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Through the Barricades (song)

"Through the Barricades" is a song by English new wave band Spandau Ballet, released as the second single from their 1986 studio album of the same name. The song was inspired by the murder of a member of the band's road crew in Belfast during The Troubles and emerged as the Spandau Ballet song that the band members rated the best. It reached number six on the UK Singles Chart, becoming their final top ten hit, and made the top ten elsewhere.

"Through the Barricades"
Single by Spandau Ballet
from the album Through the Barricades
B-side"With the Pride" (Live in '85)
Released27 October 1986
Recorded1986
GenreSoft rock[1]
Length
  • 5:20 (single/video version)
  • 5:58 (album version)
  • 7:09 (extended version)
LabelCBS
Songwriter(s)Gary Kemp
Producer(s)
Spandau Ballet singles chronology
"Fight for Ourselves"
(1986)
"Through the Barricades"
(1986)
"How Many Lies"
(1987)

Background edit

When Spandau Ballet guitarist/songwriter Gary Kemp met his "True" object of affection Clare Grogan in 1981,[2] her band Altered Images employed Belfast native Thomas "Kidso" Reilly as a member of their road crew. Spandau Ballet hired him to sell merchandise during their 1983 UK tour and enjoyed his upbeat personality.[3][a] He became a casualty of The Troubles, however, on 9 August 1983 when he was walking with a group in which someone ridiculed a British army patrol.[4] Kemp described the incident in his 2009 autobiography I Know This Much: From Soho to Spandau:[3]

One hot, sunny evening, Kidso was walking home bare chested through the streets of West Belfast, when he and a few friends were stopped by an army patrol. After giving his name and details he walked away. In one hand was his takeout, in the other his T-shirt. A few seconds later he was dead, shot in the back by a young private who would later become the first British soldier convicted of murder while serving in Northern Ireland. Kidso was twenty-three.

The band's first exposure to the political climate in Belfast on that year's tour was especially eye-opening,[5][b] but it was their stop there on the Parade tour in 1984 that inspired Kemp to use the setting as a backdrop for a song. He met with Kidso's brother, who took him to Milltown Cemetery to see Kidso's grave. During their trip down the Falls Road along the way, Kemp was taken aback by the sight of the barricades that were used as peace lines.[6][c]

Composition and lyrical interpretation edit

The band later spent time in Dublin,[7][d] and Kemp began writing the songs for their next album there over the course of six months in 1985.[8][e] After spending an evening reading about the history of The Troubles, he was again consumed by the political climate in Belfast and his memory of the visit to Kidso's grave.[9][f] He woke after little sleep and felt compelled to get up and write down the lyrics that came to mind.[9][g] In a Mastertapes interview in 2013 he told John Wilson, "[T]he first thing that probably came along was, 'I know what they're saying. It's a terrible beauty we've made,'"[10]: 5:13  the last half of which is a quote from the W. B. Yeats poem "Easter, 1916", about the Irish Easter Rising.[11][12] He also told Wilson it was a song he had written "completely lyric first".[10]: 5:03  The music came to him immediately as well.[9][h] When explaining to Wilson the arena rock sound he wanted for the album, Wilson asked if some of the intimacy of love songs gets lost. Kemp replied, "I think I tried as a writer to do both in 'Through the Barricades'. So that's the best of both worlds. It starts with a dry guitar, and it's very, very intimate and ends up singing to the galleries."[10]: 4:07  In his autobiography he wrote,[9]

Sure, hiding in there somewhere was Bowie with "Five Years" or "Life on Mars", but it owed more to my early prog rock records — a touch of Jethro Tull's Thick as a Brick maybe — as well as adolescent trips to folk clubs.

It's a song that represents anyone that's had struggles.

Martin Kemp[13]

Kemp felt writing it as a love song set against the divided city would be the best way to dramatize what he had seen,[9][i] and in 2015, he told the Belfast Telegraph, "I didn't expect it to come out in the shape of a Romeo and Juliet sort of song, but it did."[14] He explained at the time of the song's release that the "different sides of life" mentioned in the lyrics paralleled relationships between people of different races and religions found throughout the world.[15]: 23:48 [j] When asked if that choice was an indication of Spandau Ballet becoming more socially aware, he replied, "No, it's just, I think you can write love songs. That's very easy, but you've got to put that in a situation that's a bit more unusual to make it poignant."[15]: 24:19  Kemp's brother, Martin, the band's bassist, told the Belfast Telegraph in 2020, "It was written about Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland and finding love across that divide but it is also about finding love across any sort of divide that keeps people apart."[13] In an article titled "It's a Terrible Beauty We've Made: Singing 'Through the Barricades' with Spandau Ballet", Dr. Jason Eng Hun Lee of Hong Kong Baptist University wrote that the song can "teach us to reconcile with our adversaries and inner demons so that we might one day transcend these differences between us."[11] Discussing the song in the context of the band having reunited after a lawsuit over royalties kept them apart for many years, Gary Kemp said, "It's also a story about us… 'Through the Barricades' is what we had to do in the end."[16]: 5:16 

Recording edit

Because of the powerful subject matter, Kemp felt more connected to the song than he had others he had written[17][k] and felt possessive of it, so much so that he spent extra time performing the song for lead singer Tony Hadley to make sure he understood his concerns.[18][l] Hadley had a good working relationship with True and Parade producer Steve Jolley,[19][m] but the band wanted to move on to someone more suited to the sound of live performance that they wanted to have on their new studio album.[20][n] They chose Gary Langan, a recording engineer they met while working with Trevor Horn, as their producer on "Fight for Ourselves", the first single from the new album,[21] and decided to hire him to work in that same capacity on the project,[19][o] which would eventually also be called Through the Barricades.

