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"New Rose" by The Damned (band), The Damned was the first single by a British punk rock group, released on 22 October 1976 on Stiff Records, and in 1977 in the Netherlands, Germany and France. Written by guitarist Brian James (guitarist), Brian James, "New Rose" was also included on the group's full-length debut album, ''Damned Damned Damned''. The deadpan intro by singer Dave Vanian ("Is she really going out with him?") parodied the 1964 The Shangri-Las, Shangri-Las song "Leader of the Pack". The single's A-side and B-side, B-side was a cover of the Beatles' hit "Help! (song), Help!", performed about twice as fast as the original. Both songs became staples of the Damned's live shows, and appeared on various compilations. "New Rose" was reissued in Stiff's ''Damned 4 Pack'' mail-order set. Original copies had a press-out centre, while reissues had a solid centre. Copies from the four-pack had matrix details: "Bilbo tape" handwritten and "AY 50332" printed. A CD version was issued in the ''Stiff Singles 1976–1977'' boxed set by Castle Music in 2003. "Help!" also appeared on ''Hits Greatest Stiffs''.


Production

The song was produced by Nick Lowe. It was recorded at Pathway Studios in London, recorded in one day, according to drummer Rat Scabies. and "Nick Lowe may have taken an extra day to mix it".


Release

"New Rose" was released on 22 October 1976. James stated that Captain Sensible initially wanted the song "I Fall" as the first single. Sensible later said that "I Fall" would have been "even more gobsmacking because it's so snotty and fast".


Critical reception

In a retrospective review in 1992, music critic Dave Thompson (author), Dave Thompson heaped praise on the single:
'New Rose' is today rightly revered as one of the greatest songs to emerge from 1970s Britain. More than anything outside of the Sex Pistols, Pistols, 'New Rose' (and its flip, the relentless slaughter of the Beatles' 'Help') brought a focus to the still burgeoning punk scene, finally lifting it out of the musical basket it had hitherto shared with the The Stooges, Stooges/New York Dolls, Dolls/MC5 axis, and knocking the Dr. Feelgood (band), Feelgoods and Eddie and the Hot Rods, Hot Rods-powered Pub rock (United Kingdom), pub rock angle clean out of sight. This was no sub-metal snottiness, no high octane R&B revival. Rather, it was the absolute redefinition of all that rock 'n' roll held dear, a stunning return to basics which threw every last iota of expertise and experience to the winds. The band's detractors thought they were smart when they called the Damned's record 'primitive.' They were way off the mark – the Damned's fans saw it as primeval.
Daniel Ash of Bauhaus (band), Bauhaus and Love and Rockets (band), Love and Rockets called the song, "The perfect single".


Cover versions

Guns N' Roses covered the track on their 1993 covers album ''The Spaghetti Incident?''. When asked about the Guns N' Roses cover, Damned guitarist Captain Sensible said that he had not heard it because he does not listen to music released after 1980. The song was released as a promo single in 1993.new rose on Discogs
/ref> Duff McKagan, who performs the lead vocals on the track, has performed the song live with his various solo projects and with Guns N' Roses after he rejoined in 2016. Rachel Sweet covered the song on her 1980 album ''Protect the Innocent (Rachel Sweet album), Protect the Innocent''.


Track listing

# "New Rose" (James) – 2:46 # "Help!" (Lennon–McCartney) – 1:43


Production credits

* Producer: Nick Lowe * Musicians: ** Dave Vanian − Singing, vocals ** Brian James (guitarist), Brian James − guitar ** Captain Sensible − Bass guitar, bass ** Rat Scabies − Drum kit, drums


References

;Sources *


External links

* {{authority control 1976 debut singles The Damned (band) songs Guns N' Roses songs Songs written by Brian James (guitarist) Song recordings produced by Nick Lowe 1976 songs