I actually had this -- one of the very first singles on the then fledgling Brit label Beggars Banquet -- when it first came out, and I used to play it constantly to taunt some of my friends who weren't quite getting with the late 70s punk/New Wave program. Sadly, I lost it, along with most of the rest of my seven inch vinyl collection, during the Great Girlfriend Crisis of 1980.
As for Johnny G., he was an ex-pub rocker who, like Nick Lowe (although obviously on a less exalted level) had some brief rock biz success in the early 70s and then managed to find himself find himself a niche in the briefly eclectic wake of the Sex Pistols.
Anyway, it's way catchy and pretty funny still, I think; certainly, it's one of the more unjustly forgotten artifacts of its era.
I should also add that I have long since forgiven Mr. G for having mispelled the word "hippie's." 😎
That's fun, but I'm sure you lost more important 7" singles in the 1980 debacle.
ReplyDeleteWere your 45s sorted like John Cusack in High Fidelity? Autobiographical? His ultimate, most complex method, where he sorted records in the order he acquired them, linking each album to a specific time or person in his life.
ReplyDeleteI don't remember, alas. But of course I don't remember a lot of things at my age. 😎
Delete"it smells like incense.. .". lol
ReplyDeleteI love that line.😎
DeleteThis has nothing to do with the subject today, but I know there are Replacement fans here, so: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0k-bSqzgSk
ReplyDeleteC in California