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Shivers (song)

"Shivers"
A close-up image of the label of a 7-inch gramophone record. Block black text reads "A, Shivers, Boys Next Door".
Single by The Boys Next Door
from the album Door, Door
B-side "Dive Position"
Released May 1979 (1979-05)
Format 7-inch single
Recorded January 1979 (1979-01) at Richmond Recorders in Melbourne
Genre Post-punk, new wave
Length 4:37
Label Mushroom
Songwriter(s) Rowland S Howard
Producer(s) The Boys Next Door
The Boys Next Door singles chronology
"These Boots Are Made for Walking"
(1978)
"Shivers"
(1979)
"Scatterbrain" / "Early Morning Brain"
(1979)
"These Boots Are Made for Walking"
(1978)
"Shivers"
(1979)
"Scatterbrain"/"Early Morning Brain"
(1979)

"Shivers" is a song by the Australian post-punk band the Boys Next Door, who would later become the Birthday Party. It is the tenth and final track from the band's debut studio album Door, Door, released in 1979 on Mushroom Records. It was released as the album's only single in May 1979, backed with the B-side "Dive Position".

Written by guitarist Rowland S Howard at age 16, "Shivers" is a post-punk and new wave ballad featuring ironic lyrics regarding teenage relationships and suicide. Originally intended as humorous by Howard, he felt later it had been misinterpreted due to frontman Nick Cave's vocal delivery on the Boys Next Door version. Despite later distancing himself from the song, "Shivers" remained Howard's most requested song during his lifetime and was met with critical acclaim. It has since been cited as one of the most popular cult hits in Australian music.

Several versions of "Shivers" have been released—including demo and solo recordings by Howard—and it has been covered by a variety of artists, including Marie Hoy, Laura Jane Grace, the Screaming Jets, Courtney Barnett and Divine Fits.

In 1976, at age 16 and as a member of the Melbourne punk rock band Young Charlatans, Howard wrote "Shivers". Discussing the song's origins, Howard said that "Shivers" was "intended as an ironic comment on the way that I felt that people I knew were making hysterical things out of what were essentially high school crushes". He further explained that the emotional responses of people he knew who were in relationships seemed "incredibly insincere and blown out of proportion" and inspired the cynical lyrics of the song.


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