20 Great Joe Jackson Songs
Joe Jackson at the El Macombo, Toronto, May 21, 1979. image: Jean-Luc OurlinJoe Jackson kicked off his career from the mid-1970s as a classic outsider. He was not really a snotty punk, nor was he a classically chiseled rock god. Instead, he was gifted (or burdened) with formal training in musical theory and a keen ear for composition and intricate arrangements. Even so, Jackson found himself caught in the eddies of some prevalent musical movements when he started working live dates as a jobbing musician and bandmember, those being pub rock and its tagalong little brother London-based punk rock.
The punk scene in particular turned its nose up at any hints of musical sophistication. But as a songwriter, Joe Jackson was deft enough to capture its energy into some deceptively intricate music that still remained highly accessible. Even contending with comparisons to the Stiff Records sound put forward in the press when he started, Joe Jackson carved out his own niche anyway. Over the decades, that niche was sometimes fashionable and sometimes not. But throughout, he always explored interesting angles wherever he could find them. To illustrate this, and to celebrate him as a unique songwriter and musician, here are 20 great Joe Jackson songs that span years, genres, and musical eras.
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Is She Really Going Out with Him?
Derived from the spoken word intro to The Damnedâs âNew Roseâ, that phrase in turn borrowed from the Shangri-Laâsâ âLeader of the Packâ, Joe Jacksonâs first big hit on 1979âs Look Sharp! established his authorial voice as a man standing out of step with his surroundings. With Jacksonâs piano taking a supporting role, his band crank out a punkish attack married to a Sixties girl group feel as Jacksonâs sneer of a voice sings of pretty women walking with their attendant gorillas down his street.
Listen: Is She Really Going Out with Him?
Sunday Papers
Always a social critic, Joe Jackson aims his ire at the salacious British press on this cut also from Look Sharp! perhaps unaware of how well his insights would retain their relevancy. With chopping ska-inspired guitar chords and stalwart Graham Mabyâs exploratory and melodic basslines, the song telegraphs barbs of cutting sarcasm and irony at the shallowness of the press and those who believe every word they print, galvanizing a whole generationâs jaded attitude around mass media spectacle.
Listen: Sunday Papers
Iâm the Man
The title track of his second release of 1979, âIâm the Manâ continues where âSunday Papersâ left off, this time considering societyâs commoditization of everything you can name. Even the recordâs cover reflects sentiments of a world littered with cheap salesmen, and another example of Jacksonâs displaced perspectives of the world around him which would only deepen later on. Jacksonâs band rip this one to shreds, particularly drummer Dave Houghton who tests the durability of his kit with notable ferocity.
Listen: Iâm the Man
Friday
Joe Jacksonâs interest in jazz and pop intersections was in place even from the start of his recording career. Further evidence of this would emerge soon enough. Meanwhile, âFridayâ features a tight new wave power-trio arrangement that deftly streaks down corridors of sophisticated, jazzy changes. This cut is just as ready for the pub crowd, inviting happy cheers from the crowd in a song about how aspirations, energy, and senses of self can so easily evaporate in nine-to-five drudgery.
Listen: Friday
On Your Radio
A pop missive with compositional sophistication that still wears a skinny tie, Jacksonâs âOn Your Radioâ finds the narrator kicking off the dust of past hardships suffered by a boy who couldnât fit in, establishing his niche in a world where heâs finally found acceptance â on the radio. Jackson perfectly frames his voice on this cut â always distinct with a curled lip of disdain that you can practically hear. But the songâs joy outweighs its bitterness, even if the latter remains.
Listen: On Your Radio
Mad at You
Jackson contemplated a drift away from new waveâs stylistic template by 1980âs Beat Crazy. âMad at Youâ is a final statement from that first phase of his career, hitting all the marks of post-punk aggression with a distinct layer of self-awareness that may or may not include a parting shot to the new wave tag by being so on-the-nose. Graham Mabyâs bass provides a rhythmic anchor with a primitive, insistent riff as Jackson lays down one of his rawest vocal performances, ironic or not.
Listen: Mad at You
Steppinâ Out
A move to New York City inspired new approaches to composition and arrangements on 1982âs landmark Night & Day, even if themes of displacement and alienation remained. With his massive hit âSteppinâ Outâ, it might take time to detect them, full as it is with stately grand piano vistas and a scrappy little drum machine now fully embracing a nocturnal world of jazz and mythical mid-century excursions. It carried a sense of wistful nostalgia even when the song was new.
Listen: Steppinâ Out
Breaking Us in Two
Where âMad at Youâ approached relationship troubles like a man with a hammer perceiving every problem as a nail, âBreaking Us in Twoâ is the more lyrically nuanced tune. Its narrator finds himself in a world that he must confront from the inside, rather than in one heâs free to criticize from without. This shift is notable for Jackson the songwriter. Besides that, it positioned Joe Jacksonâs more dominant and superb piano as a refreshing sound on mainstream radio.
Listen: Breaking Us in Two
You Canât Get What You Want (Until You Know What You Want)
If Night & Day is the New York club date, then 1984âs Body & Soul is the Broadway show. A flagship song from that record, âYou Canât Get What You Want (Until You Know What You Want)â is an irony-free and brassy jazz-pop effusion. Even if Jacksonâs voice seems built to convey wryness in everything he sings, he carries off the joy and optimism anyway with a life-affirming and fulsome arrangement that beams with enthusiasm to help take him there.
