The Flying Lizards (album)

The Flying Lizards (album)
Studio album by The Flying Lizards
Released 1979
Recorded 1978 to 1979
Berry Street Studio and Brixton Academy
additional recordings in
NYC, Munich, Maidstone
and in transit
Genre New Wave, experimental rock, dub, minimal wave, post-punk
Label Virgin Records
Producer David Cunningham
The Flying Lizards chronology

The Flying Lizards
(1979)
Fourth Wall
(1981)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]
Smash Hits 7½/10[2]

The Flying Lizards is the 1979 self-titled debut album[3] by The Flying Lizards and was released on the Virgin Records label.[4]

Track listing

1979 Original record

  1. "Der Song von Mandelay" — (Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill) — 2:27 (UK releases are titled "Mandelay Song")
  2. "Her Story" — (Dave Solomon, David Cunningham, General-Strike, Vivien Goldman) — 4:37
  3. "TV" - (David Cunningham, Deborah Evans-Stickland, General-Strike) — 3:51
  4. "Russia" - (David Cunningham) — 6:11
  5. "Summertime Blues" - (Eddie Cochran, Jerry Capehart) — 3:09
  6. "Money (That's What I Want)" - (Berry Gordy, Janie Bradford) — 5:52
  7. "The Flood" - (David Cunningham) — 4:57
  8. "Trouble" - (David Cunningham) — 2:46
  9. "Events During Flood" - (David Cunningham) — 3:25
  10. "The Window" - (Vivien Goldman) — 4:52

General Strike are David Toop and Steve Beresford, who also made the album Danger In Paradise with David Cunningham in the years 1979-1982[5]

1995 Japanese reissue on CD

  1. "Mandelay Song" (from the musical comedy Happy End)
  2. "Her Story"
  3. "TV"
  4. "Russia"
  5. "Summertime Blues"
  6. "Money (That's What I Want)"
  7. "Flood"
  8. "Trouble"
  9. "Events During Flood"
  10. "Window"
  11. "All Guitars"
  12. "Tube"
  13. "Money (That's What I Want)" (single edit)

1995 Japanese reissue on Virgin of the group's debut album on CD for the first time ever and as a 20 bit remaster with three bonus tracks: "All Guitars", "Tube" and "Money" (single edit).[6] 13 tracks total, also featuring the cult hit / cover of the classic "Money".[7] Issued in a standard jewel case with a 20-page booklet mainly in Japanese.[8]

Personnel

References