Go On...
Go On... is the third studio album by American pop rock band Mr. Mister, released in September 1987 by RCA Records.[1] Following the multi-platinum success of their 1985 album Welcome to the Real World, which included the number-one singles "Broken Wings" and "Kyrie", Go On... shifted toward more progressive and thematic songwriting, addressing social and political concerns through tracks like "Stand and Deliver" and "Healing Waters".[2] Despite featuring production by the band and engineer Kevin Killen, the album achieved only modest commercial performance, peaking at number 55 on the Billboard 200 chart.[2] Its lead single, "Something Real (Inside Me/Inside You)", reached number 29 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the band's last significant chart entry before their disbandment.[3] While critics noted its sophisticated arrangements and depth, Go On... failed to replicate prior hits amid changing musical tastes, contributing to the band's decline in popularity.[4][2]Background
Band history and prior albums
Mr. Mister formed in 1982 when vocalist and bassist Richard Page and keyboardist Steve George, formerly of the soft rock band Pages, recruited guitarist Steve Farris and drummer Pat Mastelotto to complete the lineup.[5][6] The group signed with RCA Records and released their debut album, I Wear the Face, on March 27, 1984, blending synth-pop and pop rock styles in an experimental vein that drew from jazz fusion influences via Page and George's prior session work.[7] The album peaked at number 170 on the Billboard 200, reflecting modest sales and limited radio airplay amid a competitive mid-1980s pop landscape dominated by more synth-heavy acts.[8] The band's fortunes shifted dramatically with their sophomore effort, Welcome to the Real World, released on November 27, 1985. This album topped the Billboard 200 chart for one week in March 1986 and achieved platinum certification in the United States, with sales exceeding 1.5 million copies domestically.[9] Lead singles "Broken Wings" and "Kyrie" both reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100, while "Is It Love" peaked at number eight, propelling the record to nearly two million units sold and establishing Mr. Mister's formula of melodic, keyboard-driven pop rock with introspective lyrics as a commercial mainstay.[10] Sustained by these hits, Mr. Mister undertook extensive international touring through 1986, performing over 200 shows that amplified their global profile but engendered creative fatigue and pressure to replicate the prior album's accessible, hit-oriented structure amid shifting market tastes toward harder-edged rock and emerging dance trends.[2]Conception and motivations for the album
Following the breakthrough success of their 1985 sophomore album Welcome to the Real World, which topped the Billboard 200 and yielded multi-platinum synth-pop singles "Broken Wings" and "Kyrie", Mr. Mister experienced creative fatigue with their established formula of escapist, keyboard-driven tracks.[11] The band, leveraging their newfound commercial leverage, opted for artistic evolution rather than replication on their third LP, Go On..., released September 8, 1987, by RCA Records.[2] Lead vocalist Richard Page articulated the core motivation as avoiding repetition, stating in a 1987 interview: "It was our desire not to make the same album twice... We wanted a change – something completely different."[12] This impulse extended to sonic experimentation, with Page noting the group "tried many new and different sounds and ideas" to infuse greater depth.[13] Keyboardist Steve George echoed this, describing Go On... as "definitely a change of direction for us... it’s tough to stick to a formula."[2] Thematically, the album marked a deliberate shift toward more introspective and topical content, addressing personal struggles, global issues like media saturation, and resilience amid adversity—contrasting the prior work's lighter fare. Page explained this pivot as a means to document real-world concerns, saying, "If in expressing that struggle I can help other people, then fine."[14] While RCA exerted pressure to chase hit singles akin to their predecessors, the band's post-Welcome autonomy enabled a hybrid pop-rock sensibility prioritizing substance over formulaic commercialism.[15] This resulted in a noticeably more serious tone, aligning with broader late-1980s currents favoring guitar-oriented rock amid waning synth-pop dominance.[16]Composition
Songwriting process
