Join Hands
Join Hands is the second studio album by the English post-punk band Siouxsie and the Banshees, released in September 1979 by Polydor Records.[1] Recorded at AIR Studios in London from May to June 1979 and produced by Mike Stavrou and Nils Stevenson, it features the original lineup of Siouxsie Sioux on vocals and piano, John McKay on guitar and saxophone, Steven Severin on bass guitar, and Kenny Morris on drums.[1] The album expands on the band's debut The Scream with longer, more atmospheric compositions blending post-punk angularity and emerging gothic rock elements, including the 14-minute closing track "The Lord's Prayer," a studio version of a staple from their early live sets that originated as a 20-minute improvised punk rendition at their debut performance in 1976.[2][1] It also includes the single "Playground Twist," released in July 1979, noted for its metallic guitar tones and sparse production that evoke a cold, brittle intensity.[1][3] Join Hands marked the end of the band's initial lineup, as McKay and Morris abruptly departed after just two dates into the promotional tour, citing exhaustion from fame's pressures and internal tensions with Sioux and Severin, an irony underscored by the album's title urging unity.[4][5] Critically, it was praised upon release for advancing post-punk beyond punk's rawness into a more experimental, gothic territory, though later assessments have highlighted its austere sound as both innovative and uneven.[3][6]Background and Recording
Writing Process
The songwriting for Join Hands occurred amid significant internal tensions within Siouxsie and the Banshees, following an exhaustive touring schedule after their 1978 debut The Scream. Siouxsie Sioux described the process as "very difficult," citing an "edgy atmosphere" and "a lot of conflict going on" that strained band dynamics.[7] Bassist Steven Severin echoed this, noting that guitarist John McKay "couldn’t churn out the riffs like he’d been doing before," resulting in slower progress and the band working "twice as hard" compared to prior efforts.[7] With limited pre-existing material, composition relied on real-time development, including the introduction of new tracks during live performances, such as "Premature Burial" and "Playground Twist" debuted at the Rainbow Theatre on 7 April 1979.[7] Lyrical and musical inspirations drew from contemporary events and cultural observations, reflecting the band's post-punk ethos of confronting societal unease. "Poppy Day," for instance, stemmed from observations of Remembrance Sunday in November 1978, evoking themes of war remembrance through stark imagery.[7] "Regal Zone" was influenced by television reports of the Iranian Revolution and ensuing conflicts in 1979, incorporating Middle Eastern melodic elements to underscore political upheaval.[7] Similarly, "Icon" derived from encounters with Dervish whirling rituals, blending rhythmic intensity with symbolic detachment.[7] Sioux characterized the resulting material as "lonely and isolated," an "extreme record" that demanded bravery amid the discord.[7] Unlike the more spontaneous approach of their debut, the Join Hands composition process involved recording backing tracks first in the studio, followed by overdubs, marking a shift toward structured experimentation despite the interpersonal strains.[8] These challenges culminated in the album's rushed completion starting in May 1979 at Air Studios in London, exacerbating fractures that led to the departures of McKay and drummer Kenny Morris immediately after its 7 September 1979 release.[7]Studio Sessions and Production Challenges
Recording of Join Hands took place at AIR Studios in London between May and June 1979.[9] The sessions were co-produced by the band's manager Nils Stevenson and engineer Mike Stavrou, with the group members—Siouxsie Sioux, Steven Severin, John McKay, and Kenny Morris—handling arrangements.[1] Stavrou, an American who had previously engineered sessions for T. Rex frontman Marc Bolan, was selected partly due to the Banshees' admiration for Bolan, but his involvement quickly became a point of friction.[7] Band members, particularly McKay and Morris, found Stavrou's approach mismatched with their artistic goals; Morris later recalled him as "a very arrogant guy" who "didn't understand what we were trying to do."[7] McKay voiced specific dissatisfaction with the final production sound, which he felt failed to capture the band's raw intensity.