Friday, October 29, 1982

Pat Benatar’s Get Nervous released

First posted 9/20/2020.

Get Nervous

Pat Benatar


Released: October 29, 1982


Peak: 4 US, 73 UK, 16 CN, 15 AU


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, -- UK, 1.2 world (includes US and UK)


Genre: classic rock


Tracks:

Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Shadows of the Night (D.L. Byron) [4:20] (9/21/82, 13 US, 3 AR, 50 UK, 12 CN, 32 AU)
  2. Looking for a Stranger (Franne Golde, Peter McIan) [3:24] (4/23/83, 39 US, 4 AR)
  3. Anxiety (Get Nervous) (Neil Giraldo, Billy Steinberg) [3:42]
  4. Fight It Out (Giraldo, Steinberg) [3:56]
  5. The Victim (Giraldo, Steinberg) [4:43]
  6. Little Too Late (Alex Call) [4:06] (1/19/83, 20 US, 38 AR)
  7. I’ll Do It (Giraldo, Benatar) [4:09]
  8. I Want Out (Giraldo, Steinberg) [3:43]
  9. Tell It to Her (Roger Bruno, Ellen Schwartz) [3:44]
  10. Silent Partner (Giraldo, Myron Grombacher) [3:45]


Total Running Time: 39:07

Rating:

3.966 out of 5.00 (average of 5 ratings)


Awards:

About the Album:

Benatar’s fourth album was her third to reach the top 5 of the Billboard album chart. Like its predecessors, it was supported by two top-40 singles and sold a million copies. Something was different, however.

Benatar was tired of being stereotyped as a hard rocker, often saying interviews that she “preferred new wave's melodic keyboards over hard rock and metal's crunching guitars.” AMG It didn’t mean she abandoned rock. Indeed, “songs like like Anxiety (Get Nervous), The Victim, and Silent Partners are intense, forceful jewels that rock aggressively.” AMG

However, Get Nervous was overall “the most melodic album she’d done since In the Heat of the Night.” AMG “The album’s pop elements and strong emphasis on melody leave no doubt that the last thing on Benatar’s mind was recording another Crimes of Passion.” AMG

To that end, lead single Shadows of the Night showcased a more pop-oriented, new wave sound than previous guitar-driven songs. The song was written by D.L. Byron for the 1980 film Times Square, but rejected for lack of commercialism. Helen Schneider released it as a single in 1981 and Rachel Sweet recorded it that same year for her …And Then He Kissed Me album. Benatar’s version was a top 20 hit which won her a third Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance.

The album’s second single, Little Too Late, was also a top-20 hit with a more new-wave feel. The song was penned by Alex Call, who’d previously co-written Tommy Tutone’s 1981 top-5 hit “867-5309/Jenny.” He also wrote the 1988 song “Perfect World,” a #3 song for Huey Lewis & the News.

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