The songwriting for Go On... occurred primarily between 1986 and 1987, as the band reconvened after the commercial breakthrough of Welcome to the Real World to develop material with a more introspective focus on social, political, and spiritual themes, diverging from the prevailing materialism of the 1980s music scene.[17] This shift reflected the members' evolving perspectives amid the pressures of sudden fame, prioritizing lyrical substance over radio-friendly accessibility.[2] Musical foundations were laid by lead vocalist and bassist Richard Page and keyboardist Steve George, who handled primary composition, while lyricist John Lang supplied words for key tracks, continuing a collaborative dynamic honed in earlier works despite Lang's concurrent relocation to New York for graduate studies.[18] The resulting 10 songs adopted conventional pop-rock structures—verses building to choruses, often augmented by bridges for emotional and narrative escalation—yielding an average duration of 4 to 5 minutes per track to balance thematic density with listenability.[19] This iterative approach emphasized refining initial ideas into cohesive narratives, drawing causal links between personal tolls of celebrity and broader existential inquiries, though commercial expectations constrained some experimental impulses.[17]Musical style and influences
"Go On..." exemplifies a hybrid of pop rock and AOR, incorporating soft rock sensibilities with progressive pop elements that distinguish it from the band's earlier synth-heavy hits like those on Welcome to the Real World.[20][21] The album shifts toward a more organic sound, featuring prominent guitar work from Steve Farris, including solos that emphasize melodic phrasing over electronic textures, alongside fretless bass lines and gospel-style backing vocals.[22][21] This approach favors mid-tempo introspection and layered harmonies, eschewing dance-oriented beats prevalent in mid-1980s pop for a textured, serious tone reflective of the band's session musician roots in jazz-pop fusion.[2][23] Influences draw from the band's origins in sophisticated West Coast jazz-pop, evident in the album's eclectic instrumentation such as pan pipes and a focus on atmospheric production rather than formulaic hooks.[21] Producer Kevin Killen's work, informed by his collaborations with artists like Peter Gabriel, contributes to an eclecticism that prioritizes sonic depth over commercial immediacy, aligning with 1987 contemporaries emphasizing narrative-driven pop rock.[2] The result highlights departures from 1980s AOR norms, incorporating weightier thematic introspection akin to storytelling in rock traditions, though rooted in the group's evolution toward less radio-friendly, more contemplative structures.[2][24]Production
Recording sessions
Recording sessions for Go On... commenced in late 1986, after Mr. Mister had road-tested several tracks during extensive touring following their previous album. Six songs from the album received live performances, allowing the band to refine arrangements based on audience feedback before committing to studio versions.[18] The bulk of recording occurred in Los Angeles-area studios, including The Village Recorder in Santa Monica, California, spanning late 1986 through summer 1987. Sessions faced significant hurdles due to drummer Pat Mastelotto's severe back injury and sciatica, which developed during production; he tracked drums sectionally while kneeling or standing to manage pain, contributing to delays.[18] This injury also prompted the use of programmed drum elements, such as LinnDrum samples, on multiple tracks to compensate for physical limitations.[25] Amid these challenges, band dynamics involved deliberations over artistic direction, with members seeking a shift from the synth-heavy pop of prior work toward a less "machiny" sound emphasizing organic elements and deeper lyrical content. Mastelotto described the results as "less machiny and the lyrics are great," reflecting compromises that balanced commercial expectations with a push for authenticity while navigating uncertainties about the band's evolving identity.[18] These interpersonal and logistical factors causally influenced the album's more serious, introspective tone, honed through iterative studio work on tour-honed material.Technical aspects and challenges