[I]t was a very difficult song to arrange because… the more instruments we put on the beginning, the more it detracted from Tony's singing. So in the end we just said, "Well, let's be brave enough to make it as simple as just an old-fashioned acoustic guitar and a voice."

– Gary Kemp[15]

Kemp sensed that the change in producers might reactivate old issues that began with recording Hadley's vocals for the Diamond album[19][p] when that producer, Richard James Burgess, tried having Hadley lie down in a sort of makeshift tent in the studio with candles lit to help him relax while he was singing.[22][q] Hadley also felt the other band members judging his every mistake at those sessions as they watched him record from the control room[22][r] to the point where he lost his temper.[23][s] The sentiment of "Through The Barricades" added to the tension in the studio as Hadley again felt the expectations of the band as they looked on.[24][t] Kemp recalled putting pressure on him as he tried to record the vocals:[25]

I'd been stopping Tony after every line. I could see him frustrated behind the glass…, but I gnawed away at any loose nuance. A few days earlier I'd played the guitar part, and then, at my suggestion, put on a guide vocal myself. It was meant to be a template for other overdubs but was more a flag of ownership stuck in the track. It only led to more pressure on Tony to deliver.

In his 2004 autobiography To Cut a Long Story Short, Hadley wrote, "Finally, I said, 'Look, I'll go away and learn the song in my own way and when I'm ready to sing it, I'll tell you. But I do not want everyone in the studio.'" He eventually recorded it with just Langan present,[24] but Kemp claims that it was Langan who suggested this.[26][u] Afterward Kemp also admitted that Hadley gave his best performance ever.[26]

Release and commercial performance edit

"Through the Barricades" was released in the UK on 27 October 1986[27] and peaked at number six on the UK Singles Chart, remaining on the chart for ten weeks.[28][29] Although the band thought it would be successful, they were disappointed that it did not chart higher there.[30][v] It gave them their first number one in Italy[31] and also reached number two in Spain,[32] number three in the Netherlands,[33] number four in Ireland,[34] number six on the European Hot 100,[35] number seven in Norway,[36] number ten in Belgium,[37] number 14 in West Germany[38] and number 50 in Australia.[39] It received Silver certification from the British Phonographic Industry on 2 April 2021 for reaching the 200,000 units of shipment threshold.[40]

In the US, Billboard magazine's 29 November 1986 issue reported that the song would be released there as a single in early 1987,[41] but instead the release of "How Many Lies" in the US in March came right behind that song's UK release in February.[42] Both Billboard[43] and Cash Box[44] indicated that "How Many Lies" was the first single that was released in the US from the Through the Barricades album in their respective single reviews. Billboard reported on the availability of the "Through the Barricades" music video for programming in the US in its 16 May 1987 issue,[45] and Cash Box reviewed the song in its Single Releases column the following month, in its 20 June issue.[46]

Critical reception edit

"Through the Barricades" received mixed reviews at the time of its release. In recommending the single to retailers and radio stations, the editors of Cash Box felt it had "enough appealing elements to be the rare ballad to become a hit with CHR programmers."[46] Simon Mills of Smash Hits magazine considered the song's title "preposterous" and, after quoting the lyrics, described the recording as "all tinged with a vaguely Gaelic, acoustic feel. I'm sure it's all very sincere and significant. I just can't stand it."[47] Number One's Anna Martin wrote, "Unadventurous but highly polished, this is very much a classic Spands release—a safe and surefire hit."[48] When the Through the Barricades album was released, her colleague Karen Swayne wrote that both the title song and the album showed that Kemp "still has a way with a catchy chorus and a sure commercial instinct".[49] In a review of the album for Record Mirror, Roger Morton opined that the songs were "ultimately neutered by the self-conscious classiness of it all," concluding that "even the title song's beautifully crafted, doubtlessly sincere lament for Northern Ireland ends up sounding bogus."[50]

Retrospective reviews also varied. Dan LeRoy of AllMusic called it "the best song by far" on its album.[51] In a review of a concert from the band's reunion tour in 2009, the critic for The Independent dismissed it as "unimaginably patronising".[1] During his time with BBC Radio Ulster in 2010, Stuart Bailie described the song as "repellent".[12] Ian Gittins was critical of the song in The Guardian in 2014, describing it as "one of Spandau's more ponderous, clunky numbers".[52]

Aftermath edit

Kemp received the award for Outstanding Song Collection at the 2012 Ivor Novello Awards and named "Through the Barricades" as "one I'm really close to."[53] Other band members and Langan have been generous in their praise of the song since its release. Tony Hadley said that he considers it to be the band's best song,[54] adding in his autobiography that "in the years that followed, nothing else came close".[24] When asked about his first impression of the song by Dutch Public TV in 2014, drummer John Keeble said, "Astonishing. I mean, it was, you know, the best thing I'd ever heard, and it was like, 'Wow, where did that come from?'"[16]: 3:07  When the Through the Barricades album was remastered in 2017, Langan recalled listening to all the demos when he agreed to produce the original album and singling it out as the "killer song", explaining, "Back then albums had to have the single, the killer song, and unless you had that it wasn't deemed that you had a successful album."[15]: 19:31  Martin Kemp told the Belfast Telegraph that, for him, the song "means the most because it was about finding love across a divide, no matter what that divide is… They're the sort of stories that touch my heart the most."[13]

Hadley performed the song as part of his three-song set in the final of ITV reality show Reborn in the USA in 2003, which saw him win the public vote against Michelle Gayle.[55]