[10] These interpersonal and creative clashes during mixing exacerbated underlying group tensions, rooted in differing visions between the rhythm section (McKay and Morris) and the core duo of Sioux and Severin.[11] The production process thus highlighted the band's transitional instability post their debut The Scream, with self-reliant arrangements underscoring their punk ethos amid external producer discord. No major technical issues like equipment failures are documented, but the human elements—producer-band mistrust and internal rifts—foreshadowed the immediate post-release collapse, as McKay and Morris departed after just two dates of the supporting tour on 11 September 1979.[5]Musical Composition and Content
Genre Characteristics and Instrumentation
Join Hands exemplifies the post-punk genre, characterized by its intense, claustrophobic soundscapes and unrelenting rhythmic drive, marking a darker evolution from the band's debut The Scream. The album's tracks feature angular guitar work, prominent bass lines, and tribal percussion that evoke a sense of subterranean menace and emotional tension, eschewing punk's raw simplicity for more structured yet abrasive compositions. Critics have noted its bleak, haunting quality, with Side A containing concise songs adhering to recognizable verse-chorus forms and Side B extending into longer, more experimental pieces that build atmospheric dread through repetition and dynamic shifts.[12][3][13] The core instrumentation comprises Siouxsie Sioux's vocals—delivered in a distinctive style ranging from icy detachment to piercing wails—John McKay's jagged guitar riffs, Steven Severin's pulsating bass guitar, and Kenny Morris's propulsive drums and percussion. This quartet setup produces a guitar-led, analog sound devoid of synthesizers or overdubs, emphasizing live-band interplay and minimal production to heighten the raw urgency. Bass riffs often anchor the tracks' hypnotic grooves, while drums maintain a militaristic pulse, contributing to the album's oppressive intensity without reliance on melodic embellishments.[14][7][15]Lyrics, Themes, and Track Breakdown
The lyrics of Join Hands confront themes of childhood cruelty, parental suffocation, religious desecration, imperial decay, illusory comforts, iconic martyrdom, narcotic escape, illusory idylls, premature entombment, and impending apocalypse, rendered in fragmented, incantatory style to mirror emotional entrapment and societal collapse. Siouxsie Sioux's words eschew linear narrative for hypnotic repetition and collage-like juxtaposition, amplifying the album's post-punk dissonance and evoking a pervasive sense of dread without resolution. These motifs, informed by observations of human frailty and institutional failures, reject sentimentality in favor of stark confrontation, as evidenced in Sioux's own descriptions of deriving imagery from life's playground-like brutalities.[6][16][3] Playground Twist opens with a portrayal of infantile savagery, likening life's adversities to a frozen schoolyard melee where children hang from "daisy chains" and evade foes, chanting "hanging, hanging" amid taunts of weakness; Sioux framed it as capturing playground cruelty amid harsh elements, ending in eerie children's voices to underscore corrupted innocence.[16][17][18] Mother/Oh Mein Papa twists the melody of the nostalgic German tune "O mein Papa" into a critique of maternal dominance, with lyrics decrying the "disapproval that you hate" yet compel obedience—"they teach you to respect (and fear her name)"—depicting a molding force that stifles autonomy rather than cherishes, transforming fond reminiscence into a "raw wound" of psychological bondage.[19][20] The Lord's Prayer subverts Christian liturgy by interweaving its recitation with chaotic snippets from pop hits like "Twist and Shout" and "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," alongside show tunes and wordless exclamations, to mock sacred ritual amid thrashing instrumentation, embodying profane irreverence and cultural detritus.[13] Regal Zone evokes monarchical pomp through regal epithets and commands like "bow down before the sovereign," laced with ironic subservience and decay, critiquing authority's hollow grandeur in a repetitive, trance-like structure.[6] Placebo Effect examines deceptive salves—"sugar pills for the bitter," "faith heals the blind"—as futile against profound affliction, implying war's or existence's uncurable wounds, its stark rhythm underscoring inefficacy.