New Thing from London Town
"New Thing from London Town" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Sharpe & Numan | ||||
Released | October 1986 | |||
Studio | Rock City Studios (Shepperton) | |||
Genre | Synth-pop | |||
Label | Numa | |||
Songwriter(s) |
| |||
Producer(s) | Bill Sharpe | |||
Sharpe & Numan singles chronology | ||||
|
"New Thing from London Town" is a song by the English synth-pop duo Sharpe & Numan, released as a single in October 1986. Composed by Bill Sharpe with lyrics by Roger Odell and featuring lead vocals by Gary Numan, it spent three weeks on the UK Singles Chart, peaking at number 52.[1]
Musically similar to the duo's previous hit single "Change Your Mind", Sharpe and Numan recorded the song at Rock City Studios, Shepperton with synthesizers and drum programming by Sharpe and vocals by Numan. The track was completed to its finished form in five days.[2] A version of the song with new lyrics by Numan was included on his eighth solo studio album Strange Charm (1986), released shortly after the single.[3]
Critical reception
Upon its release, "New Thing From London Town" was "Single of the Forthnight" in Smash Hits, reviewer Ian Cranna writing: "The pair that brought you "Change Your Mind" now serve up brutally relentless crashing drums, sweeping but briskly melodic piano and synthesizer lines laced with chopped-up laughter and old Gazza's distinctive, erm, "singing" - quite apt here - to make a startingly efficient, almost dehumanised record."[4]
Track listing
7" single
- "New Thing from London Town" – 3.30
- "Time to Die" – 3.00
12" single
- "New Thing from London Town" – 8.00
- "Time to Die" – 4.10
References
External links
- "New Thing from London Town" at Discogs (list of releases)
- v
- t
- e
- Tubeway Army
- Replicas
- The Plan
- The Pleasure Principle
- Telekon
- Dance
- I, Assassin
- Warriors
- Berserker
- The Fury
- Strange Charm
- Metal Rhythm
- Outland
- Machine + Soul
- Sacrifice
- Exile
- Pure
- Jagged
- Dead Son Rising
- Splinter (Songs from a Broken Mind)
- Savage (Songs from a Broken World)
- Intruder
- Automatic (with Bill Sharpe)
- Human (with Michael R. Smith)
- Nicholson / Numan 1987–1994 (with Hugh Nicholson)
- Living Ornaments '79
- Living Ornaments '80
- Living Ornaments '79 and '80
- White Noise
- Ghost
- The Skin Mechanic
- Dream Corrosion
- Dark Light
- Living Ornaments '81
- The Radio One Recordings
- Scarred
- Live at Shepherds Bush Empire
- Hope Bleeds
- Fragment 1/04
- Fragment 2/04
- The Complete John Peel Sessions
- Jagged Live
- Engineers
- Telekon – Live
- Replicas Live
- The Pleasure Principle Live
- Big Noise Transmission
- "That's Too Bad"
- "Bombers"
- "Down in the Park"
- "Are "Friends" Electric?"
- "Cars"
- "Complex"
- "We Are Glass"
- "I Die: You Die"
- "This Wreckage"
- "Stormtrooper in Drag"
- "She's Got Claws"
- "Love Needs No Disguise"
- "Music for Chameleons"
- "We Take Mystery (To Bed)"
- "Warriors"
- "Change Your Mind"
- "New Thing from London Town"
- "This Is Love"
- "I Can't Stop"
- "Like a Refugee (I Won't Cry)"
- "Crazier"
- The Radial Pair: Video Soundtrack
- New Man Numan
- Exhibition
- Isolate
- The Best of Gary Numan 1978–1983
- The Premier Hits
- Techno Army Featuring Gary Numan
- Random
- Random (02)
- The Mix
- New Dreams for Old
- Exposure
- Hybrid
- Resonator (Pioneer of Sound)
- Jagged Edge
- Dead Moon Falling
- Discography
- Sharpe & Numan
- Paul Gardiner
- Dramatis
- Tubeway
- Radio Heart
- "Freak Like Me"
- "Where's Your Head At"
This 1980s single–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e