Members from Birmingham UK's The Beat dissolved and formed two new groups: The Fine Young Cannibals and General Public.
Before the Fine Young Cannibals ruled the charts in 1988 with “She Drives Me Crazy” and “Good Thing” they kicked off their career with a catchy groove showing off their ska roots called "Johnny Come Home".
Before the Fine Young Cannibals ruled the charts in 1988 with “She Drives Me Crazy” and “Good Thing” they kicked off their career with a catchy groove showing off their ska roots called "Johnny Come Home".
A breath of fresh air, this infectious tune with boss vocals, great arrangements and cool horns sounded like nothing else at the time.
The single only reached #16 on the Canadian charts which is sheer lunacy. I'm pleased to report I fixed the error as it climbed to #3 on my own chart from May 1986 (see photo below from binder salvaged from parent's attic).
But the question still remains: why did Johnny leave home?
The single only reached #16 on the Canadian charts which is sheer lunacy. I'm pleased to report I fixed the error as it climbed to #3 on my own chart from May 1986 (see photo below from binder salvaged from parent's attic).
In 1984, General Public churned out the infinitely catchy "Tenderness" on radio and video channels, later featured on the soundtrack of the nerd Weird Science film.
Johnny Come Home started off about being black in a white man's world, but it evolved into something more inclusive and better. Also happy to see it reach number 3 in your chart
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