[2] Icon confronts war and faith's intersections, with Sioux's "doom-mongering" invoking sacrificial idols and battlefield futility, positioning it as a pinnacle of the album's thematic depth through angular guitar and vocal ferocity.[6] Heroine probes dependency on a chemical "heroine" as seductive panacea—"inject me with your desire"—blending allure and peril in rhythmic propulsion suggestive of addiction's grip.[3] Paradise Place conjures a false utopia marred by entrapment, lyrics hinting at commodified bliss and relational stagnation amid dub-influenced bass, exposing paradise as confining illusion.[21] Premature Burial urges solidarity—"join hands, we're all sisters and brothers"—against isolation's tomb, rejecting fraternal denial in favor of collective defiance, its plea intensified by dirge-like pulse.[22] Something's Happening builds to cataclysmic urgency, fragmented phrases signaling rupture—"the sky is falling, walls are closing"—as a frenzied closer prophesying inevitable upheaval without escape.[23]Artwork and Packaging
Cover Design and Symbolism
The original 1979 edition of Join Hands features a minimalist cover design consisting of a white field overlaid with silhouettes of four bronze soldier statues from London's Guards Memorial, a World War I commemoration for the Guards Division erected in 1924.[24] The statues depict infantrymen linking arms in a gesture of solidarity, visually echoing the album title while evoking themes of wartime unity amid the record's inspirations drawn from First World War imagery.[3] Sleeve design was handled by Rob O'Connor, with illustration credited to John Maybury.[24] Prior to finalization, the band pursued alternative concepts, including an image of two children holding hands, which was discarded due to unresolved copyright clearance.[25] The preferred artwork, a modified Holy Communion card illustration by John Maybury, faced rejection from Polydor Records over concerns regarding its religious connotations and potential controversy.[26] A 2015 Record Store Day vinyl reissue restored this intended Maybury design, presenting the edited Communion imagery on a black background to align with the band's original vision.[26] The stark, monochromatic aesthetic of both versions reinforces the post-punk era's emphasis on stark, evocative visuals over ornate presentation.[24] No explicit statements from band members detail symbolic intent beyond the literal "joining" motif, though the war memorial's selection coincides with tracks like "Poppy Day" referencing Remembrance Day poppies.[8]Packaging Variations Across Editions
The original 1979 UK vinyl edition of Join Hands featured a gatefold sleeve with lyrics printed on the inner liner.[14] International variants from the same year, such as the French pressing, also used gatefold sleeves, while the Japanese edition employed a standard sleeve.[1] Later vinyl reissues maintained gatefold packaging but introduced artwork changes. The 2013 European remastered LP used a gatefold sleeve replicating the original design.[1] In contrast, the 2015 Record Store Day limited edition of 1,000 copies restored the originally intended sleeve artwork by John Maybury, incorporating an edited image from a Holy Communion card that had not appeared on prior releases, alongside gatefold packaging.[27][28] CD editions varied in format to evoke vinyl aesthetics or standard jewel cases. The 2006 European remastered release came in a digipak.[1] The Japanese 2006 limited edition utilized a paper sleeve in gatefold style, replicating the original vinyl artwork including inner sleeve and lyrics.[1] Earlier CD pressings, such as those from the 1990s, typically featured standard jewel cases with multi-page inserts containing lyrics and credits.[1]| Edition | Year | Format | Key Packaging Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK Original | 1979 | Vinyl LP | Gatefold sleeve, printed lyric inner[14] |
| US Reissue | 1983 | Vinyl LP | Standard sleeve[1] |
| Europe Remastered | 2006 | CD | Digipak[1] |
| Japan Limited | 2006 | CD | Gatefold paper sleeve replica with lyrics[1] |
| Europe RSD | 2015 | Vinyl LP | Gatefold with Maybury's intended artwork[27] |
Release and Commercial Aspects
Release Date and Label Details
