Panic (single)

From Morrissey-solo Wiki
Revision as of 06:03, 15 September 2021 by Famous when dead (talk | contribs)
Cover art
THE SMITHS Single
Name Panic
Release July 1986
Total Length 2:20
Recorded May 1986
Writer/composer Morrissey/Marr
Producer John Porter
Art work Richard Bradford
'The Man In A Suitcase' series (1967)
Vinyl Etching A: I DREAMT ABOUT STEW LAST NIGHT
UK 7" & 12" (A-side only)
A: HANG THEM HIGH MONIKA
B: HANG THEM HIGH MONIKA
German 12"
Publisher Rough Trade Records (UK)
Sire Records (US)
Format(s) 7" Vinyl, 12" Vinyl, CD
Chart position UK #11
Single chronology
Bigmouth Strikes Again
Panic
Ask

Information

Lyrics

Live History

Play count (The Smiths concert): 38

The Smiths live history:

... further results

Play count (Morrissey concert): 81

Morrissey live history:

... further results

Appears On

Appears On Covers Compilation

Cover Versions

Mentioned In

Discogs Information

Credits

  • Bass Guitar - Andy Rourke
  • Drums - Mike Joyce
  • Engineer - Kenny Jones (3)
  • Guitar - Johnny Marr
  • Guitar [Second] - Craig Gannon
  • Lacquer Cut By - Tim Young
  • Layout - Caryn Gough
  • Model [Cover Star] - Richard Bradford (5)
  • Producer - John Porter
  • Sleeve, Voice - Morrissey
  • Songwriter [Songs Written By] - Johnny Marr
  • Songwriter [Songs Written By] - Morrissey

Notes

Some copies came with free 'Panic', 'Hang The DJ' and 'Smiths' sticker sheet.

Labels: © 1986 Warner Bros. Music Ltd. Made in England B-Side: Taken from the LP '[r=494927]'

Sleeve: Recorded at Livingston North London Mastered at CBS Music published by Warner Brothers Special thanks to Jo Slee Cover star: Richard Bradford © ITC Entertainment Ltd [Bradford was the star in a program called 'Man In A Suitcase']

Images

LmpwZw.jpeg LmpwZWc.jpeg LTQ1NDYuanBlZw.jpeg LTkyMTYuanBlZw.jpeg LTUwODUuanBlZw.jpeg

Discogs information (additional release)

Notes

Black vinyl. Also available as transparent blue vinyl under same catalogue number.

Recorded at Livingston, North London Mastered at CBS

Cover Star: Richard Bradford © ITC Entertainment Ltd

Etchings on vinyl: Side A+B: HANG THEM HIGH MONIKA

Made in Germany ℗&© 1986 BPM: 132

Images

OS5qcGVn.jpeg NC5qcGVn.jpeg Mi5qcGVn.jpeg Mi5qcGVn.jpeg

Discogs information (additional release)

Notes

Originally released July 1986 on 12".

Recorded at Livingston, North London. Mastered at CBS. Cover Star © ITC Entertainment Ltd.

℗ 1988 Rough Trade Records Ltd. © 1986 Warner Bros. Music Ltd.

Made in England

Images

LmpwZw.jpeg LmpwZWc.jpeg LmpwZWc.jpeg LTc3NjguanBlZw.jpeg

Wikipedia Information

300px-Panic_The_Smiths.jpg

"Panic" is a song by the English rock band the Smiths, released in 1986 and written by singer Morrissey and guitarist Johnny Marr. The first recording to feature new member Craig Gannon, "Panic" bemoans the state of contemporary pop music, exhorting listeners to "burn down the disco" and "hang the DJ" in retaliation. The song was released by Rough Trade as a single and reached No. 7 on the Irish Singles Chart and No. 11 in the UK Chart. Morrissey considered the song's appearance on daytime British radio a "tiny revolution" in its own way, as it aired amongst the very music it criticised. Morrissey later gave a controversial interview for Melody Maker about the song's subject matter, which spurred allegations of latent racism in the lyrics and allusions to the Disco Sucks campaign of the 1970s, which some commentators at the time accused of being motivated by racism. This was strongly denied by the Smiths, who also claimed that the interview had grossly misquoted Morrissey. The affair led to debate about the song's meaning, including more recent speculation that it is in fact about Jimmy Savile and his then-veiled sexual abuse. It was later included in the compilation albums The World Won't Listen and Louder Than Bombs (both 1987).