, and Marr seeing Sumner as brooding.[7] The pivotal reconnection occurred in 1988 during New Order's U.S. tour, where Marr joined Sumner in San Francisco for an impromptu discussion about potential collaboration, sparked by Sumner's solo material.[8] By 1989, they formalized their partnership at Marr's Clear studio in Manchester, starting with Sumner's rough tracks like "Gangster" and building early demos that blended guitar with electronic elements.[7] Opting to keep it as a side project to avoid overshadowing their main bands, they envisioned Electronic as a flexible duo for anonymous white-label releases on Factory Records, though it soon expanded into a full endeavor.[5] Early sessions benefited from guest input, notably Neil Tennant of Pet Shop Boys, who contributed to initial tracks without formal band membership, helping shape the project's pop sensibilities.[9] This collaboration marked Electronic's debut single as a key milestone in 1989.[7]Inspiration and Writing
Bernard Sumner crafted the verses for "Getting Away with It" as a satirical take on Morrissey's signature lyrical style from his time with The Smiths, poking fun at the frontman's often melancholic and self-pitying persona.[3] This approach drew from Sumner's observations of Morrissey's public image, aiming to highlight the irony in sustaining such a demeanor over years.[3] In contrast, Johnny Marr composed the chorus melody, introducing an upbeat and escapist vibe that directly opposed the verses' tone, creating a dynamic push-pull within the song's structure.[5] Marr developed this instrumental foundation, including chords and topline, during a collaborative session, which provided the track's optimistic core.[5] The chorus's lighthearted theme emphasized themes of unrequited affection and resilience, serving as a counterpoint to the parody in the verses.[2] Neil Tennant of the Pet Shop Boys significantly shaped the song's vocal delivery and infused it with thematic lightness, contributing to its humorous undertones through co-writing the lyrics and suggesting arrangement tweaks. Chris Lowe of the Pet Shop Boys provided the synth bass-line and additional suggestions on the arrangement.[2][3] Tennant described the track as a playful jab, noting, “‘Getting away with it’ is looking at Morrissey’s persona of being miserable and all the rest of it, and saying that he’s been getting away with it for years,” which aligned with the escapist and witty elements.[3] The song originated from initial demo versions recorded in 1989, where the basic track was laid down without orchestral flourishes; these elements were incorporated later to enhance the final release's lush, expansive feel.[3] This collaborative effort, blending Sumner's, Marr's, and Tennant's inputs in a condensed studio session, allowed for rapid evolution from demo to polished single.[7]Composition and Recording
Musical Elements
"Getting Away with It" is composed in the key of F major, providing a bright and accessible tonal foundation for its electronic pop framework.[10] The song maintains a tempo of approximately 126 beats per minute, contributing to its mid-tempo groove that balances introspective verses with anthemic choruses.[11] Its album version, clocking in at 5:16, adheres to a classic verse-chorus structure, with two verses leading into repeating choruses, a bridge, and an extended outro that fades on layered instrumentation.[12] Key musical elements highlight the collaborative synergy among contributors. Johnny Marr delivers a distinctive guitar solo in the bridge, featuring his signature jangly, finger-picked style that cuts through the synth-heavy arrangement.[13] Neil Tennant provides prominent backing vocals, harmonizing with Bernard Sumner's lead to add a Pet Shop Boys-esque melodic depth.[2] Chris Lowe contributes the song's driving bassline, which anchors the track with a pulsating synth bass that underscores its house influences.[2] Anne Dudley's orchestral string arrangements infuse the piece with a lush, symphonic texture, elevating the electronic pop sound into something more expansive and cinematic.[1] David Palmer's drum work, employing early digital programming techniques, establishes a house-influenced rhythm section that propels the track forward with crisp, repetitive beats suited to late-1980s dance floors.[14] This upbeat musical palette subtly contrasts the song's lyrical parody of guilt and evasion, enhancing its ironic tone through buoyant energy.[15]Production Details
The recording of "Getting Away with It" took place in 1989 at Johnny Marr's Clear studio in Macclesfield, Cheshire.[5][7] Bernard Sumner and Johnny Marr served as producers, with Neil Tennant also contributing to production.[1] The track began as an instrumental chorus idea by Marr, which Sumner and Marr developed collaboratively with Tennant and Lowe during a session at the studio; the backing track was completed in about 20 minutes before overdubbing orchestral elements to enhance its lush quality.[5] Strings were arranged and conducted by Anne Dudley, adding a sweeping, cinematic layer that complemented the song's synth-driven foundation.[1]Release
Single Formats