Track listings edit

Charts edit

Certifications edit

Certifications for "Through the Barricades"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Italy (FIMI)[62] Gold 25,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[40] Silver 200,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Kidso was a Belfast boy whose Falls Road accent revealed his allegiances. I’d met this ardent Celtic fan — christened Thomas Reilly — during my courtly friendship with Clare Grogan. Small, dark and fit for the street, he’d worked with Altered Images as part of their road crew, but later, in 1983, he joined us on our UK tour, helping, rather successfully, to sell merchandise. We soon became very fond of him. He was a good guy whose optimistic temperament encouraged others to fold their proverbial wings around him."[3]
  2. ^ "For a band used to touring Western cities, Belfast came as a shock. The observation towers that loomed like giant beasts of war flagged up the city’s difference as soon as you arrived. And then there were the army trucks, cruising nervously through the old streets, the tanks, the RUC's bullet-proof vans, and the general visibility of weaponry, all of which told of a city under occupation, a city that in 1983 I found impossible to imagine as part of the cosy, tea-and-toast Britain I thought I knew."[5]
  3. ^ "The following year we were back in Belfast for the Parade tour and I'm introduced to Jim Reilly. He's a drummer — he'd played in the punk band Stiff Little Fingers — but he's also Kidso's brother and he came along to meet us at the King's Hall. Somehow he and I decided that he'd walk me down the Falls Road the next day, for a little insight into how he and his family lived. What affected me most as we walked were the so-called 'peace lines' that blocked the streets branching off that Catholic thoroughfare. On the other side I saw people walking, dressed in a similar style, fellow citizens, no different from the people I found myself with on this side, but, cordoned off by the barricades, they could have been on another continent."[6]
  4. ^ "The best time we had was together in Dublin."[7]
  5. ^ "Spandau's 17th single, a song about love across the Protestant and Catholic divides of Northern Ireland written, like the album, in Dublin during six months of last year, is as far removed from the pleasure-loving, soul boy days of 'Chant No. 1' as possible."[8]
  6. ^ "A few months later, living in Dublin, I'm doing my history, and Ulick O’Connor’s The Troubles lodges upon my bedside table. One night, while reading, I find myself thinking of that day, of Kidso, of the barricades and the divided people. What do I know? I'm a privileged pop star. But what I did know, as I closed the book, was how affected I was by it all."[9]
  7. ^ "About two in the morning I wake, and lying beneath the covers find lines forming in my head... In all my time of writing songs I’d never leapt, cliché-like, from the bed in search of a pen, but now I am."[9]
  8. ^ "It came in one sitting; a surprise delivery of lyrics and music."[9]
  9. ^ "It’s a love song — that’s what I know best; no: that’s how best to tell it - a Romeo and Juliet tale set somewhere divided, somewhere torn, somewhere made for a tragic assignation. Belfast."[9]
  10. ^ "It's like a Romeo and Juliet situation. It's a love story where the individuals come from either different races or different religions and just the problems that would occur in that situation. Um, it's quite sad in a way because that thing is happening all over the world, not just in places like Northern Ireland or South Africa, say, but in London with a black and white relationship."[15]
  11. ^ "It was climactic and dramatic, and all in all I began to have a relationship with it like no other song I’d ever written. When you sang it, you felt its power."[17]
  12. ^ "As the band began to find their way through it, I made reasoned excuses to Tony as to why I should sing it just one more time — 'Have a listen to how the middle section goes' — 'Just read the lyrics for now until you get the vibe'— 'Let me show you again'. I had to let the song go, but with 'Barricades' a dangerous desire to own it started to form within me."[18]
  13. ^ "Tony’d lost the mentor he had in Steve Jolley."[19]
  14. ^ "We wanted to move on from Swain and Jolley, we wanted a bigger, meatier sound, one more suitable to the arenas we were now playing."[20]
  15. ^ "Working in Germany in the wintery new year of 1986, we got off to a great start with the song 'Fight For Ourselves' and rubber-stamped Langan through into continuing the co-production of the whole album with us."[19]
  16. ^ "For Tony, it must have brought back all the fear he felt back under that Turkish rug."[19]
  17. ^ "It was while I was wrestling with 'Paint Me Down' that Richard Burgess came up with what he thought was an inspired idea. He had heard - although precisely where from remains a mystery - that singers sometimes performed better lying down. He wanted to put me in a tent with a few candles to create a relaxed mood."[22]
  18. ^ "As I sweated, the rest of the band watched from behind the glass that separated the studio from the control room. Everyone was willing me to get it right, which only made matters worse. Each time I messed up a line I sensed a collective rolling of the eyes."[22]
  19. ^ "I don't even remember which track I was struggling with. I just remember losing it. Again, the rest of the band was watching from the control room."[23]
  20. ^ "When we recorded it there was a lot of pressure to get it right. I remember working on the vocals in the studio at Musicland, as Gary and the others watched from the control room. It was incredibly off-putting, everyone going on about the sentiment of the song, and how important it was."[24]
  21. ^ "Langan turned the talkback button to off so Tony couldn’t hear what we were saying. 'Look, Gary, why don't we start again tomorrow on this? But maybe I should do it my own with Tony.'"[26]
  22. ^ "We were confident it would be a huge hit. When it peaked at Number 6 in November ’86, we were all disappointed. It deserved to be a bigger hit."[30]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Robbie Williams, Roundhouse, London Spandau Ballet, O2, London". The Independent. 25 October 2009. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022.
  2. ^ Myers, Marc (27 December 2017). . The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 17 April 2022. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Kemp 2009, p. 235
  4. ^ "British soldier sentenced to life". United Press International. 15 December 1984. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  5. ^ a b Kemp 2009, pp. 235–236
  6. ^ a b Kemp 2009, pp. 236–237
