For those of us old enough to remember, 'Smash Hits' magazine (a UK publication) used to print lyrics to popular songs within their pages.
New Order songs (and Joy Division ones, occasionally) appeared in their pages a number of times.
Just as a bit of daftness, I thought I'd sling all the ones that I know of together in one handy-dandy collection.
I have most of these in my (frankly massive, but terribly cluttered) cuttings collection, but I've mainly sourced the scans from the internet.
Have a look at 'em. Or don't.
(To be honest, I'm not sure why I did it; so feel free to shake your head and ignore this post.)
But, if interested, get 'em here (link is valid for 2 weeks):
https://www.mediafire.co...27_%28Lyrics%29.pdf/fileJust out of interest, the only New Order singles up to 'Regret' that don't appear to have had lyrics printed for them are:
'Procession' / 'Everything's Gone Green', 'Murder', 'Sub-Culture' & 'Run'.
I'm assuming that Run must have been missed due to its obscurity.
Sub-Culture was possibly excluded due to the 'shaft' line (Smash Hits was a very 'kid friendly' music paper).
The lack of lyrics for 'Murder' probably precluded inclusion (I can't see them printing the '2001' / 'Caligula' dialogue).
Not sure about Procession / Everything's Gone Green. The paper was very much focussed on 'pop' / 'mainstream', with little emphasis on 'indie' stuff, so maybe that 'double a-side' single was a bit too obscure (although they did review it within the pages of one of their issues).
I'm also unsure whether or not lyrics to any of the singles after 'Regret' were ever printed. 'Ruined In A Day', 'World' and 'Spooky' seem prime candidates. So too, 'True Faith '94, '1963-95' and 'Blue Monday '95' (they printed lyrics for the 1988 version).
Obviously, if you know of any others, just let me know.
Edited by user 08 February 2019 13:08:11(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified