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Videos Album: There Goes a Tenner1982

"There Goes a Tenner"
Single by Kate Bush
from the album The Dreaming
B-side"Ne t`enfuis pas"
Released1 November 1982
Recorded1982
Genre
Length3:26
LabelEMI
Songwriter(s)Kate Bush
Producer(s)Kate Bush
Kate Bush singles chronology
"The Dreaming"
(1982)
"There Goes a Tenner"
(1982)
"Suspended in Gaffa"
(1982)
Music video
"There Goes a Tenner" on YouTube

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There Goes a Tenner
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Singles chronology

There Goes a Tenner

Kate Bush

1982 Single
  • Released: 1 November 1982 · Fecha Grabación: 1982 -
    Label: EMI · · Productor: Kate Bush

    "There Goes a Tenner" is a song by the English singer Kate Bush. It was released as a single on 1 November 1982, the third to be taken from her album The Dreaming. It was released as a 7-inch single in the UK and Ireland only. The single peaked at No. 93 and spent two weeks in the UK singles chart.[3]

    Background

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    Review

    "There Goes a Tenner" is a song by the English singer Kate Bush. It was released as a single on 1 November 1982, the third to be taken from her album The Dreaming. It was released as a 7-inch single in the UK and Ireland only. The single peaked at No. 93 and spent two weeks in the UK singles chart.[3]

    Background

    Leer más

    "There Goes a Tenner" attracted no interest from radio stations and television stations. The single did not sell well and became Bush`s first single to miss the top 75 in the UK. It was originally intended to be Bush`s first twelve-inch single, but its disappointing sales performance caused plans for the 12-inch to be cancelled.

    The song`s lyrics concern a bungled bank robbery as told by a fearful and paranoid perpetrator. As Bush stated;

    "It`s about amateur robbers who have only done small things, and this is quite a big robbery that they`ve been planning for months, and when it actually starts happening, they start freaking out. They`re really scared, and they`re so aware of the fact that something could go wrong that they`re paranoid and want to go home."[4]

    Towards the end of the song, the lyrics and tone take on a dream-like state, which is reflected in the video. A review in Record Mirror commented that despite the comic tone of the song, the end left a rather unnerving effect.[5] Bush sang it in what has been described as "a curious accent that seemed to veer from an aristocrat to an East End villain" (see mockney).[6]

    The B-side, "Ne t`enfuis pas" ("Don`t Run Away") is spelt incorrectly on the actual single as "Ne T`en Fui Pas", which has no meaning in French.

    Critical reception

    Upon its release as a single, Neil Tennant of Smash Hits described "There Goes a Tenner" as "very weird". He noted that Bush "sings a fractured tune partly in a cockney accent" and added the song has "a haunting atmosphere that lingers after the record has finished".[7] Richard Hook of NME called it "a peculiar choice" for a single "from a baffling LP" and commented, "Rococo embellishments flit around this odd story like fireflies in a belfry, the tale told in the usual Berlitz range of voices."[8]

    Personnel

    • Kate Bush – piano, Fairlight CMI, Yamaha CS-80, vocals
    • Del Palmer – bass guitar
    • Stuart Elliott – drums
    • Dave Lawson – Synclavier

    Chart performance

    Chart (1982)

    Peak
    position

    UK Singles (OCC)[3]

    93

    "There Goes a Tenner" is a song by the English singer Kate Bush. It was released as a single on 1 November 1982, the third to be taken from her album The Dreaming. It was released as a 7-inch single in the UK and Ireland only. The single peaked at No. 93 and spent two weeks in the UK singles chart.[3]

    Background

    "There Goes a Tenner" attracted no interest from radio stations and television stations. The single did not sell well and became Bush`s first single to miss the top 75 in the UK. It was originally intended to be Bush`s first twelve-inch single, but its disappointing sales performance caused plans for the 12-inch to be cancelled.

    The song`s lyrics concern a bungled bank robbery as told by a fearful and paranoid perpetrator. As Bush stated;

    "It`s about amateur robbers who have only done small things, and this is quite a big robbery that they`ve been planning for months, and when it actually starts happening, they start freaking out. They`re really scared, and they`re so aware of the fact that something could go wrong that they`re paranoid and want to go home."[4]

    Towards the end of the song, the lyrics and tone take on a dream-like state, which is reflected in the video. A review in Record Mirror commented that despite the comic tone of the song, the end left a rather unnerving effect.[5] Bush sang it in what has been described as "a curious accent that seemed to veer from an aristocrat to an East End villain" (see mockney).[6]

    The B-side, "Ne t`enfuis pas" ("Don`t Run Away") is spelt incorrectly on the actual single as "Ne T`en Fui Pas", which has no meaning in French.

    Critical reception

    Upon its release as a single, Neil Tennant of Smash Hits described "There Goes a Tenner" as "very weird". He noted that Bush "sings a fractured tune partly in a cockney accent" and added the song has "a haunting atmosphere that lingers after the record has finished".[7] Richard Hook of NME called it "a peculiar choice" for a single "from a baffling LP" and commented, "Rococo embellishments flit around this odd story like fireflies in a belfry, the tale told in the usual Berlitz range of voices."[8]

    Personnel

    • Kate Bush – piano, Fairlight CMI, Yamaha CS-80, vocals
    • Del Palmer – bass guitar
    • Stuart Elliott – drums
    • Dave Lawson – Synclavier

    Chart performance

    Chart (1982)

    Peak
    position

    UK Singles (OCC)[3]

    93