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It is in effect a greatest hits album for both of the bands, the first seven tracks bracketed together as "The Housemartins Condensed" and the remaining fifteen as "The Cream of The Beautiful South". All twenty-two songs were released as singles by the bands, and the track listing runs in chronological order by year of song release from 1985's ...
The Housemartins were an English indie rock group formed in Hull who were active in the 1980s [2] and charted three top-ten albums and six top-twenty singles in the UK. [3] Many of their lyrics conveyed a mixture of socialist politics and Christianity, reflecting the beliefs of the band [4] (the back cover of their debut album, London 0 Hull 4, contained the message, "Take Jesus – Take Marx ...
It should only contain pages that are The Housemartins songs or lists of The Housemartins songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Housemartins songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Pages in category "The Housemartins compilation albums" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. ... Soup (The Housemartins and the Beautiful South ...
It should only contain pages that are The Beautiful South albums or lists of The Beautiful South albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Beautiful South albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
"One Last Love Song" Liam & Grant Carry On Up the Charts: 1995 "Dream a Little Dream" Pedro Romhanyi non-album singles "Pretenders to the Throne" Liam & Grant 1996 "Rotterdam" Liam & Grant Blue Is the Colour "Don’t Marry Her" Liam & Grant 1997 "Blackbird on the Wire" Pedro Romhanyi "Liars' Bar" Liam & Grant 1998 "Perfect 10" Liam & Grant Quench
The Housemartins chronology; Soup (2007) ... (2011) Happy Hour: The Collection was a 2011 compilation album by English indie rock band The Housemartins. [1]
"Happy Hour" is a 1986 single by British indie rock band The Housemartins. [1] It was the third single from the album London 0 Hull 4 and reached number three in the UK Singles Chart. [2] [3] Vocalist Paul Heaton had been working on the lyrics for some time, with the song originally being called "French England". [4]