Siouxsie & The Banshees – Complete Discography [1978-2009/MP3/320]
Following Tinderbox's success but still not working as well with John Valentine Carruthers as they could have, Siouxsie and the Banshees kept him on for one further album - a covers collection, much in the vein of band inspiration David Bowie's Pin-Ups. After building up an intense live reputation and a rabid fan base, Siouxsie and the Banshees almost had to debut with a stunner - which they did, 'Hong Kong Garden' taking care of things on the singles front and The Scream on the full-length. Matched with a downright creepy cover and a fair enough early producing effort from Steve Lillywhite. High quality Siouxsie And The Banshees music downloads from 7digital United Kingdom. Buy, preview and download over 30 million tracks in our store.
Siouxsie and the Banshees were a British rock band formed in 1976 by vocalist Siouxsie Sioux and bassist Steven Severin. Initially associated with the English punk rock scene, the band rapidly evolved to create 'a form of post-punk discord full of daring rhythmic and sonic experimentation'. The Times cited Siouxsie and the Banshees as 'one of the most audacious and uncompromising musical adventurers of the post-punk era.'
The group also became inspirational in the creation and development of the gothic rock genre, and their music also combined elements of pop and avant-garde. The Banshees disbanded in 1996, with Siouxsie and drummer Budgie continuing to record music as The Creatures, a second band they had formed in the early 1980s. In 2004, Siouxsie began a solo career.
Read More ~ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siouxsie_and_the_Banshees
SIOUXSIE & THE BANSHEES – OFFICIAL ALBUM & SINGLE RELEASES 1978-1996
1978. Hong Kong Garden 7″
1978. The Scream CD
1979. Playground Twist 7″
1979. Join Hands CD
1979. Mittageisen (Metal Postcard) 7″
1979. The Staircase (Mystery) 7″
1980. Happy House 7″
1980. Kaleidoscope CD
1980. Christine 7″
1980. Happy House 7″
1980. Israel 7″
1981. Spellbound 12″
1981. JuJu CD
1981. Arabia Knights 12″
1981. Once Upon A Time. The Singles CD
1982. Fireworks 12″
1982. A Kiss In The Dreamhouse CD
1982. Slowdive 12″
1982. Melt! 12″
1983. Nocturne CD
1983. Dear Prudence 12″
1984. Dazzle 12″
1984. Hyaena CD
1984. Swimming Horses 12″
1984. The Thorn EP
1985. Cities In Dust 12″
1986. Tinderbox CD
1986. Candyman 12″
1987. Song From The Edge Of The World 12″
1987. This Wheels On Fire 12″
1987. Through The Looking Glass CD
1987. The Passenger 12″
1988. Peek-A-Boo 12″
1988. Peepshow CD
1988. The Killing Jar 12″
1988. The Last Beat Of My Heart 12″
1991. Kiss Them For Me 12″
1991. Superstition CD
1991. Shadowtime 12″
1992. Twice Upon A Time. The Singles CD
1992. Face To Face 12″
1995. O Baby 12″
1995. The Rapture CD
1995. Stargazer 12″
2002. The Best Of. CD
2003. The Seven Year Itch. DVD
2004. Downside Up. The B Sides 4CD
2009. At The BBC 3CD
2009. At The BBC Bonus DVD
Siouxsie And The Banshees Join Hands Rar
THE CREATURES – OFFICIAL ALBUM & SINGLE RELEASES 1981-1996
1981. Wild Things By The Creatures 2×7″
1983. Feast CD
1983. Right Now 7″
1983. Miss The Girl 7″
1989. Standing There 12″
1989. Boomerang CD
1989. Fury Eyes (UK) 12″
1990. Fury Eyes (USA) EP
2006. Tivoli, Utrecht 06/03/90 CD
Directed by Nathan Greno, Byron Howard. With Mandy Moore, Zachary Levi, Alan Dale, Paul F. Rapunzel and Flynn Rider have their wedding, but Pascal.