Kevin Killen produced, engineered, and mixed Go On..., collaborating with band members to refine the album's sound.[1] Second engineer Jimmy Hoyson supported the sessions, which took place at The Village Recorder in Los Angeles.[26] This setup allowed for detailed overdubbing and layering typical of mid-1980s pop rock production, emphasizing synth integration with live instrumentation. Mastering occurred at Masterdisk in New York City under Bob Ludwig, whose techniques enhanced dynamic range and clarity, aligning with industry standards for AOR releases.[26] The process retained analog tape warmth from multitrack recordings despite digital mastering tools emerging by 1987, avoiding over-reliance on early digital effects to maintain instrumental separation and vocal prominence.[27] Challenges included drummer Pat Mastelotto's back injury, which disrupted recording flow and necessitated schedule adjustments and potential reworks.[18] These issues, combined with label pressures for a radio-friendly polish, led to perceptions of diluted edge in the final mix compared to initial demos, as guitarist Steve Farris later reflected on production compromises. Empirical audio analysis shows improved separation over the band's 1984 debut I Wear the Face, with reduced muddiness in midrange frequencies attributable to Killen's mixing precision.[11]Track listing and formats
Standard track listing
The standard edition of Go On..., released on vinyl and initial CD formats in 1987, features ten tracks divided across two sides, with a total runtime of approximately 45 minutes.[28] The album was produced by the band Mr. Mister alongside engineer Kevin Killen.[29] Songwriting credits primarily attribute music to Richard Page and Steve George, with lyrics by John Lang; tracks 6 and 10 additionally credit guitarist Steve Farris as co-writer.[30][31]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Stand and Deliver" | Page, George, Lang | 5:32 |
| 2. | "Healing Waters" | Page, George, Lang | 5:04 |
| 3. | "Dust" | Page, George, Lang | 6:34 |
| 4. | "Something Real (Inside Me/Inside You)" | Page, George, Lang | 4:21 |
| 5. | "The Tube" | Page, George, Lang | 5:22 |
| 6. | "Bare My Soul" | Page, George, Lang, Farris | 4:37 |
| 7. | "Control" | Page, George, Lang | 4:59 |
| 8. | "Watching the World" | Page, George, Lang | 4:55 |
| 9. | "The Border" | Page, George, Lang | 4:19 |
| 10. | "Run to Her" | Page, George, Lang, Farris | 3:34 |
Variant editions
The album Go On... was initially released by RCA Records in 1987 across vinyl LP, cassette, and compact disc formats, with the CD edition featuring a slightly extended track listing that incorporated "Bare My Soul" into the main sequence, unlike the LP and cassette versions which followed a more concise arrangement omitting its primary integration.[32] These format differences primarily affected sequencing and total runtime, with the CD offering enhanced accessibility through digital playback and minor fade-out variations in transitions not present on analog media.[1] International variants were limited, with European pressings such as those in the UK adhering closely to the U.S. standard without documented major edits or exclusive content, though some regional cassette releases included Dolby noise reduction for improved fidelity in portable playback.[1] Packaging across formats maintained consistent artwork emphasizing abstract, introspective motifs aligned with the album's thematic shift toward personal reflection, enclosed in standard jewel cases for CDs and gatefold sleeves for LPs where lyrics were printed.[33] No significant reissues occurred during the 1990s or 2000s, preserving the original editions as primary sources until 2015, when Rock Candy Records released a digitally remastered expanded CD edition that reverted to the vinyl track order, relegated "Bare My Soul" to bonus status, and added five previously unreleased tracks comprising B-sides and archival mixes to enhance collector accessibility.[32][34] This edition, limited in distribution, catered to niche markets without altering core mixes but improving audio quality via 24-bit remastering.[32]Personnel
Mr. Mister's core lineup for Go On... consisted of Richard Page on lead vocals and bass, Steve George on keyboards, soprano saxophone, and backing vocals, Steve Farris on guitars, and Pat Mastelotto on drums.[35] [16] Guest contributors included featured vocalist Phillip Perry, as well as background vocalists Bill Champlin, Carmen Twillie, Tamara Champlin, and the Stan Lee Revue.[35] The album was produced by the band itself alongside Kevin Killen, who also engineered and mixed the recordings, with additional engineering by Jimmy Hoyson.[35] Mastering was performed by Bob Ludwig, and production coordination involved Sherry Rettig and Susan Gilman.[35]Release and promotion
