"Punch and Judy" | ||||||||
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Single by Marillion | ||||||||
from the album Fugazi | ||||||||
Released | 30 January 1984 (UK) | |||||||
Format | 7" vinyl record, 12" vinyl record | |||||||
Genre | Progressive rock | |||||||
Length | 3:18 | |||||||
Label | EMI | |||||||
Producer | Nick Tauber | |||||||
Marillion singles chronology | ||||||||
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"Punch and Judy" is the first single from Marillion's second studio album Fugazi. The lyrics of the song are about a marriage gone bad.
The single reached no. 29 on the UK singles charts in February 1984.[1] This was the only single during the band's EMI years that no music video was shot for.
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The B-side on all formats contained new versions of "Market Square Heroes" (originally the A-side of the band's debut single) and "Three Boats Down from the Candy" (the B-side of "Market Square Heroes"). Both versions were re-recorded with drummer John Marter (erroneously credited as 'John Martyr'), the only tracks Marillion ever recorded with him.
The only difference between the 7" and 12" versions is found in "Market Square Heroes", which is 49 seconds longer on the 12" version.
These re-recorded versions would also appear on the B'Sides Themselves compilation in 1988; "Market Square Hereos" is also on the 1997 compilation The Best of Both Worlds.
The originally planned B-side, "Emerald Lies", ended up instead on the Fugazi album.
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