THE GLOVE – OFFICIAL ALBUM RELEASES 1983
1983. Like An Animal 12″
1983. Blue Sunshine CD
1983. Punish Me With Kisses 7″
MISCELLANOUS
Interlude mCD 1994 with Morrissey
The Lighthouse with Hector Zazou
Threat Of Love with Marc Almond
New Skin taken of the 'Showgirls' O.S.T. 1995
DISCOGRAPHY NOTES;
* Although this is the complete discography, i avoided including the exact same songs
If you want to complete (for example) all 7 inches, copy/paste them from the compilations
I did this to keep the discography downloadable for slow users
* Siouxsie & The Banshees (back then Suzy & The Banshees) debuted on the 100 Club festival
in London on September 20, 1976. Unsigned for 2 years their first release was in 1978
* This discography stops in 1996 when the Banshees broke up. Except from the 2003 reunion
CD/DVD which is included, i didn't include Siouxsie Sioux & Creatures releases afterwards, as
she is supported by a total different line-up. Also the music parts off to another genre
* All releases after 1996 reflect back to the 1978-1996 period & are therefor included.
UPLOADERS NOTES;
* I will seed this as long as possible via my server. If you download (parts of) this, try to keep
it seeded as long as possible, so others can enjoy it too. Enjoy!
Kaleidoscope | |||
---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | |||
Released | 1 August 1980 | ||
Recorded | 1980 | ||
Studio | Coach (Monmouth), Surrey (Leatherhead), Polydor, (London) | ||
Genre | |||
Length | 40:44 | ||
Label | Polydor PVC(original US release) Geffen(1984 US reissue) | ||
Producer | Nigel Gray Siouxsie and the Banshees | ||
Siouxsie and the Banshees chronology | |||
| |||
Singles from Kaleidoscope | |||
|
Kaleidoscope is the third studio album by British rock band Siouxsie and the Banshees, released in 1980 by record label Polydor. With the departure of John McKay and Kenny Morris and their replacement by two new musicians, Budgie on drums and John McGeoch on guitars, the band changed their musical direction and offered an album containing a wide variety of colors. 'It was almost a different band', said Siouxsie.[1]
The album was preceded by the hit singles 'Happy House' and 'Christine'. In the UK, Kaleidoscope quickly became their most successful album to date, climbing to No. 5 in the albums chart.
Background and music[edit]
Following the departure of McKay and Morris, the band regrouped and redirected their sound for their third record. Departing from their previous work, the Banshees incorporated synthesizers and drum machines for the first time. They particularly experimented in electronic music on a couple of tracks: the electro-dance minimalism of 'Red Light' and the atmospheric, synth-based piece 'Lunar Camel'. The album also contained what could be described as a ballad, 'Desert Kisses'. Kaleidoscope marked the debut of guitarist John McGeoch and new drummer Budgie. Siouxsie saw it 'like a new lease of life'.[2] The songs had been demoed at Warner Chappell studios with only a bass and a synthesizer played by Siouxsie and Steven Severin. After the 1979 tour, Siouxsie had been ordered to take one month of rest by doctors; she used this time to learn to play guitar and compose music for the first time.
