"Good Stuff" was a transparent attempt to recapture the good vibes of "Love Shack." It didn't succeed, but it had its own charms, from the friendly beat to Fred Schneider's endearing vocal affectations.
It wasn't great, but it did have the distinction of being the best single pulled from Good Stuff.
Since it was released in 1992, when singles were released in seemingly endless permutations in both the U.S.
and the U.K., "Good Stuff" was available in all sorts of incarnations.
In the U.S., it was released as a seven-inch single, with an edit of the title track taking up the A-side and the B given over to "Bad Influence." This same lineup was released as a seven-inch and cassette single in the U.K.
In the U.S., it was also released as a 12-inch and CD-5 single featuring "Bad Influence" and three versions of "Good Stuff" -- the "12-inch remix," the "remix edit" and the "Schottische Mix." Minus "Bad Influence," this lineup was replicated for the U.K.
12-inch single, but the same lineup -- plus the original version of "Good Stuff" -- was released as a single in Europe.
But that wasn't the end of it by any means.
Not counting the American promotional single (a worthless issue for anyone but DJs, containing just the edit and original version of "Good Stuff"), "Good Stuff" was also released in a box set (!) in the U.K., featuring the edited single version of the title track, "Bad Influence" and "Return to Dreamland," plus three badges, a sticker and a postcard.
Certainly the kind of item just for collectors.
.