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1963 (song)

"1963"
Single by New Order
A-side "True Faith"
Released 20 July 1987
Format
Recorded 1987
Genre Alternative rock, synthpop
Length 5:32
Label Factory
Songwriter(s) Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Gillian Gilbert, Stephen Hague
Producer(s) Stephen Hague, New Order
"1963"
Nineteen63 (New Order album - cover art).jpg
Single by New Order
from the album The Best of New Order
Released 9 January 1995
Format
Recorded 1987
Length 5:05
Label London
Songwriter(s) Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Gillian Gilbert, Stephen Hague
New Order singles chronology
"True Faith-94"
(1994)
"1963"
(1995)
"Blue Monday-95"
(1995)
"True Faith-94"
(1994)
"1963"
(1995)
"Blue Monday-95"
(1995)
Alternative cover
UK Disc 1 cover
UK Disc 1 cover

"1963" is a track by English rock group New Order. It was originally released as a B-side to "True Faith" in 1987 and appeared on the Substance compilation of the same year. It was then released as a single in January 1995, in a radio mix by Arthur Baker.

"1963"'s B-sides were all remixes of the title track or songs previously released.

In New Order Music 1981–89, the band's lyricist Bernard Sumner writes a tongue-in-cheek account of the song's lyrics that relate it to the 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy. Sumner theorises that Kennedy arranged for Lee Harvey Oswald to shoot his wife so that "J.F. could do one with M. Monroe". Monroe commits suicide when Oswald hits the wrong target (in reality, Marilyn Monroe died in 1962, over a year before the assassination took place) and Oswald is later shot by his boss for "doing such a bad job and causing his hit-man business to go bust."

The producer Stephen Hague has referred to the song as "the only song about domestic violence that you can dance to."

The original 1987 version ended in a fade-out while repeating the last line of the outro, "I will always feel free". The "94 album mix", also included on the international edition of (The Best of) New Order as "1963-94", had all new orchestration and is similar in structure to the original version, except that the outro is removed and replaced with a repeat of the final bridge and chorus, faded out. The 1995 Arthur Baker remix restores the original outro, and, instead of fading out, has a cold ending after four repeats of the last line.

An extended mix of "1963-94" appeared on the 2005 Singles compilation, while the 2016 re-release of Singles features the Arthur Baker remix.

The video for the single's release, featuring the "95 Arthur Baker Radio remix", was directed by Gina Birch and produced by Michael H. Shamberg. It depicts British comic actress Jane Horrocks waking up in a box in the countryside and walking to the city. Jane's suitcase becomes bigger in each camera take.


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Wikipedia

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