Release[edit]
Kaleidoscope was released on 1 August 1980 by record label Polydor. The album peaked at No. 5 in the UK Albums Chart, the highest position the band has achieved to date.[3] A 180 gram vinyl reissue of the album, remastered from the original ¼' tapes and cut at half-speed at Abbey Road Studios by Miles Showell, was released in December 2018.[4]
Critical reception[edit]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [5] |
Melody Maker | favourable[6] |
ZigZag | very favourable[7] |
Melody Maker's Paulo Hewitt gave the album qualified praise, summarising it as 'a kaleidoscope of sound and imagery, new forms, and content, flashing before our eyes'. Singling out the tracks 'Paradise Place' and 'Skin', Hewitt called them 'classic Banshee pieces. Hypnotic, relentless and incisive'.[6] Writing for ZigZag, Kris Needs hailed it as 'probably the most varied, diverse and adventurous offering yet to shimmer under the Banshees' banner', praising the band's new musical direction: 'If anything, it makes its two predecessors, seem a trifle one-dimensional now. Tracks veer from the lightest electronic backdrop pulse to surging soundwalls as mesmeric and powerful as anything they've done. But the subtlety evident in 'Happy House' and marvellous 'Christine' are the pointers to the main content of 'Kaleidoscope'. Needs noted that Siouxsie's voice 'gained new strength and depth, but she's also widened beyond singing and writing to include synth, piano and a spot of guitar'.[7]
The band's work on the singles 'Happy House' and 'Christine' was hailed shortly after their release by peers the Jam; singer-songwriter Paul Weller said that both songs used 'some unusual sounds', while drummer Rick Buckler qualified them as 'innovative'.[8]
In his retrospective review, David Cleary of AllMusic described Kaleidoscope as a 'strong record' with 'extraordinarily imaginative production values, featuring intricate synthesizer-flecked arrangements; psychedelic touches in 'Christine', spaceship synthesizer swoops in 'Tenant' and rhythmic camera clicks in 'Red Light' all enliven their respective songs'.[5] The 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide gave a 3 out 5 rating saying that with the change in personnel, Kaleidoscope refined 'the Banshees' attack, diversifying the sound without losing its swirling impact'.[9] In 2020, Rolling Stone included Kaleidoscope in the top 40 of their '80 Greatest albums of 1980' list, praising McGeoch as 'one of the Eighties' unsung guitar masters' and Siouxsie's 'vocal charisma'.[10]
Legacy[edit]
802.1 x ise. Kaleidoscope later influenced several critically acclaimed musicians including the Cure frontman Robert Smith, Johnny Marr of the Smiths, Radiohead and their guitarist Ed O'Brien, Bobby Gillespie of Primal Scream and the Weeknd.
Robert Smith cited the album when describing The Head on the Door to the press in 1985: 'It reminds me of the Kaleidoscope album, the idea of having lots of different sounding things, different colours'.[11] During a TV interview to promote The Head on the Door, Smith also included Kaleidoscope in a selection of his 'Top 5 all-time favorite albums.[12] In a February 2008 interview on BBC Radio 2, Johnny Marr discussed McGeoch's contribution to 'Happy House': 'What it is about 'Happy House' from a guitar playing point of view, is for a start it's modern. It's not got any of the sort of creaky old rock'n'roll aspects to it and it still sounded like the Banshees, almost more so. That's when I really began to become a fan of John McGeoch. It was an extra bonus for me that they'd got a great guitar player who had left another band and came in as a ringer and joined and not surprisingly, that to me was a very good scenario. I've always liked that. It was like getting George Best on the guitar'.[13] Radiohead stated in 2008 interviews that they had rehearsed 'Happy House' before going on tour. O'Brien added: 'We've been doing all this [..] stuff, [..] which is our youth, really. You know, when we were teenagers. They were very formative years, and those bands'.[14] Bobby Gillespie was inspired by both 'Happy House' and 'Christine' because they were pop songs with dark subject matter. He stated: 'That's the idea, yeah—to use the conventional way of constructing a pop song to communicate what I feel about the world and my take on relationships. It's a twist that makes it darker than it seems. When we were growing up, Siouxsie and the Banshees were doing this kind of stuff—they were getting in the charts with songs about mental hospitals! 'Happy House'? That was nearly number fucking 10 in the charts! 'Christine, the strawberry girl, Christine, banana split lady'—they were writing about a girl with schizophrenia! They were getting in pop magazines and on TV; they were getting played on daytime radio. It's fucking subversive! They were outsiders bringing outsider subjects to the mainstream'.[15] Santigold took inspiration from the song 'Red Light', explaining, 'My Superman' is an interpolation of a Siouxsie Sioux song, 'Red Light'.. I love her song..'[16] Santigold also later sampled another song from Kaleidoscope, 'Lunar Camel', on her Top Ranking remix album. Jeremy Jay covered the same song on his Airwalker EP.