"Getting Away with It" was initially released as a single on December 4, 1989, in the United Kingdom by Factory Records, with a United States release following in March 1990 via Warner Bros. Records.[1] The single appeared in multiple physical formats, including 7-inch vinyl, 12-inch vinyl, CD, and cassette, each featuring variations in track lengths and additional content. It was also released internationally in regions such as Europe, Australia, and Canada in 1990, often mirroring UK formats with local catalog variations.[1] The standard 7-inch vinyl edition (Factory FAC 257/7) included the radio edit of the title track at 4:18 on the A-side, paired with an edit of the B-side instrumental "Lucky Bag," an Italo-house-influenced track.[16][1] The 12-inch vinyl format (Factory FAC 257) extended the main track to 7:35, while also incorporating "Lucky Bag" in full.[17] Cassette versions, such as the UK Factory FAC 257c and US Warner Bros. 9-19880-4, mirrored the 7-inch content, with some maxi-cassette editions (e.g., US Warner Bros. 9 21498-4) adding extended mixes.[1] CD singles, like the UK Factory FACD 257 and US Warner Bros. 9 21498-2, offered the radio edit alongside the extended version and "Lucky Bag."[1] Remix editions expanded the single's offerings, particularly for club play. The UK 12-inch remix single (Factory FAC 257R, released January 1990) featured the "Electromix" of the title track at approximately 7:00.[17] In the US, promotional 12-inch and CD formats included an instrumental version running 5:15, alongside the extended mix and a "Nude Mix."[1] Digital reissues began with inclusion on the 2006 compilation Get the Message: The Best of Electronic (EMI), featuring the vocal remix at 5:14.[18] In 2023, remastered versions of the single's core tracks became available through streaming platforms under Rhino Records, incorporating high-resolution audio updates (24-bit/44.1 kHz) from the expanded Get the Message reissue released that year.[19] Artwork featuring a minimalist design with the band's logo was consistent across these physical formats.[1]Artwork and Packaging
The cover art for Electronic's debut single "Getting Away with It" was designed by Peter Saville Associates, known for their minimalist aesthetic in Factory Records releases. The design features a simple layout with stock photography selected for the first time in Saville's work for the label, emphasizing clean lines and modern print visual language. Cover photography was sourced from The Image Bank by S. V & B Productions.[20][21] Packaging variations included the standard UK 7-inch vinyl sleeve (FAC 257/7), while the US release on Warner Bros. (9 21498-2) came as a CD EP with an alternate sleeve format adapted for the maxi-single edition, maintaining the core design but tailored for American distribution. Inner sleeves across formats contained notes crediting key collaborators, such as drums by David Palmer of ABC and string arrangements by Anne Dudley of The Art of Noise, underscoring the supergroup's collaborative ethos. These elements tied into the single's various formats, from 12-inch vinyl to cassette, ensuring consistent visual identity.[22][23][24] Promotional materials from 1989-1990, including 20” x 30” and 40” x 60” posters, highlighted the supergroup lineup of Bernard Sumner and Johnny Marr, with Neil Tennant's involvement noted to emphasize the project's prestige. Press kits distributed during this period similarly focused on the star-studded production, using adapted artwork to promote the single's release across UK and US markets.[22] The single's artwork later appeared in later compilations, notably the 1994 reissue of Electronic's self-titled debut album on Parlophone, where "Getting Away with It" was added as a bonus track, integrating the original sleeve design into the updated album packaging that drew from a 1991 promotional poster. This reissue featured a black cover variant, marking the first vinyl use of that design from the CD edition.[25][26]Promotion
Music Videos
The official music video for "Getting Away with It" was released in two distinct versions to support the single's promotion in different markets. The initial European version, directed by acclaimed filmmaker Chris Marker and produced by Michael Shamberg, premiered in 1989.[27][28] This abstract, dreamlike production featured band members Bernard Sumner and Johnny Marr in surreal studio sequences interspersed with ethereal imagery, including a caped female figure evoking Pre-Raphaelite aesthetics.[27][29] Neil Tennant of Pet Shop Boys made a brief cameo appearance, aligning with his vocal contribution to the track.[30] The video's conceptual focus on elusive, otherworldly visuals mirrored the song's lyrical themes of escapism, such as deliberately walking in the rain to avoid confronting emotions and forcing smiles to evade deeper troubles.[1] For the US market, an extended version was produced in 1990, directed by Judith Briant and Greg Copeland.[31] This iteration emphasized performance elements, with Sumner and Tennant alternating against vibrant colored backgrounds enhanced by superimposed artistic effects, including close-up pans of two women's faces.[31] Marr appeared briefly playing guitar, underscoring the collaborative supergroup dynamic. The video's stylized, escapist presentation echoed the lyrics' motif of "getting away with it" through denial and fleeting distractions.[31] Both versions have remained accessible through various formats. The 1990 US video is included on the bonus DVD accompanying the 2006 compilation Get the Message: The Best of Electronic, which collects the band's official promotional clips (excluding the 1989 European edit of this single). Official YouTube uploads, managed by the band's channel, feature HD upgrades of the videos, with the 1989 version remastered in 2021 and the 1990 version upgraded in 2009.[32][33] In 2025, a new audio remaster of the track was released, complementing the videos' ongoing digital availability.[34]Live Performances