Join Hands, the second studio album by Siouxsie and the Banshees, was originally released on 7 September 1979 in the United Kingdom by Polydor Records.[29][1] The initial format was vinyl LP, bearing the catalog number POLD 5024.[30] Polydor handled distribution in most territories, though variations occurred internationally, such as releases under Interfusion in Australia.[1] In the United States, the album saw later distribution through Geffen Records rather than Polydor.[1] Subsequent reissues, including CD and remastered vinyl editions, have been managed by Universal Music's Polydor imprint, with catalog numbers like 825 252-2 for digital formats.[1]Chart Performance and Sales Data
Join Hands was released on 7 September 1979 by Polydor Records and entered the UK Albums Chart shortly thereafter, achieving a peak position of number 13.[31] The album remained on the chart for a total of five weeks.[31] It did not achieve notable positions on international charts, including in the United States, where post-punk albums of the era often struggled for mainstream airplay and sales. No official sales certifications were issued for the album by bodies such as the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), reflecting its status as an early, niche release in the post-punk genre rather than a commercial blockbuster. Estimates of worldwide sales hover around 60,000 units, primarily driven by UK domestic performance, though such figures derive from aggregated data rather than verified industry reports.[32]Promotion and Touring
Singles and Marketing Strategies
"Playground Twist" served as the sole single from Join Hands, released by Polydor Records in September 1979 to coincide with the album's launch.[2] The track, featuring Siouxsie Sioux's urgent vocals over driving post-punk rhythms, exemplified the album's claustrophobic intensity but failed to achieve notable chart success, reflecting the band's limited mainstream radio penetration at the time.[33] Marketing efforts for Join Hands emphasized live performance over traditional media campaigns, aligning with the post-punk ethos of authenticity over commercial polish. Polydor orchestrated a month-long UK tour starting on the album's release date of September 7, 1979, with the second show in Aberdeen, designed to build grassroots momentum through intense, sold-out gigs that showcased the material's raw energy.[34] Supplementary promotion included brief European jaunts to cities like Hamburg and Berlin, aimed at expanding the band's cult following in continental markets without heavy reliance on advertising.[8] The Banshees cultivated an aura of elitism, dubbed "The Most Elitist Band In The World" by Sounds critic Pete Silverton, which informed a strategy shunning chart-chasing singles saturation or television appearances in favor of press cultivation and merchandise like promotional pins and posters bearing the album title.[7][35] This approach yielded organic buzz in underground scenes but constrained broader sales, as the band prioritized artistic integrity amid punk's anti-commercial undercurrents.[8]UK Tour and Immediate Aftermath
The Join Hands tour commenced in late August 1979, shortly before the album's release on September 7, coinciding with support from acts including The Cure, and featured performances across UK venues such as Leicester De Montfort Hall on September 18 and Birmingham Odeon on September 19.[36] Tensions had been mounting within the band prior to and during the early dates, stemming from a growing rift between drummer Kenny Morris and guitarist John McKay, exacerbated by the pressures of an expanding schedule and interpersonal strains with Siouxsie Sioux and Steven Severin.[7] On September 7, 1979, at the Capitol Theatre in Aberdeen, Scotland—the same day as the album's release—Morris and McKay abruptly quit the band following an offstage altercation, leading to the cancellation of that night's headline performance after opening acts had concluded.[37] An announcement was made to the audience explaining the departure, averting potential unrest amid a crowd expecting the full set.[38] This incident marked the tour's near-collapse, with the original lineup dissolving mid-promotion. In the immediate aftermath, Siouxsie and Severin, determined to salvage the commitments, recruited drummer Peter Clarke (known as Budgie) from The Slits and enlisted The Cure's Robert Smith to handle guitar duties for the remaining dates, enabling the tour to resume by mid-September and conclude successfully, including a finale at London's Hammersmith Odeon on October 15.[10][36] Budgie's addition proved stabilizing, as he remained with the band long-term, while Smith's temporary role bridged the gap until John McGeoch joined as permanent guitarist in early 1980, facilitating the transition to the Kaleidoscope era.[39] The episode underscored the volatile dynamics of the post-punk scene but ultimately reinforced Siouxsie and Severin's core partnership.[10]Controversies and Internal Dynamics