Kaleidoscope was also praised by the singer of Suede, Brett Anderson.[17]Erasure's Andy Bell cited it as one of his favourites :'More commercial offering from Siouxsie was much more up my street - and consequently, as with all my favourite teen angst albums, I learnt all of the songs inside out and backwards'.[18] The Weeknd sampled and used the chorus of 'Happy House' on his track 'House of Balloons/Glass Table Girls' in 2011.[19]
Siouxsie And The Banshees Arabian Knights
Cultural references[edit]
In the 2006 film Notes on a Scandal, the sleeve of Kaleidoscope is shown in one of the scenes: the character played by Cate Blanchett tells her lover that it is her favorite album, calling it 'a masterpiece', and that listening to the album as a teenager made her feel 'invincible'.[20]
Track listing[edit]
Original release[edit]
All tracks written by Siouxsie and Steven Severin (lyrics by Siouxsie) except where noted
- Side one
- 'Happy House' - 3:53
- 'Tenant' - 3:43
- 'Trophy' (Sioux/Severin/John McGeoch) - 3:20
- 'Hybrid' - 5:33
- 'Clockface' - 1:55
- 'Lunar Camel' - 3:03
THE GLOVE – OFFICIAL ALBUM RELEASES 1983
1983. Like An Animal 12″
1983. Blue Sunshine CD
1983. Punish Me With Kisses 7″
MISCELLANOUS
Interlude mCD 1994 with Morrissey
The Lighthouse with Hector Zazou
Threat Of Love with Marc Almond
New Skin taken of the 'Showgirls' O.S.T. 1995
DISCOGRAPHY NOTES;
* Although this is the complete discography, i avoided including the exact same songs
If you want to complete (for example) all 7 inches, copy/paste them from the compilations
I did this to keep the discography downloadable for slow users
* Siouxsie & The Banshees (back then Suzy & The Banshees) debuted on the 100 Club festival
in London on September 20, 1976. Unsigned for 2 years their first release was in 1978
* This discography stops in 1996 when the Banshees broke up. Except from the 2003 reunion
CD/DVD which is included, i didn't include Siouxsie Sioux & Creatures releases afterwards, as
she is supported by a total different line-up. Also the music parts off to another genre
* All releases after 1996 reflect back to the 1978-1996 period & are therefor included.
UPLOADERS NOTES;
* I will seed this as long as possible via my server. If you download (parts of) this, try to keep
it seeded as long as possible, so others can enjoy it too. Enjoy!
Kaleidoscope | |||
---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | |||
Released | 1 August 1980 | ||
Recorded | 1980 | ||
Studio | Coach (Monmouth), Surrey (Leatherhead), Polydor, (London) | ||
Genre | |||
Length | 40:44 | ||
Label | Polydor PVC(original US release) Geffen(1984 US reissue) | ||
Producer | Nigel Gray Siouxsie and the Banshees | ||
Siouxsie and the Banshees chronology | |||
| |||
Singles from Kaleidoscope | |||
|
Kaleidoscope is the third studio album by British rock band Siouxsie and the Banshees, released in 1980 by record label Polydor. With the departure of John McKay and Kenny Morris and their replacement by two new musicians, Budgie on drums and John McGeoch on guitars, the band changed their musical direction and offered an album containing a wide variety of colors. 'It was almost a different band', said Siouxsie.[1]
The album was preceded by the hit singles 'Happy House' and 'Christine'. In the UK, Kaleidoscope quickly became their most successful album to date, climbing to No. 5 in the albums chart.