  7. ^ a b Simper, Paul (12 July 1986). "I'm a Born Again Spandau". Number One. No. 160. p. 10. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  8. ^ a b Panos, Andrew (8 November 1986). "The Dance Goes On". Number One. No. 177. p. 6. Retrieved 30 September 2023.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kemp 2009, p. 237
  10. ^ a b c Kemp, Gary (24 June 2013). "Spandau Ballet (B-Side)". Mastertapes. Series 2. UK. BBC. BBC Radio 4. Retrieved 14 October 2023.
  11. ^ a b Lee, Jason Eng Hun (29 September 2017). "It's a Terrible Beauty We've Made: Singing Through the Barricades with Spandau Ballet". Hong Kong Baptist University. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
  12. ^ a b Bailie, Stuart (10 November 2010). "I'll Get You, William Butler..." BBC Radio Ulster. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
  13. ^ a b c "Martin Kemp: Spandau Ballet's Troubles track Through the Barricades means great deal to me". Belfast Telegraph. 29 November 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  14. ^ "Gary Kemp: When we played Through the Barricades in Belfast the reaction was incredible". Belfast Telegraph. 13 February 2015. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d e Gary Kemp, Gary Langan, John Keeble, Steve Norman. Through the Barricades documentary (Internet video). YouTube. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  16. ^ a b John Keeble, Gary Kemp. Spandau Ballet - Through the Barricades: The story behind the song – Top 2000 a gogo (Internet video). YouTube. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  17. ^ a b Kemp 2009, p. 240
  18. ^ a b Kemp 2009, p. 241
  19. ^ a b c d e f Kemp 2009, p. 242
  20. ^ a b Kemp 2009, p. 238
  21. ^ Kemp 2009, p. 238
  22. ^ a b c d Hadley 2004, p. 95
  23. ^ a b Hadley 2004, p. 96
  24. ^ a b c d Hadley 2004, p. 188
  25. ^ Kemp 2009, pp. 242–243
  26. ^ a b c Kemp 2009, p. 243
  27. ^ "Releases" (PDF). Record Mirror. 25 October 1986. p. 3. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  28. ^ a b "Spandau Ballet: Artist Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  29. ^ David Roberts, British Hit Singles and Albums, Guinness World Records Limited, p 518
  30. ^ a b Hadley 2004, pp. 188–189
  31. ^ a b "Classifiche". Musica e dischi (in Italian). Retrieved 24 June 2022. Select "Singoli" in the "Tipo" field, type "Through the Barricades" in the "Titolo" field and press "cerca".
  32. ^ a b Salaverrie, Fernando (September 2005). Sólo éxitos: año a año, 1959–2002 (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Madrid: Fundación Autor/SGAE. ISBN 84-8048-639-2.
  33. ^ a b "Nederlandse Top 40 – week 1, 1987" (in Dutch). Dutch Top 40. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  34. ^ a b "The Irish Charts – Search Results – Spandau Ballet". Irish Singles Chart. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
  35. ^ a b "European Hot 100 Singles" (PDF). Music & Media. Vol. 3, no. 50. 20 December 1986. p. 16. OCLC 29800226 – via World Radio History.
  36. ^ a b "Spandau Ballet – Through the Barricades". VG-lista. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  37. ^ a b "Spandau Ballet – Through the Barricades" (in Dutch). Ultratop 50. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  38. ^ a b "Offiziellecharts.de – Spandau Ballet – Through the Barricades" (in German). GfK Entertainment charts. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  39. ^ a b Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 286. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  40. ^ a b "British single certifications – Spandau Ballet – Through the Barricades". British Phonographic Industry. 2 April 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  41. ^ Gett, Steve (29 November 1986). "On the Beat" (PDF). Billboard. p. 21. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
  42. ^ "News digest". Record Mirror. 31 January 1987. p. 14. Retrieved 9 December 2023 – via flickr.com.
  43. ^ "Reviews > Singles > Pop > Picks > Spandau Ballet – How Many Lies" (PDF). Billboard. 21 March 1987. p. 75. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  44. ^ "Single Releases >Feature Picks >Spandau Ballet – How Many Lies" (PDF). Cashbox. 21 March 1987. p. 9. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  45. ^ "New Videoclips" (PDF). Billboard. 16 May 1987. p. 57. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  46. ^ a b "Single Releases >Feature Picks >Spandau Ballet – Through the Barricades" (PDF). Cashbox. 20 June 1987. p. 9. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  47. ^ Mills, Simon (22 October – 4 November 1986). "Spandau Ballet: "Through the Barricades"". Smash Hits. Vol. 8, no. 22. p. 31. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  48. ^ Martin, Anna (1 November 1986). "Spandau Ballet: Through the Barricades". Number One. No. 176. p. 38. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  49. ^ Swayne, Karen (22 November 1986). "Spandau Ballet: Through the Barricades". Number One. No. 179. p. 46. Retrieved 27 November 2023.
  50. ^ Morton, Roger (22 November 1986). "Spandau Ballet: Through the Barricades" (PDF). Record Mirror. Vol. 33, no. 47. p. 12. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
  51. ^ LeRoy, Dan. "Through the Barricades". AllMusic. Retrieved 4 May 2014.
  52. ^ Gittins, Ian (1 October 2014). "Spandau Ballet review – return of the shoulder-heaving soul boys". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  53. ^ "Gary Kemp 'Complete' With Ivor Novello Award". Contact Music. 18 May 2012. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  54. ^ Bernstein, Jonathan (4 October 2014). "Spandau Ballet's True story: 1980s pop stars on how their hits were written". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  55. ^ "Hadley wins Reborn contest". BBC News. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  56. ^ Through the Barricades (7-inch single liner notes). Spandau Ballet. CBS. 1986. SPANS1.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  57. ^ Through the Barricades (7-inch single liner notes). Spandau Ballet. Epic Records. 1986. 34-07190.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  58. ^ Through the Barricades (12-inch single liner notes). Spandau Ballet. CBS. 1986. SPANST1.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  59. ^ "Spandau Ballet – Through the Barricades" (in Dutch). Single Top 100. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  60. ^ "Top 100-Jaaroverzicht van 1987" (in Dutch). Dutch Top 40. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  61. ^ "Jaaroverzichten – Single 1987" (in Dutch). Dutch Charts. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  62. ^ "Italian single certifications – Spandau Ballet – Through the Barricades" (in Italian). Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana. Retrieved 16 December 2019. Select "2019" in the "Anno" drop-down menu. Select "Through the Barricades" in the "Filtra" field. Select "Singoli" under "Sezione".