Listen: You Canât Get What You Want (Until You Know What You Want)
Be My Number Two
A story of a man trying to get back on his feet with someone new after a heartbreak, âBe My Number Twoâ is either a defiantly optimistic love song, or a tale of a man doomed to repeat his mistakes. Either way, it finds Jackson reaching new levels of nuance and emotional resonance. His simple and melodic piano lines in a song about how complicated love can be provide stark contrast, completed by an epic saxophone reprise and finish.
Listen: Be My Number Two
Home Town
A native of Portsmouth, a seaside town in England, Jacksonâs song about it featured on 1986âs Big World is a classic wistful lyric contrasted with an ebullient guitar-bass-drums arrangement. By the end of the Nineties in solo piano versions, Jackson ditched the ironic distance in favour of a genuine reflection on his own complex yet still affectionate relationship to the place in which he grew up, bringing out its charms as one of Jacksonâs best compositions.
Listen: Home Town (Big World Version) | Home Town (live version)
Down to London
Joe Jackson takes another tack on the theme of home towns in âDown to Londonâ, a key track from 1989âs Blaze of Glory. A kitchen sink tale of hopefuls trying to see over their limited horizons, the setting is a city of revolutionary artistic movements and lost souls in equal measure. Spiced with a Sixties pop flavour, this cut is a celebration and a warning in a story thatâs as resonant now as it was since London was first founded.
Listen: Down to London
Me and You Against the World
Ending the 1980s in a titular blaze of glory, âMe and You Against the Worldâ is the sonic equivalent of youthful fervour to change the world through sheer force of will. Joe Jackson makes us feel that itâs all possible in this tune that features a towering arrangement of brass, call and response vocals, ringing guitars, and a singalong refrain. This cut sets the scene to preserving the belief that positive change is possible, applicable to any era.
Listen: Me and You Against the World
Stranger Than Fiction
A bona-fide pop single with Sixties references suitable for a new decade on 1991âs Laughter & Lust, âStranger Than Fictionâ is adorned by organ, big backing vocals, and a cornucopia of percussion. This is a grown-up tale about how the details of life in their ordinariness can reveal profundity when youâre in love. This song in Jacksonâs catalogue that distinguishes itself in its contentedness would be the last of its kind for a few years from here.
Listen: Stranger Than Fiction
Happyland
Removing himself from the pop landscape for a while in the Nineties, Joe Jackson continued in his neo-classical composition explorations. By 2000, heâd revisit his complicated relationship with New York City, a theme found on his Night & Day album. âHappylandâ is a gem from Night & Day II finding him blending all those elements with vivid imagery and wistfulness in equal measure. Its complex emotional profile matches its compositional sophistication in an affectionate song of memory, tragedy, and love.
Listen: Happyland
Still Alive
Returning to the pop-rock fold by 2004, Joe Jackson gathered his original band together that joined him on his first three records. The appropriately-titled Volume 4 has Joe Jackson and his guys combining their unique dynamics with deeper poise that takes them beyond a straightforward nostalgia trip. âStill Aliveâ leans into a shared love of Sixties British guitar pop with patented irony reflected in the songâs title, played as it is by his old army buddies in a new century.
Listen: Still Alive
A Place in the Rain
For 2008âs Rain, Jackson retains Graham Maby on bass and Dave Houghton on drums for a collection of pop songs arranged for a jazz trio who contrarily donât play jazz at all. Jacksonâs piano takes centre stage as he sings of taking deliberate measures to change oneâs place and times. Perhaps, like Night & Day before it, these themes are driven by a move to a new city â this time Berlin. âA Place in the Rainâ closes the record with a hopeful note, although decidedly under overcast skies.
Listen: A Place in the Rain
Rush Across the Road
Like a burst of sunshine on the Rain album, âRush Across the Roadâ can be easily viewed as an almost thirty-year follow-up to âIs She Really Going Out with Himâ. It has the narrator seeing the pretty woman once knew (this time without her gorilla) walking down his street as a chance to redeem past resentments and embrace affection instead. This song is one Jacksonâs most good-natured, reflective of how the years can banish old insecurities much easier than we ever thought they could.
Listen: Rush Across the Road
A Little Smile
Joe Jackson did the rounds for 2015âs Fast Forward, recording in various cities and with equally varied line-ups of musicians. âA Little Smileâ reflects Jacksonâs skill at balancing shadows and light in his arrangements. This is a song about being in conflict balanced with the belief that it only takes a little bit of love and respect to get out of it again. In this, he demonstrates another skill proven throughout â that optimism like this doesnât have to sound saccharine.
Listen: A Little Smile
Strange Land
âStrange Landâ from 2019âs Fool captures the feeling that oneâs time has passed without a map by which to proceed into the next era. This song updates a familiar Joe Jackson theme of being on the outside, marked by lyrical jazz textures and a stop-start arrangement that communicates hesitancy. It also reminds listeners that when uncertainty endures, an impulse to ask questions gives us the chance to gain new perspectives as old worlds pass to make way for new ones.
Listen: Strange Land
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Runners up and bubbling under:
- Itâs Different for Girls
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Joe Jackson didnât exactly fit into any one scene or genre as he developed his career. He still refuses to stay in one artistic province for very long. Yet at the same time, he is an artist with a unique and instantly recognizable artistic voice, with a thread running through everything heâs done that make him one of the most singular artists of the modern rock era.
Joe Jackson is an active and artistically curious artist today. You can catch up to him at joejackson.com for news and new releases.
Also, check out this link for a whole TEN MORE great Joe Jackson songs also written by your humble Delete Bin writer and Editor-in-Chief.
Enjoy!
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