Recording Tensions and Creative Disputes
The recording of Join Hands took place over May and June 1979 at Air Studios in London, with engineer Mike Stavrou handling production duties after the band considered but ultimately rejected options like Tony Visconti or John Cale.[7] The sessions were marked by strained interpersonal dynamics, primarily dividing along lines between vocalist Siouxsie Sioux and bassist Steven Severin on one side, and guitarist John McKay and drummer Kenny Morris on the other. McKay and Morris increasingly felt marginalized in creative decisions, leading to withdrawal and complaints among themselves, as Siouxsie later described: "John and Kenny huddled together… like two old ladies complaining."[7] Creative output during this period was limited, with songwriting proving arduous amid the discord; Siouxsie noted that "the writing… was very difficult… a lot of conflict going on," while McKay struggled to develop new riffs, contributing to an overall edgy atmosphere that influenced the album's dense, oppressive sound.[7] Tensions extended to production choices, as McKay and Morris expressed strong dissatisfaction with Stavrou, whom Morris called "a little shit" and with whom they "certainly didn’t [get along]."[7] Severin attributed the album's intensity to these pressures, stating that "'Join Hands' was such a shock… we were all having to work twice as hard."[7] Poor communication within the group further exacerbated the issues, fostering a sense of isolation that mirrored the record's claustrophobic aesthetic.[40] These disputes over vision and process—rather than erupting into outright collapse during sessions—channeled into the material's raw ferocity, though they foreshadowed deeper fractures; the rushed sleeve artwork, for instance, proceeded without full input or approval from McKay and Morris.[7] Despite the challenges, Siouxsie retrospectively viewed the conflict as productive, crediting the "edgy atmosphere" for elevating the work musically.[7]Lineup Dissolution and Tour Abandonment
Following the release of Join Hands on 7 September 1979, guitarist John McKay and drummer Kenny Morris abruptly quit the band, marking the dissolution of its original recording lineup alongside Siouxsie Sioux and bassist Steven Severin.[4][41] The departures occurred acrimoniously on the same day, stemming from escalating internal tensions, including McKay's dissatisfaction with the album's direction—he reportedly removed a copy of Join Hands from a player during travel and replaced it with another record—and broader pressures of rising fame.[11][4] The immediate consequence was the cancellation of the Banshees' scheduled headline performance at the Capitol Theatre in Aberdeen, Scotland, that evening, with support act The Cure having already completed their set.[37][42] An announcement informed the audience of the "disappearance" of two members, prompting refunds and averting a potential riot amid fan frustration.[42] This incident effectively abandoned the opening leg of the Join Hands tour, though Sioux and Severin quickly reformed the group by recruiting drummer Budgie (Peter Clarke) and enlisting Robert Smith of The Cure as a temporary guitarist for subsequent dates.[10] Reports of a preceding altercation at an in-store signing— involving a fan dispute over merchandise that escalated, with road crew intervention and alleged physical confrontations—have been cited as a flashpoint, though accounts vary and emphasize underlying band discord rather than a sole cause.[43] McKay and Morris did not return, leading to a transitional period that delayed full touring stability until the next album, Kaleidoscope, in 1980.[10]Critical Reception
Contemporary Reviews
