There Goes a Tenner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
“There Goes a Tenner” | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Kate Bush from the album The Dreaming |
|||||||||||
B-side | "Ne t'enfuis pas" | ||||||||||
Released | 2 November 1982 | ||||||||||
Format | 7" single | ||||||||||
Recorded | 1982 | ||||||||||
Genre | New Wave, Rock | ||||||||||
Length | 3:26 | ||||||||||
Label | EMI | ||||||||||
Writer(s) | Kate Bush | ||||||||||
Producer | Kate Bush | ||||||||||
Kate Bush singles chronology | |||||||||||
|
"There Goes a Tenner" was the third single to be released from The Dreaming by Kate Bush. It was only issued in the UK, and was the final single from the album. It was released 2 November 1982.
"There Goes a Tenner" is often considered as the "lost single", because when it was released it gained no interest from any radio stations or music television programmes. The music video was only played once on UK television.[citation needed] Due to the lack of media interest the single did not sell well and became the only song by Bush not to chart in the UK. It was originally to be Bush's first 12-inch single, but was eventually cancelled.
The track's subject is a (bungled) bank robbery, as told by a very fearful and paranoid perpetrator. Bush sang it in what has been described as "a curious accent that seemed to veer from an aristocrat to an East End villain".[1]
The B-side, "Ne t'enfuis pas" is spelled wrongly on the actual single as "Ne T'en Fui Pas", which does not mean anything in French.
[edit] References
- ^ Lorne Murdoch (1985). "Kate Bush". Record Collector (December 1985, No. 76): p.22