Background and music[edit]
Following the departure of McKay and Morris, the band regrouped and redirected their sound for their third record. Departing from their previous work, the Banshees incorporated synthesizers and drum machines for the first time. They particularly experimented in electronic music on a couple of tracks: the electro-dance minimalism of 'Red Light' and the atmospheric, synth-based piece 'Lunar Camel'. The album also contained what could be described as a ballad, 'Desert Kisses'. Kaleidoscope marked the debut of guitarist John McGeoch and new drummer Budgie. Siouxsie saw it 'like a new lease of life'.[2] The songs had been demoed at Warner Chappell studios with only a bass and a synthesizer played by Siouxsie and Steven Severin. After the 1979 tour, Siouxsie had been ordered to take one month of rest by doctors; she used this time to learn to play guitar and compose music for the first time.
Release[edit]
Kaleidoscope was released on 1 August 1980 by record label Polydor. The album peaked at No. 5 in the UK Albums Chart, the highest position the band has achieved to date.[3] A 180 gram vinyl reissue of the album, remastered from the original ¼' tapes and cut at half-speed at Abbey Road Studios by Miles Showell, was released in December 2018.[4]
Critical reception[edit]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [5] |
Melody Maker | favourable[6] |
ZigZag | very favourable[7] |
Melody Maker's Paulo Hewitt gave the album qualified praise, summarising it as 'a kaleidoscope of sound and imagery, new forms, and content, flashing before our eyes'. Singling out the tracks 'Paradise Place' and 'Skin', Hewitt called them 'classic Banshee pieces. Hypnotic, relentless and incisive'.[6] Writing for ZigZag, Kris Needs hailed it as 'probably the most varied, diverse and adventurous offering yet to shimmer under the Banshees' banner', praising the band's new musical direction: 'If anything, it makes its two predecessors, seem a trifle one-dimensional now. Tracks veer from the lightest electronic backdrop pulse to surging soundwalls as mesmeric and powerful as anything they've done. But the subtlety evident in 'Happy House' and marvellous 'Christine' are the pointers to the main content of 'Kaleidoscope'. Needs noted that Siouxsie's voice 'gained new strength and depth, but she's also widened beyond singing and writing to include synth, piano and a spot of guitar'.[7]
The band's work on the singles 'Happy House' and 'Christine' was hailed shortly after their release by peers the Jam; singer-songwriter Paul Weller said that both songs used 'some unusual sounds', while drummer Rick Buckler qualified them as 'innovative'.[8]
In his retrospective review, David Cleary of AllMusic described Kaleidoscope as a 'strong record' with 'extraordinarily imaginative production values, featuring intricate synthesizer-flecked arrangements; psychedelic touches in 'Christine', spaceship synthesizer swoops in 'Tenant' and rhythmic camera clicks in 'Red Light' all enliven their respective songs'.[5] The 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide gave a 3 out 5 rating saying that with the change in personnel, Kaleidoscope refined 'the Banshees' attack, diversifying the sound without losing its swirling impact'.[9] In 2020, Rolling Stone included Kaleidoscope in the top 40 of their '80 Greatest albums of 1980' list, praising McGeoch as 'one of the Eighties' unsung guitar masters' and Siouxsie's 'vocal charisma'.[10]
Legacy[edit]
802.1 x ise. Kaleidoscope later influenced several critically acclaimed musicians including the Cure frontman Robert Smith, Johnny Marr of the Smiths, Radiohead and their guitarist Ed O'Brien, Bobby Gillespie of Primal Scream and the Weeknd.
Robert Smith cited the album when describing The Head on the Door to the press in 1985: 'It reminds me of the Kaleidoscope album, the idea of having lots of different sounding things, different colours'.[11] During a TV interview to promote The Head on the Door, Smith also included Kaleidoscope in a selection of his 'Top 5 all-time favorite albums.[12] In a February 2008 interview on BBC Radio 2, Johnny Marr discussed McGeoch's contribution to 'Happy House': 'What it is about 'Happy House' from a guitar playing point of view, is for a start it's modern. It's not got any of the sort of creaky old rock'n'roll aspects to it and it still sounded like the Banshees, almost more so. That's when I really began to become a fan of John McGeoch. It was an extra bonus for me that they'd got a great guitar player who had left another band and came in as a ringer and joined and not surprisingly, that to me was a very good scenario. I've always liked that. It was like getting George Best on the guitar'.[13] Radiohead stated in 2008 interviews that they had rehearsed 'Happy House' before going on tour. O'Brien added: 'We've been doing all this [..] stuff, [..] which is our youth, really. You know, when we were teenagers. They were very formative years, and those bands'.[14] Bobby Gillespie was inspired by both 'Happy House' and 'Christine' because they were pop songs with dark subject matter. He stated: 'That's the idea, yeah—to use the conventional way of constructing a pop song to communicate what I feel about the world and my take on relationships. It's a twist that makes it darker than it seems. When we were growing up, Siouxsie and the Banshees were doing this kind of stuff—they were getting in the charts with songs about mental hospitals! 'Happy House'? That was nearly number fucking 10 in the charts! 'Christine, the strawberry girl, Christine, banana split lady'—they were writing about a girl with schizophrenia! They were getting in pop magazines and on TV; they were getting played on daytime radio. It's fucking subversive! They were outsiders bringing outsider subjects to the mainstream'.[15] Santigold took inspiration from the song 'Red Light', explaining, 'My Superman' is an interpolation of a Siouxsie Sioux song, 'Red Light'.. I love her song..'[16] Santigold also later sampled another song from Kaleidoscope, 'Lunar Camel', on her Top Ranking remix album. Jeremy Jay covered the same song on his Airwalker EP.
Kaleidoscope was also praised by the singer of Suede, Brett Anderson.[17]Erasure's Andy Bell cited it as one of his favourites :'More commercial offering from Siouxsie was much more up my street - and consequently, as with all my favourite teen angst albums, I learnt all of the songs inside out and backwards'.[18] The Weeknd sampled and used the chorus of 'Happy House' on his track 'House of Balloons/Glass Table Girls' in 2011.[19]
Siouxsie And The Banshees Arabian Knights
Cultural references[edit]
In the 2006 film Notes on a Scandal, the sleeve of Kaleidoscope is shown in one of the scenes: the character played by Cate Blanchett tells her lover that it is her favorite album, calling it 'a masterpiece', and that listening to the album as a teenager made her feel 'invincible'.[20]
Track listing[edit]
Original release[edit]
All tracks written by Siouxsie and Steven Severin (lyrics by Siouxsie) except where noted
- Side one
- 'Happy House' - 3:53
- 'Tenant' - 3:43
- 'Trophy' (Sioux/Severin/John McGeoch) - 3:20
- 'Hybrid' - 5:33
- 'Clockface' - 1:55
- 'Lunar Camel' - 3:03
- Side two
- 'Christine' (lyrics by Severin) - 3:01
- 'Desert Kisses' - 4:16
- 'Red Light' (lyrics by Severin) - 3:23
- 'Paradise Place' - 4:36
- 'Skin' - 3:50
2006 remastered reissue bonus tracks[edit]
Siouxsie And The Banshees Rutracker
- 'Christine' (demo version)
- 'Eve White/Eve Black' (demo version)
- 'Arabia (Lunar Camel)' (demo version)
- 'Sitting Room' (unreleased track)
- 'Paradise Place' (demo version)
- 'Desert Kisses' (demo version)
- 'Hybrid' (demo version)
- 'Happy House' (demo version)
- 'Israel' (7' A-Side)
Personnel[edit]
Siouxsie And The Banshees Tinderbox Rar
Siouxsie and the Banshees
- Siouxsie Sioux – vocals, acoustic (track 2) and electric guitar (track 10), synthesizer (track 6), finger cymbals (track 8), camera (track 9), melodica (track 11), production
- Steven Severin – bass guitar (tracks 1-8, 10-11), electric guitar (track 2), vocals, piano (track 5), synthesizer (track 9), electric sitar (track 2), production
- Budgie – drums (tracks 1-5, 7-11), harmonica (track 1), bass guitar (track 2), percussion, production
- John McGeoch – guitar (tracks 1, 3, 4, 7, 8), saxophone (track 4), Farfisaorgan (track 7), sitar (track 8), string synth (track 8), production
Additional personnel
- Steve Jones – lead guitar on 'Clockface', 'Paradise Place' and 'Skin'
- The Sirens (consisting of Severin, McGeoch, Budgie) - backing vocals on 'Desert Kisses'
Siouxsie And The Banshees Albums
Technical
- Nigel Gray – production
References[edit]
- ^Goddard, Simon. Mozipedia: The Encyclopaedia of Morrissey and the Smiths [Sioux, Siouxsie entry]. Ebury Press. p. 393.
