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Diamond Smiles
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Singles chronology

Diamond Smiles
Diamond Smiles
9/11/1979
Banana Republic
Banana Republic
14/11/1980

Diamond Smiles

  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 9 Noviembre 1979 · Fecha Grabación: 1979 -
    Discográfica: Ensign Records (UK)Columbia Records (USA) · ·
    1
    Diamond Smiles
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Bob Geldof • 1979 /11 /09
    3:52
  • 2
    Late Last Night
    The Boomtown Rats • w: B-side of Diamond Smiles • 1979 /11 /09
    0:00
  • Album


    The Fine Art of Surfacing

    The Fine Art of Surfacing

    Fecha Lanzamiento: 5 Octubre 1979 · Fecha Grabación: Febrero 1979 -
    Discográfica: EnsignMulliganColumbiaMercury · Estudio de Grabación: Phonogram, Hilversum, Netherlands · Productor: Robert John "Mutt" Lange , Phil Wainman
    1
    Someone`s Looking at You
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Bob Geldof • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side A
    4:22
  • 2
    Diamond Smiles
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Bob Geldof • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side A
    3:49
  • 3
    Wind Chill Factor
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Minus Zero • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side A
    4:35
  • 4
    Having My Picture Taken
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Geldof, Pete Briquette • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side A
    3:18
  • 5
    Sleep
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Fingers` Lullaby • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side A
    5:30
  • 6
    I Don`t Like Mondays
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Geldof, Johnnie Fingers • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side B
    4:16
  • 7
    Nothing Happened Today
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Bob Geldof • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side B
    3:18
  • 8
    Keep It Up
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Geldof, Gerry Cott • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side B
    3:39
  • 9
    Nice N Neat
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Bob Geldof • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side B
    2:50
  • 10
    When the Night Comes
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Bob Geldof • 1979 /10 /05 1979 Vinyl Release·Side B
    5:00
  • 11
    Episode 3
    The Boomtown Rats • w: a combination of both hidden tracks on the vinyl release • 1979 /10 /05 2005 re-release bonus tracks·* A hidden track of a warped v
    1:10
  • 12
    Real Different
    The Boomtown Rats • w: B-side of Elephant`s Graveyard • 1979 /10 /05 2005 re-release bonus tracks·* A hidden track of a warped v
    2:39
  • 13
    How Do You Do?
    The Boomtown Rats • w: B-side of Like Clockwork • 1979 /10 /05 2005 re-release bonus tracks·* A hidden track of a warped v
    2:39
  • 14
    Late Last Night
    The Boomtown Rats • w: B-side of Diamond Smiles • 1979 /10 /05 2005 re-release bonus tracks·* A hidden track of a warped v
    2:43
  • 15
    Nothing Happened Today
    The Boomtown Rats • w: Live in Cardiff • 1979 /10 /05 2005 re-release bonus tracks·* A hidden track of a warped v
    3:44
  • Album

    Diamond Smiles
    Diamond Smiles
    9/11/1979
    Banana Republic
    Banana Republic
    14/11/1980
    "Diamond Smiles"
    Single by The Boomtown Rats
    from the album The Fine Art of Surfacing
    B-side"Late Last Night"
    Released9 November 1979 [1]
    Genre
    Length3:54
    LabelEnsign Records (UK)
    Columbia Records (USA)
    Songwriter(s)Bob Geldof
    The Boomtown Rats singles chronology
    "I Don`t Like Mondays"
    (1979)
    "Diamond Smiles"
    (1979)
    "Someone`s Looking at You"
    (1980)

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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    1979 single by The Boomtown Rats

    "Diamond Smiles" was the second single from The Boomtown Rats` album The Fine Art of Surfacing. It was the follow-up to their successful single "I Don`t Like Mondays" and peaked at Number 13 in the UK Charts. The band has suggested that it might have fared better had it not been for a strike of lighting technicians on the powerful UK TV programme Top of The Pops at the time that the record was released and rising in the charts.[3]

    Dealing with death, as had "I Don`t Like Mondays", the song tells the story of a glamorous debutante (`Diamond`) who commits suicide and is remembered only for her low-cut dress.[4] Some of the staff of Duke Street Hospital, in Glasgow, filed a petition with the IBA and the BBC demanding that the song be banned due to the lyrics exploiting a real-life suicide.[5]

    The song also featured as one of four songs on an Australian EP called Surface Down Under that also featured past hits "Rat Trap", "Looking After No.1" and "Like Clockwork".[3]

    The song was covered by Jay Bennett (of Wilco) on his posthumous album Kicking at the Perfumed Air, with the album`s title also being derived from the song`s lyrics.[6]

    Reception

    In a review of the album The Fine Art of Surfacing, critic Mike DeGagne said "`Diamond Smiles` jaunts along on a hiccup-like rhythm".[7]

    Smash Hits said, "It`s puzzling that The Rats should have chosen this rather lifeless tale of high-society suicide as the follow up to "Mondays". It`s tougher and more compact than their recent singles but I thought they`d have put aside the subject of violent death for a while."[8]

    Decades later, Penny Black Music commented on the band`s connection to Ireland:"The song reflected the Dublin that had changed before the band’s very eyes. It was no longer the city of saints, but a reservoir of bankers, gangsters and sex."[9]

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1979 single by The Boomtown Rats

    "Diamond Smiles" was the second single from The Boomtown Rats` album The Fine Art of Surfacing. It was the follow-up to their successful single "I Don`t Like Mondays" and peaked at Number 13 in the UK Charts. The band has suggested that it might have fared better had it not been for a strike of lighting technicians on the powerful UK TV programme Top of The Pops at the time that the record was released and rising in the charts.[3]

    Dealing with death, as had "I Don`t Like Mondays", the song tells the story of a glamorous debutante (`Diamond`) who commits suicide and is remembered only for her low-cut dress.[4] Some of the staff of Duke Street Hospital, in Glasgow, filed a petition with the IBA and the BBC demanding that the song be banned due to the lyrics exploiting a real-life suicide.[5]

    The song also featured as one of four songs on an Australian EP called Surface Down Under that also featured past hits "Rat Trap", "Looking After No.1" and "Like Clockwork".[3]

    The song was covered by Jay Bennett (of Wilco) on his posthumous album Kicking at the Perfumed Air, with the album`s title also being derived from the song`s lyrics.[6]

    Reception

    In a review of the album The Fine Art of Surfacing, critic Mike DeGagne said "`Diamond Smiles` jaunts along on a hiccup-like rhythm".[7]

    Smash Hits said, "It`s puzzling that The Rats should have chosen this rather lifeless tale of high-society suicide as the follow up to "Mondays". It`s tougher and more compact than their recent singles but I thought they`d have put aside the subject of violent death for a while."[8]

    Decades later, Penny Black Music commented on the band`s connection to Ireland:"The song reflected the Dublin that had changed before the band’s very eyes. It was no longer the city of saints, but a reservoir of bankers, gangsters and sex."[9]

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