Excited (M People song)

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"Excited"
ExcitedM.jpg
Single by M People
from the album Northern Soul
B-side"Remixes"
Released28 September 1992
GenreHouse
Length3:46
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)M People
M People singles chronology
"Someday"
(1992)
"Excited"
(1992)
"How Can I Love You More (Mixes)"
(1993)
Music video
"Excited" on YouTube
Alternative cover
US 12" cover of "Excited".
US 12" cover of "Excited".

"Excited" is the fourth and final single to be lifted from M People's first album Northern Soul (1991). It was written by Mike Pickering and Paul Heard. The song peaked at number 29 on the UK Singles Chart.

Background[]

After three Top 40 hits, where each single had charted lower than the one before, M People went back into the studio to record some new tracks for a 1992 re-release of their debut album. Two tracks, "Excited" and "Man Smart", were chosen to replace the outgoing "Life" and "Platini". The band planned to release a revised track listing as well, and the track "Excited" was to be the opener, with its fresher, more fun sound. They were looking for a track that would take them from the underground to a more widespread and populist audience as the 1991 version of the album had only charted in the lower echelons of the chart.

Critical reception[]

Larry Flick from Billboard wrote that "few dance/pop albums are as consistently potent as this band's U.S. debut, "Elegant Slumming". On its third, top 40 offering, singer Heather Small bounces over a lively, Philly soul-influenced groove with a performance that is, by turns, giddy and hearty. Programmers with a savvy musical ear will feast on the cut's brassy horn flourishes and rollicking piano lines. Meanwhile, dancefloor enthusiasts will subscribe to the bass intensity and percolating breaks."[1] A reviewer from Lennox Herald described it as a "very open and spacious dance track with classy vocal."[2] Alan Jones from Music Week commented that M People are "operating at the more sophisticated end of the dance music spectrum."[3] John Kilgo from The Network Forty noted the song as "an uptempo jammer".[4]

Chart performance[]

When the single was released it sold in excess of 27,000 copies in its first week to enter the chart at 30, after their second Top of the Pops appearance the single sold slightly more (29,000 copies) to climb one place to its peak position of 29, equalling the peak position of the parent album's first single: "How Can I Love You More?" became their fourth consecutive Top 40 hit and second top thirty hit.

The song stayed in the Top 40 for three weeks, climbing from its entry position of 30 up to 29 and back down to 35 in its third week. For the final two weeks the single slid down to 53 and then, finally, to 74.

Remixes[]

Music video[]

There are two music videos for the single, one for the UK and one for the US.

The UK video was filmed in the summer of 1992, once the band had been in the studio to record Man Smart and Excited. And features Heather with her hair tied up, for the first time in two different poses. Primarily she wears a grey trouser suit over a black vest, the other scenes she sings from a red chaise longue, wearing a purple suede figure-hugging gown, surrounded by flowers, and her face is decorated with small white beads around her eyes. Throughout the video there are shots and silhouettes of Mike Pickering and Paul Heard all getting photographed together; Heather is seen performing separately.

In the US video, filmed in the summer of 1994, in between the 2nd and 3rd albums (Elegant Slumming and Bizarre Fruit). It features all members of the band, including Bizarre Fruit musicians: Andy Gangadeen on drums, backing vocalists Paul Johnson and Lynieve Austin and Percussionist Shovel, who at this point had become full member. Paul Heard plays keyboards and Mike Pickering on saxophone.

The band are all seen performing at an indoor LA Pool party from the side of the pool, meanwhile party revellers are dancing round the pool’s edge. Halfway through the song and leading towards the middle eight of “You and me, so Excited”, the revellers start to jump into the pool one by one and continue to have fun. The band plays on getting splashed by water but continue playing happily. The video through also has a gold hue throughout the pool -side video.

Artwork[]

The artwork of the CD single is simply 16 differently shaded red rectangles laid out in a 4 x 4 pattern with two of the boxes coloured a starkly bright yellow. The name of the single is in white font on a black banner with a smaller signature Red Rose (last seen on previous single Someday) to the top centre left.

The UK album artwork is slightly different with the same 16 differently shaded red rectangles laid out in a 4 x 4 pattern but two of the yellow boxes are in a different arrangement and the black title banner across the top.

The US artwork also has the same 16 differently shaded red rectangles laid out in a 4 x 4 pattern but two of the yellow boxes are in a different arrangement; one in the bottom right corner on the 12”/bottom centre right on the CD single) the other is mid-centre right above the centre banner and contains an image of the Elegant Slumming album cover sofa portrait featuring Mike, Paul and Shovel – as the single featured on the US version of that album.

Track listings[]

Charts[]

Chart (1992) Peak

Position

Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[5] 95
UK Singles (OCC)[6] 29
UK Dance Singles (Music Week)[7] 4

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ Flick, Larry (5 November 1994). "Single Reviews" (PDF). Billboard. Retrieved 31 January 2020.
  2. ^ "NEW SINGLES". Lennox Herald. 23 October 1992. page 26. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
  3. ^ Jones, Alan (3 October 1992). "Mainstream: Singles" (PDF). Music Week. p. 22. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  4. ^ Kilgo, John (28 October 1994). "Mainstream: Music Meeting" (PDF). The Network Forty. p. 20. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
  5. ^ "Eurochart Hot 100" (PDF). Music & Media. Vol. 9 no. 43. 24 October 1992. p. 23. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
  6. ^ "M People: Artist Chart History". Official Charts Company.
  7. ^ "Top 60 Dance Singles" (PDF). Music Week. 10 October 1992. p. 24. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
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