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • "Through the Barricades" Official Music Video on YouTube

through, barricades, song, through, barricades, song, english, wave, band, spandau, ballet, released, second, single, from, their, 1986, studio, album, same, name, song, inspired, murder, member, band, road, crew, belfast, during, troubles, emerged, spandau, b. Through the Barricades is a song by English new wave band Spandau Ballet released as the second single from their 1986 studio album of the same name The song was inspired by the murder of a member of the band s road crew in Belfast during The Troubles and emerged as the Spandau Ballet song that the band members rated the best It reached number six on the UK Singles Chart becoming their final top ten hit and made the top ten elsewhere Through the Barricades Single by Spandau Balletfrom the album Through the BarricadesB side With the Pride Live in 85 Released27 October 1986Recorded1986GenreSoft rock 1 Length5 20 single video version 5 58 album version 7 09 extended version LabelCBSSongwriter s Gary KempProducer s Gary Langan Spandau BalletSpandau Ballet singles chronology Fight for Ourselves 1986 Through the Barricades 1986 How Many Lies 1987 Contents 1 Background 2 Composition and lyrical interpretation 3 Recording 4 Release and commercial performance 5 Critical reception 6 Aftermath 7 Track listings 8 Charts 8 1 Weekly charts 8 2 Year end charts 9 Certifications 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksBackground editWhen Spandau Ballet guitarist songwriter Gary Kemp met his True object of affection Clare Grogan in 1981 2 her band Altered Images employed Belfast native Thomas Kidso Reilly as a member of their road crew Spandau Ballet hired him to sell merchandise during their 1983 UK tour and enjoyed his upbeat personality 3 a He became a casualty of The Troubles however on 9 August 1983 when he was walking with a group in which someone ridiculed a British army patrol 4 Kemp described the incident in his 2009 autobiography I Know This Much From Soho to Spandau 3 One hot sunny evening Kidso was walking home bare chested through the streets of West Belfast when he and a few friends were stopped by an army patrol After giving his name and details he walked away In one hand was his takeout in the other his T shirt A few seconds later he was dead shot in the back by a young private who would later become the first British soldier convicted of murder while serving in Northern Ireland Kidso was twenty three The band s first exposure to the political climate in Belfast on that year s tour was especially eye opening 5 b but it was their stop there on the Parade tour in 1984 that inspired Kemp to use the setting as a backdrop for a song He met with Kidso s brother who took him to Milltown Cemetery to see Kidso s grave During their trip down the Falls Road along the way Kemp was taken aback by the sight of the barricades that were used as peace lines 6 c Composition and lyrical interpretation editThe band later spent time in Dublin 7 d and Kemp began writing the songs for their next album there over the course of six months in 1985 8 e After spending an evening reading about the history of The Troubles he was again consumed by the political climate in Belfast and his memory of the visit to Kidso s grave 9 f He woke after little sleep and felt compelled to get up and write down the lyrics that came to mind 9 g In a Mastertapes interview in 2013 he told John Wilson T he first thing that probably came along was I know what they re saying It s a terrible beauty we ve made 10 5 13 the last half of which is a quote from the W B Yeats poem Easter 1916 about the Irish Easter Rising 11 12 He also told Wilson it was a song he had written completely lyric first 10 5 03 The music came to him immediately as well 9 h When explaining to Wilson the arena rock sound he wanted for the album Wilson asked if some of the intimacy of love songs gets lost Kemp replied I think I tried as a writer to do both in Through the Barricades So that s the best of both worlds It starts with a dry guitar and it s very very intimate and ends up singing to the galleries 10 4 07 In his autobiography he wrote 9 Sure hiding in there somewhere was Bowie with Five Years or Life on Mars but it owed more to my early prog rock records a touch of Jethro Tull s Thick as a Brick maybe as well as adolescent trips to folk clubs It s a song that represents anyone that s had struggles Martin Kemp 13 Kemp felt writing it as a love song set against the divided city would be the best way to dramatize what he had seen 9 i and in 2015 he told the Belfast Telegraph I didn t expect it to come out in the shape of a Romeo and Juliet sort of song but it did 14 He explained at the time of the song s release that the different sides of life mentioned in the lyrics paralleled relationships between people of different races and religions found throughout the world 15 23 48 j When asked if that choice was an indication of Spandau Ballet becoming more socially aware he replied No it s just I think you can write love songs That s very easy but you ve got to put that in a situation that s a bit more unusual to make it poignant 15 24 19 Kemp s brother Martin the band s bassist told the Belfast Telegraph in 2020 It was written about Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland and finding love across that divide but it is also about finding love across any sort of divide that keeps people apart 13 In an article titled It s a Terrible Beauty We ve Made Singing Through the Barricades with Spandau Ballet Dr Jason Eng Hun Lee of Hong Kong Baptist University wrote that the song can teach us to reconcile with our adversaries and inner demons so that we might one day transcend these differences between us 11 Discussing the song in the context of the band having reunited after a lawsuit over royalties kept them apart for many years Gary Kemp said It s also a story about us Through the Barricades is what we had to do in the end 16 5 16 Recording editBecause of the powerful subject matter Kemp felt more connected to the song than he had others he had written 17 k and felt possessive of it so much so that he spent extra time performing the song for lead singer Tony Hadley to make sure he understood his concerns 18 l Hadley had a good working relationship with True and Parade producer Steve Jolley 19 m but the band wanted to move on to someone more suited to the sound of live performance that they wanted to have on their new studio album 20 n They chose Gary