Upon its release on 7 September 1979, Join Hands received mixed contemporary reviews in the British music press, with critics often highlighting the album's intense, claustrophobic atmosphere while noting its inconsistencies and departure from the raw energy of the band's debut The Scream.[25] In Melody Maker on 1 September 1979, Jon Savage praised the record's capacity for power but criticized its extremes, stating, "At its worst, 'Join Hands' is unforgivably necrophiliac; at its best, it captures the power of which the Banshees are capable."[25] He specifically commended tracks like "Poppy Day" for their evocative bleakness but faulted the lengthy closing jam "The Lord's Prayer" for dragging into repetition.[25] Sounds critic Peter Silverton, in a 1 September 1979 review, echoed this ambivalence, opening with the album's grim opener "Poppy Day" as "ringing in the new album with a peal of bells... about as cheerful as Chesterfield" and describing the extended "The Lord's Prayer" as "fourteen minutes of rage and twisted bitterness."[25] Silverton appreciated the rhythmic drive in songs such as "Playground Twist" and "Icon," viewing them as evolutions in the band's post-punk style, but lamented the predictability in some riffs and the overall lack of variation, suggesting the Banshees risked stagnation without broader experimentation.[25] In Superpop on 18 September 1979, Mary Ann Ellis captured the album's polarizing nature, observing, "They can be good, superb, tedious and terrible all in the space of eight tracks," while finding side one more accessible than the denser second half.[25] Ellis noted the gothic undertones in tracks like "Mother/Oh Mein Gott" but questioned the band's reliance on dissonance over melody, reflecting a broader press sentiment that Join Hands amplified the Banshees' sonic extremity at the expense of cohesion.[25] No star ratings were assigned in these outlets, but the consensus positioned the album as a bold, if flawed, progression in post-punk, influential for its thematic depth on war and alienation despite uneven execution.[25]Retrospective Assessments and Criticisms
Retrospective assessments frequently characterize Join Hands as a sophomore slump, overshadowed by the raw intensity of the band's 1978 debut The Scream and hampered by internal lineup instability that limited the album to just eight tracks, with side two dominated by an extended live rendition of "The Lord's Prayer" to fill space after the departures of drummer Kenny Morris and bassist Matthew Ashman.[44][45] This transitional quality, marking the end of the original quartet's bleakest phase, is seen as both a product of creative turmoil and a deliberate evolution toward post-punk experimentation, though it lacks the melodic accessibility that later albums like Kaleidoscope (1980) would introduce.[3] Critics have pointed to the album's unrelenting darkness and sparsity as key flaws, with few standout hooks amid its angular, metallic guitar work and Siouxsie's icy vocal delivery, resulting in a monochromatic intensity that rarely deviates or provides relief.[3] Tracks such as "Placebo Effect" and "Premature Burial" draw specific rebuke for excessive length and repetitive guitar noise, functioning more as atmospheric exercises than cohesive songs, while lyrics in pieces like "Mother/Oh Mein Papa" occasionally veer into simplistic or strained territory.[21] The production, emphasizing cold brutality over warmth or variety, amplifies these issues, contributing to perceptions of the record as an uneven bridge between punk's aggression and the band's more refined gothic rock sound.[3][21] Despite these shortcomings, some reassessments credit Join Hands for its principled adherence to a post-punk aesthetic that dissected romanticism through stark realism, influencing contemporaries in gothic and experimental rock, though its uncompromising vision is often weighed against the band's inability to sustain such extremity without burnout.[21][3] The 2015 vinyl reissue for Record Store Day, featuring the original unedited artwork, prompted renewed appreciation for its historical role but did little to elevate its standing relative to the band's discography peaks.[46]Legacy and Influence
Artistic Impact on Post-Punk