- ^'The Banshees and other Creatures'. BBC2 television. 1 hour documentary. Broadcast September 1998
- ^'Siouxsie & the Banshees [uk charts]'. officialcharts.com. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
- ^'Kaleidoscope German 2018 black Vinyl Siouxsie and the Banshees'. Amazon.de. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
- ^ abCleary, David. 'Kaleidoscope – Siouxsie and the Banshees'. AllMusic. AllRovi. Retrieved 2 September 2012.
- ^ abHewitt, Paulo (26 July 1980). 'Siouxsie's Sketches'. Melody Maker. Retrieved 2 September 2012.(subscription required)
- ^ abNeeds, Kris (August 1980), 'Siouxsie and the Banshees 'Kaleidoscope' [album review]', zigZag (104)
- ^'Desert Islands Disc: The Jam List Their Current Favourite Records'. Flexipop (1). 1980. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
'Desert Islands Disc: The Jam List Their Current Favourite Records'. Flexipop (1). 1980. Retrieved 6 December 2014. - ^Coleman, Mark; Randall, Mac (2004). 'Siouxsie and the Banshees'. In Brackett, Nathan; with Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 740–41. ISBN978-0-7432-0169-8.
- ^'The 80 Greatest Albums of 1980 What came out of all this was, arguably, the greatest year for great albums ever'. Rolling Stone. 11 November 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
- ^Sutherland, Steve (17 August 1985). 'A Suitable Case for Treatment'. Melody Maker.
- ^'The Cure on 4C+' Robert Smith interview. Canal plus. 11 December 1985. Retrieved 7 June 2015 on youtube. Excerpt about Siouxsie and the Banshees from 15:24
- ^'Spellbound: The John McGeoch Story BBC 6 MUSIC'. YouTube. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ^'Radiohead Ed O'Brien interview on 94/9 radio, San Diego radio'. citizeninsane.eu. 11 January 2008. Archived from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
We've kind of been rehearsing Happy House - Siouxsie & the banshees.
Ryan Dombal (28 March 2008). 'Radiohead interview'. Pitchfork. Retrieved 16 May 2016.In rehearsals yesterday, Thom, Ed and I were running through a Siouxsie and the Banshees cover called 'Happy House'.
- ^Seymour, Corey (24 March 2016). 'Primal Scream's Bobbie Gillespie on His High-profiles Collaborations'. vogue.com. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
- ^Hresko, Lisa (28 April 2008). 'All That Glitters Is Santogold'. CMJ. Archived from the original on 2 May 2008. Retrieved 2 September 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
- ^'Some Current Fascinations'. brettanderson.co.uk. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
- ^'Erasure's Andy Bell Selects 13 Favourite Records'. quietus.com. 26 April 2011. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
- ^Neyland, Nick.'The Weeknd's House Of Balloons'Archived 2012-07-23 at the Wayback Machine. Pitchfork. 2011-03-28.
- ^Wilonsky, Robert (4 January 2007). 'Notes on a Scandal'. westword.com. Retrieved 5 March 2015.