"Banana Republic" was the first single from The Boomtown Rats` album Mondo Bongo.[1] It peaked at number three in the UK Singles Chart.[5]
Breaking from the band`s previous new wave sound, the song opens with a ska-reggae hook (that repeats at the close of the much longer album version).[6] However, the song itself is a more mainstream piece musically. The `banana republic` which the song describes is actually a deliberately scathing portrait of the Republic of Ireland, the band`s country of origin, and was written in response to the band being banned from performing there.[7] This in turn was reputedly because of Geldof`s "denunciation of nationalism, medieval-minded clerics and corrupt politicians" in a memorably controversial 1977 interview/performance on Ireland`s The Late Late Show with Gay Byrne.[8][9]
Leer más
1
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Banana Republic
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Geldof, Briquette •
1980 /11 /14
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5:01 |
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2
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Man at the Top[2]
The Boomtown Rats •
1980 /11 /14
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0:00 |
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1
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Mood Mambo
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Geldof, Pete Briquette •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
4:06 |
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2
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Straight Up
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
3:15 |
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3
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This is My Room
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Geldof, Simon Crowe •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
3:35 |
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4
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Another Piece of Red
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
2:35 |
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5
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Go Man Go!
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
3:52 |
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6
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Under Their Thumb is Under My Thumb
The Boomtown Rats •
w: music: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards; new lyrics: Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
2:41 |
|
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7
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Please Don`t Go
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
3:34 |
|
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8
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The Elephants Graveyard
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
3:43 |
|
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9
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Banana Republic
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Geldof, Briquette •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
4:55 |
|
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10
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Fall Down
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
2:26 |
|
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11
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Hurt Hurts
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
3:05 |
|
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12
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Whitehall 1212
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
3:43 |
|
|
13
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Cheerio -
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Hidden track •
1980 /12 Side 1
|
1:24 |
|
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14
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Straight Up
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:15 |
|
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15
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The Elephants Graveyard
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:43 |
|
|
16
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This is My Room
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:35 |
|
|
17
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Another Piece of Red
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
2:35 |
|
|
18
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Hurt Hurts
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:05 |
|
|
19
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Please Don`t Go
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:34 |
|
|
20
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Fall Down
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
2:26 |
|
|
21
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Go Man Go!
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:52 |
|
|
22
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Under Their Thumb
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
2:41 |
|
|
23
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Banana Republic
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
4:55 |
|
|
24
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Whitehall 1212
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:43 |
|
|
25
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Mood Mambo
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
4:06 |
|
|
26
|
Cheeri
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Bob Geldof •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
1:15 |
|
|
27
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Don`t Talk to Me
The Boomtown Rats •
w: B-side •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
2:53 |
|
|
28
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Arnold Layne
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Recorded for TV •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:11 |
|
|
29
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Another Piece of Red
The Boomtown Rats •
w: Live in Portsmouth •
1980 /12 2005 re-issue·The North American releases re
|
3:33 |
|
"Banana Republic" | ||||
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![]() | ||||
Single by The Boomtown Rats | ||||
from the album Mondo Bongo[1] | ||||
B-side | "Man at the Top"[2] | |||
Released | 14 November 1980 [3] | |||
Genre | New wave, reggae[4] | |||
Length | 3:24 (album version 5:01) | |||
Label | Ensign Records (UK)[2] Columbia Records (USA) | |||
Songwriter(s) | Pete Briquette, Bob Geldof[2] | |||
Producer(s) | Tony Visconti[2] | |||
The Boomtown Rats singles chronology | ||||
|
"Banana Republic" was the first single from The Boomtown Rats` album Mondo Bongo.[1] It peaked at number three in the UK Singles Chart.[5]
Breaking from the band`s previous new wave sound, the song opens with a ska-reggae hook (that repeats at the close of the much longer album version).[6] However, the song itself is a more mainstream piece musically. The `banana republic` which the song describes is actually a deliberately scathing portrait of the Republic of Ireland, the band`s country of origin, and was written in response to the band being banned from performing there.[7] This in turn was reputedly because of Geldof`s "denunciation of nationalism, medieval-minded clerics and corrupt politicians" in a memorably controversial 1977 interview/performance on Ireland`s The Late Late Show with Gay Byrne.[8][9]
Leer másChart (1980–81) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (Kent Music Report)[10] | 18 |
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[11] | 30 |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[12] | 47 |
Germany (GfK)[13] | 3 |
Ireland (IRMA)[14] | 3 |
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[15] | 35 |
Norway (VG-lista)[16] | 3 |
South Africa (Springbok Radio)[17] | 12 |
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[18] | 7 |
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[19] | 10 |
UK Singles (OCC)[20] | 3 |
"Banana Republic" was the first single from The Boomtown Rats` album Mondo Bongo.[1] It peaked at number three in the UK Singles Chart.[5]
Breaking from the band`s previous new wave sound, the song opens with a ska-reggae hook (that repeats at the close of the much longer album version).[6] However, the song itself is a more mainstream piece musically. The `banana republic` which the song describes is actually a deliberately scathing portrait of the Republic of Ireland, the band`s country of origin, and was written in response to the band being banned from performing there.[7] This in turn was reputedly because of Geldof`s "denunciation of nationalism, medieval-minded clerics and corrupt politicians" in a memorably controversial 1977 interview/performance on Ireland`s The Late Late Show with Gay Byrne.[8][9]
Chart (1980–81) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (Kent Music Report)[10] | 18 |
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[11] | 30 |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[12] | 47 |
Germany (GfK)[13] | 3 |
Ireland (IRMA)[14] | 3 |
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[15] | 35 |
Norway (VG-lista)[16] | 3 |
South Africa (Springbok Radio)[17] | 12 |
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[18] | 7 |
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[19] | 10 |
UK Singles (OCC)[20] | 3 |