Marketing strategy
RCA Records pursued a marketing approach for Go On... that prioritized radio airplay on Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) and adult contemporary stations, aiming to engage the band's core demographic of listeners aged 25-44 who had responded to prior hits like "Broken Wings" and "Kyrie." This strategy diverged from the teen-oriented pop campaigns dominant in the mid-1980s, focusing instead on thematic depth and musical maturity to sustain interest among established fans rather than broadening to younger audiences.[20] Promotional efforts included print advertisements in music magazines that referenced the band's previous commercial successes while adopting a restrained tone aligned with the album's more introspective content, avoiding the sensationalism typical of contemporaneous pop releases. Planned touring was intended to support the rollout, but execution faltered amid logistical issues within the band and label.[36][18] These initiatives were significantly compromised by RCA's corporate instability, as the label underwent a major reshuffle following its 1986 acquisition by Bertelsmann, resulting in key staff departures and reduced commitment to artist promotion. The ensuing disarray at RCA limited the campaign's reach, contributing to inconsistent support during the album's September 8, 1987, release period. Additionally, the strategy struggled to adapt to MTV's emphasis on visually dynamic content, where Mr. Mister's straightforward video aesthetic for lead single "Something Real (Inside Me/Inside You)" failed to compete with more extravagant productions from visual pop acts.[37][38][2]Singles and music videos
"Something Real (Inside Me/Inside You)" served as the lead single from Go On..., released in 1987 on 7-inch and 12-inch vinyl formats, with "Bare My Soul" as the B-side on the standard 7-inch edition.[39] The track featured a radio edit version optimized for airplay, emphasizing the band's pop-rock arrangement with layered vocals and synthesizers.[40] Subsequent singles included "Healing Waters," issued in November 1987 primarily as a promotional 7-inch single for radio stations, backed by album tracks to support limited commercial push. "The Border" followed in the same month, available in cassette and vinyl formats targeted at adult contemporary outlets, reflecting the label's strategy to extract mid-tempo cuts for broader demographic appeal.[28] "Stand and Deliver" was released as the final single in 1988, on 7-inch vinyl with "Power Over Me" as the B-side, and gained incidental exposure through its inclusion in the film soundtrack for Stand and Deliver.[41][42] Music videos accompanied select singles, produced on modest budgets typical of mid-1980s follow-up albums after initial commercial peaks. The clip for "Something Real (Inside Me/Inside You)" depicted the band in performance-focused sequences with abstract lighting and minimal narrative, prioritizing instrumental close-ups.[43] "Healing Waters" featured a similar straightforward format, showcasing live-like band interplay against simple backdrops to highlight vocal harmonies.[44] The "Stand and Deliver" video followed suit, emphasizing group dynamics in a studio setting without elaborate production elements.[42] These visuals were distributed via promotional tapes to video outlets, aligning with the era's shift toward performance-oriented content for secondary rotation.Commercial performance
Chart positions
The album Go On... debuted on the US Billboard 200 at number 62 on September 26, 1987, before peaking at number 55 the following week.[45]| Chart (1987) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 55 |
| Single | Chart (1987) | Peak position |
|---|---|---|
| "Something Real (Inside Me/Inside You)" | US Billboard Hot 100 | 29 |
Sales figures and certifications
"Go On..." achieved gold certification in Canada from Music Canada on October 28, 1987, denoting shipments of 50,000 units.[48][9] No certifications were awarded by the RIAA in the United States, where gold requires 500,000 units shipped—a threshold unmet despite the prior album's platinum status. This outcome reflected broader 1987 market dynamics, including saturation from an influx of pop-rock releases amid shifting listener preferences post-mid-1980s synth-pop peak, contributing to the album's failure to replicate predecessor sales volumes exceeding one million domestically.[9]| Region | Certification | Units Certified | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Gold | 50,000 | Oct 28, 1987 |