Langan a recording engineer they met while working with Trevor Horn as their producer on Fight for Ourselves the first single from the new album 21 and decided to hire him to work in that same capacity on the project 19 o which would eventually also be called Through the Barricades I t was a very difficult song to arrange because the more instruments we put on the beginning the more it detracted from Tony s singing So in the end we just said Well let s be brave enough to make it as simple as just an old fashioned acoustic guitar and a voice Gary Kemp 15 Kemp sensed that the change in producers might reactivate old issues that began with recording Hadley s vocals for the Diamond album 19 p when that producer Richard James Burgess tried having Hadley lie down in a sort of makeshift tent in the studio with candles lit to help him relax while he was singing 22 q Hadley also felt the other band members judging his every mistake at those sessions as they watched him record from the control room 22 r to the point where he lost his temper 23 s The sentiment of Through The Barricades added to the tension in the studio as Hadley again felt the expectations of the band as they looked on 24 t Kemp recalled putting pressure on him as he tried to record the vocals 25 I d been stopping Tony after every line I could see him frustrated behind the glass but I gnawed away at any loose nuance A few days earlier I d played the guitar part and then at my suggestion put on a guide vocal myself It was meant to be a template for other overdubs but was more a flag of ownership stuck in the track It only led to more pressure on Tony to deliver In his 2004 autobiography To Cut a Long Story Short Hadley wrote Finally I said Look I ll go away and learn the song in my own way and when I m ready to sing it I ll tell you But I do not want everyone in the studio He eventually recorded it with just Langan present 24 but Kemp claims that it was Langan who suggested this 26 u Afterward Kemp also admitted that Hadley gave his best performance ever 26 Release and commercial performance edit Through the Barricades was released in the UK on 27 October 1986 27 and peaked at number six on the UK Singles Chart remaining on the chart for ten weeks 28 29 Although the band thought it would be successful they were disappointed that it did not chart higher there 30 v It gave them their first number one in Italy 31 and also reached number two in Spain 32 number three in the Netherlands 33 number four in Ireland 34 number six on the European Hot 100 35 number seven in Norway 36 number ten in Belgium 37 number 14 in West Germany 38 and number 50 in Australia 39 It received Silver certification from the British Phonographic Industry on 2 April 2021 for reaching the 200 000 units of shipment threshold 40 In the US Billboard magazine s 29 November 1986 issue reported that the song would be released there as a single in early 1987 41 but instead the release of How Many Lies in the US in March came right behind that song s UK release in February 42 Both Billboard 43 and Cash Box 44 indicated that How Many Lies was the first single that was released in the US from the Through the Barricades album in their respective single reviews Billboard reported on the availability of the Through the Barricades music video for programming in the US in its 16 May 1987 issue 45 and Cash Box reviewed the song in its Single Releases column the following month in its 20 June issue 46 Critical reception edit Through the Barricades received mixed reviews at the time of its release In recommending the single to retailers and radio stations the editors of Cash Box felt it had enough appealing elements to be the rare ballad to become a hit with CHR programmers 46 Simon Mills of Smash Hits magazine considered the song s title preposterous and after quoting the lyrics described the recording as all tinged with a vaguely Gaelic acoustic feel I m sure it s all very sincere and significant I just can t stand it 47 Number One s Anna Martin wrote Unadventurous but highly polished this is very much a classic Spands release a safe and surefire hit 48 When the Through the Barricades album was released her colleague Karen Swayne wrote that both the title song and the album showed that Kemp still has a way with a catchy chorus and a sure commercial instinct 49 In a review of the album for Record Mirror Roger Morton opined that the songs were ultimately neutered by the self conscious classiness of it all concluding that even the title song s beautifully crafted doubtlessly sincere lament for Northern Ireland ends up sounding bogus 50 Retrospective reviews also varied Dan LeRoy of AllMusic called it the best song by far on its album 51 In a review of a concert from the band s reunion tour in 2009 the critic for The Independent dismissed it as unimaginably patronising 1 During his time with BBC Radio Ulster in 2010 Stuart Bailie described the song as repellent 12 Ian Gittins was critical of the song in The Guardian in 2014 describing it as one of Spandau s more ponderous clunky numbers 52 Aftermath editKemp received the award for Outstanding Song Collection at the 2012 Ivor Novello Awards and named Through the Barricades as one I m really close to 53 Other band members and Langan have been generous in their praise of the song since its release Tony Hadley said that he considers it to be the band s best song 54 adding in his autobiography that in the years that followed nothing else came close 24 When asked about his first impression of the song by Dutch Public TV in 2014 drummer John Keeble said Astonishing I mean it was you know the best thing I d ever heard and it was like Wow where did that come from 16 3 07 When the Through the Barricades album was remastered in 2017 Langan recalled listening to all the demos when he agreed to produce the original album and singling it out as the killer song explaining Back then albums had to have the single the killer song and unless you had that it wasn t deemed that you had a successful album 15 19 31 Martin Kemp told the Belfast Telegraph that for him the song means the most because it was about finding love across a divide no matter what that divide is They re the sort of stories that touch my heart the most 13 Hadley performed the song as part of his three song set in the final of ITV reality show Reborn in the USA in 2003 which saw him win the public vote against Michelle Gayle 55 Track listings edit7 inch single 56 A Through the Barricades 5 10 B With the Pride Live in 85 5 30 7 inch single US only 57 A Through