There's a turntable company in Glasgow called Linn Products. They make some of the most expensive record players in the world. In 1982 they started a record label, mostly as a way to demonstrate what their hardware could do. Their first signing was a local band called The Blue Nile. That band's second album, released seven years later, turned out to be one of the most meticulously crafted records of the 1980s — an album so sonically pristine that audiophile reviewers still use it as a diagnostic tool for testing speaker systems.
Hats came out on 9 October 1989. Seven tracks, thirty-eight minutes. Paul Buchanan on vocals and guitar, Robert Bell on bass and synths, Paul Joseph Moore on keyboards. Calum Malcolm engineering at Castlesound Studios in East Lothian, who some fans consider an honorary fourth member. The recording took five years. Most of those years produced nothing.
The gap between the debut, A Walk Across the Rooftops, and Hats wasn't just slow, it was paralysing. Virgin Records, who licensed the band's releases from Linn, actually initiated legal proceedings demanding new material. Buchanan later described the pressure as the worst possible circumstances for making anything. They scrapped roughly an album's worth of recordings. The band was eventually forced out of Castlesound to make room for another session.
The breakthrough came when they stopped trying. Back in Glasgow, Buchanan's writer's block lifted. Bell and Moore started laying ideas down on a portastudio at home. When they returned to the studio in 1988, they knew exactly what they wanted. Buchanan has claimed that half of Hats was recorded in about a week.
I don't know what to do with that information, honestly. Three years of nothing, a legal threat from the label, then a week.
The seven songs on Hats all seem to take place after dark. Six of them reference a time of day, and it's always late. "Over the Hillside" opens with the sun going down. "The Downtown Lights" is exactly what the title promises, an urban nocturne built from synth pads and longing. "Let's Go Out Tonight" is as direct as Buchanan ever gets, which is still not very direct. "From a Late Night Train" closes the album with a view through a window at something you can't quite reach.
Glasgow is everywhere in this record. Not in any flag-waving sense, but in the way Buchanan treats the city as emotional architecture. "Whatever happiness or sadness you're feeling," he once said, "you project it on to the streets and buildings that are around you." The album turns rain-wet streets and orange sodium lights into something close to sacred.
TNT-Audio, an audiophile review site, noted that Buchanan's voice should appear "between the loudspeakers, in good evidence and very, very natural." The minimal processing on his vocals makes them a direct test of playback quality. The electronic instruments are described as "smooth as silk and warm as velvet." This is pop music built with the tolerances of a precision instrument, which makes sense when your label's day job is manufacturing turntables.
Hats came out the same year as the Stone Roses' debut, Doolittle by Pixies, Disintegration by The Cure, and 3 Feet High and Rising by De La Soul. It peaked at number 12 on the UK Albums Chart, higher than the Stone Roses managed initially, then quietly receded. Melody Maker ranked it eighth that year. NME put it at eighteen. Q gave it five stars out of five. Rolling Stone gave it three, the only major outlier.
The reputation has done nothing but grow. Uncut gave it 10 out of 10 on reappraisal. Mojo, five stars. Pitchfork, 8.8. Matty Healy of The 1975 called it his favourite album of the 1980s and cited it as an influence. Annie Lennox and Rod Stewart both covered "The Downtown Lights." In 2024, Taylor Swift name-checked the song in "Guilty as Sin?" from The Tortured Poets Department, a reference traced back through Healy, who she'd briefly been dating. Buchanan's response, when asked, was that he was "touched."
There's a Buchanan quote I keep coming back to: "You never leave anything thinking it's completely done, you just stop." That's a strange thing for a perfectionist to say. But it might be the most honest description of how mastering works, the idea that finished is a decision, not a state. The original 1989 pressing was apparently so good that Dohmann Audio, a turntable manufacturer, says it "have not required any upgrades as it was minted perfectly first time." They stopped at exactly the right moment.
The Blue Nile's entire catalogue is four albums across twenty-two years. Buchanan once said their goal was to "stay out of the way of the music, to let people react to it in their own way." Most bands would consider that commercial suicide. Given how Hats sounds at two in the morning with the lights off, I'd say they knew exactly what they were doing.
Sources:
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Empty Streets, Empty Nights: The Blue Nile's Elusive Masterpiece Hats At 30 — Stereogum
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I Felt That: The Blue Nile and the Art of Holding Back — In Sheep's Clothing HiFi
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The Blue Nile "Hats" Review — TNT-Audio
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Hats Off, Swift — Plain or Pan