Singles Going Steady

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Singles Going Steady album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: Buzzcocks (See All Albums by Buzzcocks)
  • Date Released: Jan 1, 1999

  • Genre: Alternative/Punk, Style: Alternative, Indie Rock, Commercial Alternative, Rock

  • Label: EMI

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 47:35

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Michelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

05.18.11
Eight A-sides and eight B-sides for serious rock lovers to live by
1999 | Label: EMI

Punk was singles music before it was anything, and the Buzzcocks were its avatars. Initially formed by singer Howard Devoto and guitarist Pete Shelley, who took over the singing duties when Devoto left early in 1977, the Buzzcocks cut the Spiral Scratch EP, the first British punk 7-inch, and put it out themselves in late 1976. With the lineup eventually coalescing to the classic quartet of Shelley, guitarist-singer (and sometimes songwriter) Steve Diggle, bassist Steve Garvey and drummer John Maher, then they signed to United Artists and released a fusillade of brilliant hits and (mostly) misses that defined, and helped to stretch, the form the band called home. Singles Going Steady was put together programmatically: eight consecutive A-sides for the first half, eight more B's for the second. Almost as if they'd planned it all along, the results sound like an album-qua-album; certainly it has become one that serious rock lovers live by.

Much of the pleasure here, beyond songs that lodge and stay in your head for days (the B-sides as much as the A: That little stop in "Noise Annoys" is one of the catchiest things on an album as melodic as any in rock), is hearing a band… read more »

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Singles Going Steady

unclejamo

Great record- not great sound... (time to remaster, isn't it?)

user avatar

so much great stuff

flatfive

Singles Going Steady is chock-a-block with great songs. The first 8 tracks (the A sides) may be slightly stronger, but they're all good. Out of the B sides my favs are 11, 12, 14, 16.

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They Say All Music Guide

If Never Mind the Bollocks and London Calling are held up as punk masterpieces, then there’s no question that Singles Going Steady belongs alongside them. In fact, the slew of astonishing seven-inches collected on Steady and their influence on future musicians – punk or otherwise — sometimes even betters more famous efforts. The title and artwork alone (the latter itself partially inspired by the Beatles’ Let it Be) have been parodied or referred to by Halo of Flies and Don Caballero, which titled its own singles comp Singles Breaking Up. As for the music, anybody who ever combined full-blast rock, catchy melodies and romantic and social anxieties owes something to what the classic quartet did here. The deservedly well-known masterpiece “Ever Fallen in Love” appears along with Love Bites’ “Just Lust,” but the remaining tracks originally appeared only as individual A and B-sides, making this collection all the more essential. The earlier numbers showcase a band bursting with energy and wicked humor – the tongue-in-cheek “Orgasm Addict,” details the adventures of a sex freak with a ridiculous fake orgasm vocal break to boot. However, the slightly more serious but no less frenetic singles are equally enthralling. “What Do I Get?” with its pained cry about lacking love, the deeply cynical “Everybody’s Happy Nowadays” and Diggle’s roaring “Harmony in My Head” are just three highlights on an album made of them. The final songs show the band incorporating their more adventuresome side into their singles, as with the slower, very Can-inspired “Why Can’t I Touch It?,” the semi-jokey stop-start thrash “Noise Annoys,” and the Murphy’s Law worries of “Something’s Gone Wrong Again.” – Ned Raggett

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