Respectable Street | |
Cover: | Respectable Street.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | XTC |
Album: | Black Sea |
Recorded: | 1980 |
Studio: | Townhouse Studios, London |
Genre: | |
Length: |
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Label: | Virgin |
Producer: | Steve Lillywhite |
Prev Title: | Sgt. Rock (Is Going to Help Me) |
Prev Year: | 1980 |
Next Title: | Senses Working Overtime |
Next Year: | 1982 |
"Respectable Street" is a song written by Andy Partridge of XTC, released as the opening track on their 1980 album Black Sea. According to Partridge, the song is about English streets and "the hypocrisy of living in a so-called respectable neighborhood. It's all talk behind twitching curtains. It's all Alan Bennett land." In another interview Partridge reveals that Respectable Street was based on a real street Bowood Road in Swindon, which was diagonally opposite the flat above a shop on Kingshill Road where he was living at the time he wrote it.[3] Discounting the Canada-only "Love at First Sight", it was the fourth and last single issued from the LP. BBC Radio banned the song because of its references to abortion and a "Sony Entertainment Centre".[4]
Music journalist John Harris highlighted "Respectable Street" as "one of the most evocative items in Partridge's oeuvre."[5] In 1996, critic Jack Rabid praised its "sardonic crack" and wrote "am I the only one who's noticed that super-fans Blur have ripped this song off three times already???!!!!"[6]
In 1982, it was the only song XTC performed at a televised gig simulcast in Paris, which became one of the last live performances of their career. Partridge experienced a panic attack mid-performance and walked off the stage.[7]
It is the first XTC recording in which Dave Gregory contributed his keyboard playing.[8]
XTC
. Farmer. Neville. XTC: Song Stories: The Exclusive Authorized Story Behind the Music. 1998. Helter Skelter Publishing. London. 190092403X. 94, 134. Neville Farmer.