13
by space junk_Archive
For those concerned with such matters, this song is up there with the great pop records. A Little Respect is one of the definitive examples of a certain kind of pop - exclusively pop - composition style in which a simple, satisfying section is repeated with complimentary arrangements increasingly added every set number of bars.
I would say that Jeff Barry learned it from Phil Spector if Spector didn't tend to throw everything at you from the first second, but The Archies' 'Sugar Sugar' is a neat encapsulation of this kind of approach in its 1960's form. At the start of each new verse, a new (usually percussive, but not always) element is introduced. When done well and coupled with a non-shit melody and groove, it is endlessly charming and satisfying to listen to.
Lots of songs do it in a more simple way; a single tambourine or maraca track will be brought in behind verse two ('Denis Denis' is my favourite song that does this). A Little Respect belongs to a tradition which elevates this into an art form.
The technique is a default staple of the Dance/House/Techno industry (holding back layers and drum parts to give the song propulsion when they are "revealed"), but in this idiom it is often predictable and unimaginative - the sound of some lazy cunt smoking a joint while dicking about on Pro Tools in between bouts of Halo 2.
Used as it is in A Little Respect, it turns a humble, catchy song into something transcendentally magnificent. Vince Clark acheived this very same thing one other time that I know of in the Yazoo song 'Only You', another stone cold classic electro pop diamond.
I don't care much for Erasure in general, but this song is masterful, simple and wonderful.
Not crap.