the Barricades 5 56 B Snakes and Lovers 4 30 12 inch single 58 A Through the Barricades extended version 7 08 B1 With the Pride Live in 85 5 30 B2 Through the Barricades album version 5 55Charts editWeekly charts edit Weekly chart performance for Through the Barricades Chart 1986 1987 Peakposition Australia Kent Music Report 39 50 Belgium Ultratop 50 Flanders 37 10 Europe European Hot 100 Singles 35 6 Ireland IRMA 34 4 Italy Musica e dischi 31 1 Netherlands Dutch Top 40 33 3 Netherlands Single Top 100 59 4 Norway VG lista 36 7 Spain AFYVE 32 2 UK Singles OCC 28 6 West Germany Official German Charts 38 14 Year end charts edit Year end chart performance for Through the Barricades Chart 1987 Position Netherlands Dutch Top 40 60 77 Netherlands Single Top 100 61 100Certifications editCertifications for Through the Barricades Region Certification Certified units sales Italy FIMI 62 Gold 25 000 United Kingdom BPI 40 Silver 200 000 Sales streaming figures based on certification alone Notes edit Kidso was a Belfast boy whose Falls Road accent revealed his allegiances I d met this ardent Celtic fan christened Thomas Reilly during my courtly friendship with Clare Grogan Small dark and fit for the street he d worked with Altered Images as part of their road crew but later in 1983 he joined us on our UK tour helping rather successfully to sell merchandise We soon became very fond of him He was a good guy whose optimistic temperament encouraged others to fold their proverbial wings around him 3 For a band used to touring Western cities Belfast came as a shock The observation towers that loomed like giant beasts of war flagged up the city s difference as soon as you arrived And then there were the army trucks cruising nervously through the old streets the tanks the RUC s bullet proof vans and the general visibility of weaponry all of which told of a city under occupation a city that in 1983 I found impossible to imagine as part of the cosy tea and toast Britain I thought I knew 5 The following year we were back in Belfast for the Parade tour and I m introduced to Jim Reilly He s a drummer he d played in the punk band Stiff Little Fingers but he s also Kidso s brother and he came along to meet us at the King s Hall Somehow he and I decided that he d walk me down the Falls Road the next day for a little insight into how he and his family lived What affected me most as we walked were the so called peace lines that blocked the streets branching off that Catholic thoroughfare On the other side I saw people walking dressed in a similar style fellow citizens no different from the people I found myself with on this side but cordoned off by the barricades they could have been on another continent 6 The best time we had was together in Dublin 7 Spandau s 17th single a song about love across the Protestant and Catholic divides of Northern Ireland written like the album in Dublin during six months of last year is as far removed from the pleasure loving soul boy days of Chant No 1 as possible 8 A few months later living in Dublin I m doing my history and Ulick O Connor s The Troubles lodges upon my bedside table One night while reading I find myself thinking of that day of Kidso of the barricades and the divided people What do I know I m a privileged pop star But what I did know as I closed the book was how affected I was by it all 9 About two in the morning I wake and lying beneath the covers find lines forming in my head In all my time of writing songs I d never leapt cliche like from the bed in search of a pen but now I am 9 It came in one sitting a surprise delivery of lyrics and music 9 It s a love song that s what I know best no that s how best to tell it a Romeo and Juliet tale set somewhere divided somewhere torn somewhere made for a tragic assignation Belfast 9 It s like a Romeo and Juliet situation It s a love story where the individuals come from either different races or different religions and just the problems that would occur in that situation Um it s quite sad in a way because that thing is happening all over the world not just in places like Northern Ireland or South Africa say but in London with a black and white relationship 15 It was climactic and dramatic and all in all I began to have a relationship with it like no other song I d ever written When you sang it you felt its power 17 As the band began to find their way through it I made reasoned excuses to Tony as to why I should sing it just one more time Have a listen to how the middle section goes Just read the lyrics for now until you get the vibe Let me show you again I had to let the song go but with Barricades a dangerous desire to own it started to form within me 18 Tony d lost the mentor he had in Steve Jolley 19 We wanted to move on from Swain and Jolley we wanted a bigger meatier sound one more suitable to the arenas we were now playing 20 Working in Germany in the wintery new year of 1986 we got off to a great start with the song Fight For Ourselves and rubber stamped Langan through into continuing the co production of the whole album with us 19 For Tony it must have brought back all the fear he felt back under that Turkish rug 19 It was while I was wrestling with Paint Me Down that Richard Burgess came up with what he thought was an inspired idea He had heard although precisely where from remains a mystery that singers sometimes performed better lying down He wanted to put me in a tent with a few candles to create a relaxed mood 22 As I sweated the rest of the band watched from behind the glass that separated the studio from the control room Everyone was willing me to get it right which only made matters worse Each time I messed up a line I sensed a collective rolling of the eyes 22 I don t even remember which track I was struggling with I just remember losing it Again the rest of the band was watching from the control room 23 When we recorded it there was a lot of pressure to get it right I remember working on the vocals in the studio at Musicland as Gary and the others watched from the control room It was incredibly off putting everyone going on about the sentiment of the song and how important it was 24 Langan turned the talkback button to off so Tony couldn t hear what we were saying Look Gary why don t we start again tomorrow on this But maybe I should do it my own with Tony 26 We were confident it would be a huge hit When it peaked at Number 6 in November 86 we were all disappointed It deserved to be a bigger hit 30 References edit a b Robbie Williams Roundhouse London Spandau Ballet O2 London The