Join Hands exemplified post-punk's shift toward experimental dissonance and atmospheric tension, with its claustrophobic production and ritualistic rhythms marking a departure from punk's direct aggression. Released on September 7, 1979, the album featured jagged guitar work by John McKay and Steven Severin's bass-driven propulsion, creating layered soundscapes that prioritized mood over melody, as heard in tracks like "Premature Burial" and "Icon."[2] [47] This approach influenced subsequent post-punk acts by demonstrating how sonic abrasion could evoke psychological depth, particularly through war-inspired themes drawn from World War I imagery, such as the "Poppy Day" intro.[47] A direct example of its reach is the inspiration for Joy Division's "Colony" on their 1980 album Closer, where the guitar riff and brooding intensity mirror "Placebo Effect," track three on Join Hands, highlighting the album's role in propagating post-punk's embrace of clinical, detached lyricism and repetitive motifs.[2] [48] Similarly, the album's dark grandeur impacted The Cure's early post-punk phase, with Robert Smith temporarily joining live performances after recording, absorbing Banshees' emphasis on eerie dynamics and thematic obscurity.[47] [49] By integrating elements like the extended, improvised "The Lord's Prayer"—a holdover from the band's 1976 punk origins recontextualized in a post-punk framework—Join Hands underscored the genre's potential for evolution, blending confrontation with abstraction and paving the way for post-punk's diversification into gothic and industrial substyles.[2] Its uncompromising structure, despite internal recording tensions, reinforced Siouxsie Sioux's vocal style as a commanding, otherworldly force, setting a benchmark for female-led innovation in male-dominated post-punk circles.[47]Reissues, Remasters, and Enduring Appraisal
Join Hands has undergone several reissues and remastering efforts to preserve and enhance its original post-punk sound. In 2006, Polydor/Universal released a remastered and expanded CD edition, digitally processed at Universal Digital Mastering in London and including two bonus tracks: the non-album single "The Staircase (Mix)" and its B-side "Wasteland."[1] This version addressed some production limitations of the 1979 original by improving clarity while retaining the album's raw intensity.[50]
A notable vinyl reissue occurred on April 18, 2015, for Record Store Day, pressed on 180-gram vinyl in a limited run of 1,000 copies exclusive to UK retailers, featuring the band's initially intended gatefold sleeve artwork by John Maybury.[27] Subsequent vinyl editions, remastered from the original quarter-inch tapes and half-speed mastered at Abbey Road Studios, have emphasized fidelity to the source material, appealing to audiophiles seeking superior sonic detail over the debut's lo-fi aesthetic.[51][52]
Enduring appraisals position Join Hands as a pivotal yet polarizing entry in Siouxsie and the Banshees' discography, praised for its uncompromising bleakness and influence on goth's sonic frontiers but critiqued for monotonous tempos and underdeveloped arrangements amid internal turmoil. AllMusic rates it 7 out of 10, noting the tracks' grim lyrics, dragging rhythms, and static structures that evoke a subterranean isolation reflective of the band's 1979 mindset.[9][53] Retrospective analyses, such as those aggregating user data on Rate Your Music (average 3.2/5 from over 2,800 ratings), highlight its experimental edge in post-punk but fault the production's muddiness and lack of dynamism compared to The Scream or later works like Juju.[54] Pitchfork credits the album's early dissonance with delineating goth's thematic and musical boundaries, underscoring its role in the genre's foundational evolution despite not ranking among the band's peaks.[55] Critics like those at Progrography describe it as unrelentingly intense, refusing warmth or respite, which amplifies its morbid appeal but risks listener fatigue.[3] Overall, its legacy endures as a raw document of transitional strife, valued by dedicated fans for authenticity over polish, with remasters sustaining accessibility for newer audiences exploring post-punk's darker strains.[7]
Track Listing and Credits
Standard Track Listing
All tracks are written by Siouxsie Sioux, Steven Severin, John McKay and Kenny Morris unless otherwise noted.[1]| Side | No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | "Poppy Day" | Adapted from John McCrae | 2:02 [1] |
| A | 2 | "Regal Zone" | Siouxsie and the Banshees | 3:47 [1] |
| A | 3 | "Placebo Effect" | Siouxsie and the Banshees | 4:38 [1] |
| A | 4 | "Icon" | Siouxsie and the Banshees | 5:27 [1] |
| B | 1 | "Premature Burial" | Siouxsie and the Banshees | 5:58 [1] |
| B | 2 | "Playground Twist" | Siouxsie and the Banshees | 3:01 [1] |
| B | 3 | "Mother/Oh Mein Papa" | Music: Paul Burkhard | 3:23 [1] |
| B | 4 | "The Lord's Prayer" | Siouxsie and the Banshees | 14:08 [1] |