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Teenage Kicks

"Teenage Kicks"
Teenage Kicks.jpg
Single by The Undertones
from the album The Undertones
B-side "True Confessions"
Released 21 October 1978 (21 October 1978)
Format 7-inch single
Recorded
Genre
Length 2:28
Label Sire
Writer(s) John O'Neill
Producer(s) The Undertones
The Undertones singles chronology
"Teenage Kicks"
(1978)
"Get Over You"
(1979)
Teenage Kicks
Teenage Kicks 2.jpg
EP by The Undertones
Released September 1978 (1978-09)
Recorded 1978
Studio
Length 7:51
Label
Producer The Undertones
Alternative cover
Fold-out of sleeve of original Good Vibrations release of Teenage Kicks EP
Music video
"Teenage Kicks" on YouTube

"Teenage Kicks" was the debut single for Northern Irish punk rock/new wave band The Undertones. Written in the summer of 1977 by the band's principal songwriter, John O'Neill, the song was recorded on 16 June 1978 and initially released that September upon independent Belfast record label Good Vibrations, before the band—at the time unobligated to any record label—signed to Sire Records on 2 October 1978. Sire Records subsequently obtained all copyrights to the material released upon the Teenage Kicks EP and the song was re-released as a standard vinyl single upon Sire's own label on 14 October that year, reaching number 31 in the UK Singles Chart two weeks after its release

The single was not included upon the original May 1979 release of the band's debut album The Undertones; however, the October 1979 re-release of this debut album included both "Teenage Kicks" and the Undertones' second single, "Get Over You".

Influential BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel is known to have opined "Teenage Kicks" to be his all-time favourite song from 1978 until his death in 2004. The song has also been ranked as the second best indie song of all time in a 2016 poll conducted by an alternative music radio station.

In 2008, the song served as the theme song to the ITV sitcom of the same name.

Upon first hearing "Teenage Kicks" in September 1978, BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel is reported to have burst into tears, and readily admitted to still being reduced to tears upon hearing the song in interviews granted to journalists up until his death. To judge songs he had heard for the first time as to worthiness of airplay upon his show, Peel often rated new bands' songs with a series of asterisks, with each song judged upon a scale of one to five asterisks: Peel was so taken by "Teenage Kicks", he awarded the song 28 stars. On one occasion, he is known to have played the song twice in a row, with the explanation given to his audience being, "It doesn't get much better than this."


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Wikipedia

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