Independent 25 October 2009 Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Myers Marc 27 December 2017 The Story Behind the Making of Spandau Ballet s True The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 17 April 2022 Retrieved 31 August 2023 a b c Kemp 2009 p 235 British soldier sentenced to life United Press International 15 December 1984 Retrieved 9 October 2020 a b Kemp 2009 pp 235 236 a b Kemp 2009 pp 236 237 a b Simper Paul 12 July 1986 I m a Born Again Spandau Number One No 160 p 10 Retrieved 28 September 2023 a b Panos Andrew 8 November 1986 The Dance Goes On Number One No 177 p 6 Retrieved 30 September 2023 a b c d e f g h i Kemp 2009 p 237 a b c Kemp Gary 24 June 2013 Spandau Ballet B Side Mastertapes Series 2 UK BBC BBC Radio 4 Retrieved 14 October 2023 a b Lee Jason Eng Hun 29 September 2017 It s a Terrible Beauty We ve Made Singing Through the Barricades with Spandau Ballet Hong Kong Baptist University Retrieved 13 April 2022 a b Bailie Stuart 10 November 2010 I ll Get You William Butler BBC Radio Ulster Retrieved 13 April 2022 a b c Martin Kemp Spandau Ballet s Troubles track Through the Barricades means great deal to me Belfast Telegraph 29 November 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2023 Gary Kemp When we played Through the Barricades in Belfast the reaction was incredible Belfast Telegraph 13 February 2015 Retrieved 6 June 2019 a b c d e Gary Kemp Gary Langan John Keeble Steve Norman Through the Barricades documentary Internet video YouTube Retrieved 11 September 2023 a b John Keeble Gary Kemp Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades The story behind the song Top 2000 a gogo Internet video YouTube Retrieved 21 November 2023 a b Kemp 2009 p 240 a b Kemp 2009 p 241 a b c d e f Kemp 2009 p 242 a b Kemp 2009 p 238 Kemp 2009 p 238 a b c d Hadley 2004 p 95 a b Hadley 2004 p 96 a b c d Hadley 2004 p 188 Kemp 2009 pp 242 243 a b c Kemp 2009 p 243 Releases PDF Record Mirror 25 October 1986 p 3 Retrieved 7 April 2022 a b Spandau Ballet Artist Chart History Official Charts Company Retrieved 24 June 2022 David Roberts British Hit Singles and Albums Guinness World Records Limited p 518 a b Hadley 2004 pp 188 189 a b Classifiche Musica e dischi in Italian Retrieved 24 June 2022 Select Singoli in the Tipo field type Through the Barricades in the Titolo field and press cerca a b Salaverrie Fernando September 2005 Solo exitos ano a ano 1959 2002 in Spanish 1st ed Madrid Fundacion Autor SGAE ISBN 84 8048 639 2 a b Nederlandse Top 40 week 1 1987 in Dutch Dutch Top 40 Retrieved 27 April 2021 a b The Irish Charts Search Results Spandau Ballet Irish Singles Chart Retrieved 3 December 2023 a b European Hot 100 Singles PDF Music amp Media Vol 3 no 50 20 December 1986 p 16 OCLC 29800226 via World Radio History a b Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades VG lista Retrieved 27 April 2021 a b Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades in Dutch Ultratop 50 Retrieved 27 April 2021 a b Offiziellecharts de Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades in German GfK Entertainment charts Retrieved 27 April 2021 a b Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 illustrated ed St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book p 286 ISBN 0 646 11917 6 a b British single certifications Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades British Phonographic Industry 2 April 2021 Retrieved 9 April 2021 Gett Steve 29 November 1986 On the Beat PDF Billboard p 21 Retrieved 8 December 2023 News digest Record Mirror 31 January 1987 p 14 Retrieved 9 December 2023 via flickr com Reviews gt Singles gt Pop gt Picks gt Spandau Ballet How Many Lies PDF Billboard 21 March 1987 p 75 Retrieved 9 December 2023 Single Releases gt Feature Picks gt Spandau Ballet How Many Lies PDF Cashbox 21 March 1987 p 9 Retrieved 9 December 2023 New Videoclips PDF Billboard 16 May 1987 p 57 Retrieved 9 December 2023 a b Single Releases gt Feature Picks gt Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades PDF Cashbox 20 June 1987 p 9 Retrieved 9 December 2023 Mills Simon 22 October 4 November 1986 Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades Smash Hits Vol 8 no 22 p 31 Retrieved 8 August 2023 Martin Anna 1 November 1986 Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades Number One No 176 p 38 Retrieved 8 August 2023 Swayne Karen 22 November 1986 Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades Number One No 179 p 46 Retrieved 27 November 2023 Morton Roger 22 November 1986 Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades PDF Record Mirror Vol 33 no 47 p 12 Retrieved 26 November 2023 LeRoy Dan Through the Barricades AllMusic Retrieved 4 May 2014 Gittins Ian 1 October 2014 Spandau Ballet review return of the shoulder heaving soul boys The Guardian Retrieved 6 June 2019 Gary Kemp Complete With Ivor Novello Award Contact Music 18 May 2012 Retrieved 18 June 2013 Bernstein Jonathan 4 October 2014 Spandau Ballet s True story 1980s pop stars on how their hits were written The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 6 June 2019 Hadley wins Reborn contest BBC News Retrieved 18 June 2013 Through the Barricades 7 inch single liner notes Spandau Ballet CBS 1986 SPANS1 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Through the Barricades 7 inch single liner notes Spandau Ballet Epic Records 1986 34 07190 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Through the Barricades 12 inch single liner notes Spandau Ballet CBS 1986 SPANST1 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades in Dutch Single Top 100 Retrieved 27 April 2021 Top 100 Jaaroverzicht van 1987 in Dutch Dutch Top 40 Retrieved 27 April 2021 Jaaroverzichten Single 1987 in Dutch Dutch Charts Retrieved 27 April 2021 Italian single certifications Spandau Ballet Through the Barricades in Italian Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana Retrieved 16 December 2019 Select 2019 in the Anno drop down menu Select Through the Barricades in the Filtra field Select Singoli under Sezione Bibliography editHadley Tony 2004 To Cut a Long Story Short London Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 978 0 283 07386 1 Kemp Gary 2009 I Know This Much From Soho to Spandau London Fourth Estate ISBN 978 0 00 732330 2 External links edit Through the Barricades Official Music Video on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Through the Barricades song amp oldid 1213732764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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