Street Fighting Years Box Set

On 6th March 2020, UMC released a long awaited deluxe box set of Simple Minds’ 1989 number one album, Street Fighting Years.

Produced by Trevor Horn (and Stephen Lipson), Street Fighting Years was the band’s fourth number one album in the UK and featured their first UK number one single, Belfast Child.

Street Fighting Years is released in multiple formats which are all fully endorsed by the band. The album was remastered at Abbey Road studios by Simon Gibson and contains the album as well as a bonus disc of B-sides, edits and 12 remixes and a previously unissued Verona show from 1989 round the set off.

The booklet was designed by long time contributor Stuart Crouch and contains sleeve notes by Daryl Easlea who interviewed the band and producer Trevor Horn extensively for the set. They provide a fantastic insight into how the album was recorded and produced.

An artistically ambitious and elegant album, it arrived at a time of personnel changes. It saw the band reduced to a trio of Jim Kerr, Charlie Burchill and Mick MacNeil with session musicians playing the bass and most of the drum roles (notably Manu Katché from Peter Gabriel’s band and former Police drummer, Stewart Copeland).

Recorded in Scotland between 1988 and 1989, it was also a stylistic departure from the sound of Simple Minds’ previous album, Once Upon a Time. After 10 years of recording and releasing music, the band had learnt their craft, becoming skilled musicians and songwriters. This resulted in an album with a sense of drama and cinematic in quality.

'I was 30 years old and I wanted to write about Belfast…. Apartheid and I wanted to write about the policies of Margaret Thatcher. I’m glad I wanted to do that.' Jim Kerr

Having recently turned 30 years of age, and at the end of an incredibly divisive decade in British politics – not to mention global tensions – an outward-looking maturity emerged in frontman Jim Kerr’s lyric writing, which found him confronting major themes of the times.

This is demonstrated on songs that tackle such subjects as Apartheid (Mandela Day, and a cover of Peter Gabriel’s Biko), the on going troubles in Northern Ireland (Belfast Child), knife crime (Street Fighting Years – a very personal lyric about the loss of a Kerr family close friend), as well as the Poll Tax, Berlin Wall and nuclear submarines off the coast of Scotland.

Musically, where Once Upon a Time was influenced by American soul and gospel, Street Fighting Years was a much more atmospheric album, incorporating many styles, including Celtic and folk influences. It was Trevor Horn who recognised a folk quality about the band, especially in Kerr’s voice, and encouraged them to explore new territory.

Nowhere is this exemplified more than on Belfast Child. Released three months prior to the album on the Ballad of the Streets EP, Belfast Child was based on the Irish folk song She Moved Through The Fair. Kerr heard the melody of this song a few days after the horrific Enniskillen bombing, and wrote a song trying to relate to the people of Northern Ireland and those who had lost loved ones. The song received praise for addressing such a painful and emotive subject, including from Q Magazine (who also awarded the album five stars).

Equally contemplative songs on the album include Soul Crying Out (about Margaret Thatcher’s government) and Let It All Come Down. Conversely, though in large part a highly meditative and reflective album, Street Fighting Years also features more strident, uptempo numbers, such as Take a Step Back, Wall of Love and Kick It In. Songs which showcase the guitar-playing mastery of Charlie Burchill.

2-CD or 4-CD BOX SET

DISC ONE: Street Fighting Years

Street Fighting Years
Soul Crying Out
Wall of Love
This Is Your Land
Take A Step Back
Kick It In
Let It All Come Down
Mandela Day
Belfast Child
Biko
When Spirits Rise

DISC TWO: Edits, B-Sides and Remixes

Belfast Child – Edit
Mandela Day – Edit .
This Is Your Land – Edit
Saturday Girl – B-Side
Year of The Dragon – B-Side
This Is Your Land – DJ Version
Kick It In – Edit
Waterfront – ’89 Remix
Big Sleep – Live
Kick It In – Unauthorised Mix
Sign O’ The Times – Edit
Let It All Come Down – Edit
Sign O’ The Times – B-Side
Jerusalem – B-Side
Sign O’ The Times – C. J. Mackintosh Remix

plus on the 4 CD version:

DISC THREE: Verona

Theme for Great Cities ’90
When Spirits Rise
Street Fighting Years
Mandela Day
This Is Your Land
Soul Crying Out
Waterfront
Ghost Dancing
Book of Brilliant Things
Don’t You (Forget About Me)

DISC FOUR: Verona

Gaelic Melody
Kick It In
Let It All Come Down
Belfast Child
Sun City
Biko
Sanctify Yourself
East at Easter
Alive and Kicking

Street Fighting Years was a creative triumph for Simple Minds and attained the remarkable commercial achievement of securing a number one single with a song almost seven-minutes in length. Although, as ever with Simple Minds there is hope and optimism, also present is a wistfulness on an album that captures, and is a reminder of, the end of one of the most tumultuous decades of the 20th century.

Standout songs on the album include This Is Your Land, which saw the band fulfil a teenage dream, as it featured one of their heroes and biggest influences – Lou Reed, and Mandela Day. Approached by Jerry Dammers to write a song celebrating Nelson Mandela (who was still imprisoned at that time), Mandela Day was completed in under an hour and recorded in less than a day. It made it’s live debut not long after at the Nelson Mandela 70th birthday tribute at Wembley Stadium, in June 1988.

1-CD or 2-LP Versions

1CD or 2LP TRACK LISTING

01. Street Fighting Years (6.27)
02. Soul Crying Out (6.09)
03. Wall Of Love (5.17)
04. This Is Your Land (6.21)
05. Take A Step Back (4.24)
06. Kick It In (6.09)
07. Let It All Come Down (4.53)
08. Mandela Day (5.41)
09. Belfast Child (6.45)
10. Biko (7.31)
11. When Spirits Rise (2.01)

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Credits: Produced By Trevor Horn & Stephen Lipson.
Engineers : Heff Moraes & Robin Hancock.
Technical Master : Dougie Cowan.
Assistant Engineers : Danton Supple, Martin Plant.

Charlie Burchill : Acoustic & Electric Guitars.
Michael MacNeil : Piano, Accordian & Electronic Keyboards.
Jim Kerr : Vocals.
Mel Gaynor : Drums.
Manu Katche : Drums.
John Giblin & Stephen Lipson : Bass Guitars.
Lisa Germano : Violin.
Special Thanks to : Stewart Copeland : “The Rhythmatist”
Lou Reed for cameo Vocal on This Is Your Land (c/o sire/wea)

Additional Musicians:
Sidney Thiam, Abdul M’Boup & Leroy Williams : Percussion
William Lithgow & Sheena McKenzie : Cellos
Maureen Kerr : Pennywhistle & Bodhran
Roger Sharp : Bagpipes.
John Altman : Orchestral Arragements.
Lorna Bannon : Backing Vocals.

All Songs Written By Simple Minds.
Let It All Come Down Written By John Giblin & Simple Minds.
Biko Written By Peter Gabriel.
Belfast Child Traditional. Lyrics Written By Simple Minds.

Street Fighting Years Written in memory of Victor Jara.

Made In Scotland March ’88 – March ’89.
Studio Drums By TAMA.

Original photography By Guido Harari & NASA-Science Photo Library. Source of graphic : “The Beauty Of Fractals” By Peitgen Richter. Original design By Assorted Images.