Prior to their full live debut, Electronic promoted the single with a mimed performance on BBC's Top of the Pops on December 14, 1989.[35] Electronic's debut live performance occurred on August 5, 1990, at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, where the band supported Depeche Mode and featured Neil Tennant of Pet Shop Boys as a guest vocalist on "Getting Away with It."[36] The show marked the song's stage premiere, blending Sumner's electronic textures with Marr's guitar work in a high-profile outdoor setting.[37] The band's first United Kingdom appearance followed on January 9, 1991, at The Hacienda nightclub in Manchester, their spiritual home amid the Madchester scene, though specific setlist details from this intimate gig remain sparse.[38] Later that year, Electronic delivered major headline and support slots, including a performance at Wembley Arena on December 12, 1991, where Pet Shop Boys rejoined for an encore rendition of "Getting Away with It," extending Marr's guitar solo into an improvisational highlight that captivated the arena crowd. After a long hiatus following the band's initial run, Bernard Sumner made a surprise onstage appearance with Johnny Marr at the Jodrell Bank Observatory concert on July 7, 2013, for an impromptu Electronic reunion centered on "Getting Away with It," evoking the duo's early chemistry in a starlit, open-air setting.[39] Marr continued to revive the track in his solo outings, incorporating it into 2024 festival sets such as Crammerock in Stekene, Belgium, on September 7, where variations featured elongated instrumental breaks emphasizing his signature jangly riffs. In 2025, Marr performed "Getting Away with It" solo at the CBGB Festival in Brooklyn on September 27, adapting the track with dynamic setlist shifts that often spotlighted extended guitar solos. A notable highlight came on April 12, 2024, when Marr duetted with Neil Tennant at London's Eventim Apollo; official live audio of the collaboration was released on July 22, 2025, as part of the album Look Out Live!, capturing their vocal interplay and the song's enduring pop sheen.[40] Marr included the piece in subsequent European tour dates, such as L'Aéronef in Lille on October 21, the Gloria Theater in Cologne on October 26, Huxleys Neue Welt in Berlin on October 31, and Estragon Club in Bologna on November 7, each time varying the arrangement with improvisational flourishes on guitar.[41]Reception
Critical Reviews
Upon its release in December 1989, "Getting Away with It" garnered acclaim from UK music weeklies for its seamless blend of electronic pop, indie guitar, and orchestral elements, marking a bold supergroup collaboration between Bernard Sumner, Johnny Marr, and Neil Tennant. NME highlighted the track as one of the year's standout singles, praising its innovative fusion that bridged New Order's synth-driven sound with Marr's jangly guitar style and Tennant's sophisticated vocals.[42] Retrospective appraisals have solidified the song's status as a landmark in alternative electronic music. It ranked at number 34 on NME's list of the best singles of 1990, underscoring its enduring appeal amid the Madchester scene's rise.[43] Reviews of the 2025 vinyl reissues of Electronic's albums, including references to the track, emphasize its lasting influence on electronic rock hybrids, with critics noting how its lush arrangements prefigured genre-blending acts like The Chemical Brothers.[44] Critics frequently praised the vocal interplay between Sumner, Marr, and Tennant, which layered Sumner's earnest baritone with Tennant's wry harmonies to create a dynamic, conversational texture that elevated the song's bittersweet lyricism.[3] However, some reviewers pointed to the overly polished production—courtesy of Tennant and Chris Lowe's involvement—as occasionally smoothing out the raw edges of Marr's guitar work, resulting in a sound that felt more commercial than subversive.[45] A notable aspect of the song's reception centers on its lyrical nod to Morrissey, with Tennant co-writing lines that cheekily parody his former Smiths bandmate's melancholic persona. Music journalist Paul Lester described it as a "cheeky" takedown, capturing the irony of Morrissey's self-pitying charm through phrases like "I'm doing fine now, but sometimes wonder if I'll ever get away with it."[46] This subversive element added to the track's intrigue, blending tribute with gentle mockery in a way that resonated with fans of both artists' catalogs.Chart Performance and Sales
"Getting Away with It" entered the UK Singles Chart on 16 December 1989 and peaked at number 12 during the week ending 13 January 1990, spending a total of nine weeks in the Top 75.[47] It topped the UK Independent Singles Chart for one week on 6 January 1990. In the United States, the song reached number 38 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the issue dated 19 May 1990.[48] It performed stronger on dance and alternative charts, peaking at number 7 on the Dance Club Songs chart in the issue dated 7 April 1990 and number 4 on the Alternative Airplay chart.[49] The track achieved minor success in other territories, peaking at number 40 on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart.[50]| Chart (1990) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| UK Singles (OCC) | 12 |
| US Billboard Hot 100 | 38 |
| US Dance Club Songs (Billboard) | 7 |
| US Alternative Airplay (Billboard) | 4 |
| UK Indie Singles (NME) | 1 |
| Australia (ARIA) | 40 |