The List

5 Essential Songs by Siouxsie And The Banshees

Getting into post-punk tunes from back in the day? Few bands are as essential to that fairly broad genre as Siouxsie And The Banshees. This legendary gothic rock outfit has quite a discography to poke through, but I think the following five songs are essential listening for any old or new fan of Siouxsie And The Banshees. Letโ€™s dive in, shall we?

1. โ€œHong Kong Gardenโ€

You just canโ€™t beat the song that started it all. โ€œHong Kong Gardenโ€ was released in 1978 as the bandโ€™s debut single, and it was a killer way to kick off an incredible career. According to Siouxsie, she wrote the song as a tribute to the Chinese immigrants who ran her local takeaway, who were often terrorized by skinheads and racists during a dark time in Englandโ€™s history. The song was a national hit, reaching no. 7 on the UK Singles chart.

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2. โ€œPeek-A-Booโ€

Siouxsie And The Banshees produced the 1988 song โ€œPeek-A-Booโ€ from a pretty surprising mistake. The bandโ€™s producer slipped up and played a track backward, and the resulting loop of sound inspired Siouxsie to write โ€œPeek-A-Booโ€ based on it. The song was a pretty substantial hit and made it to no. 53 on the US Hot 100 chart.

3. โ€œSpellboundโ€

This is by far one of Siouxsie And The Bansheesโ€™ most well-known songs. A standout from the 1981 album Juju, โ€œSpellboundโ€ is a magical, authentically post-punk tune. In my opinion, it was the perfect track to open up that album.

4. โ€œHappy Houseโ€

This track was originally released as a standalone single in 1980 before it was added to Siouxsie And The Bansheesโ€™ Kaleidoscope. The song features the then-new addition of members Budgie and John McGeoch, and what a stellar addition those two were. โ€œHappy Houseโ€ mocks the often fake pretense of a โ€œhappy familyโ€ in a world where little happiness is to be found.

5. โ€œSwitchโ€

An earlier gem from Siouxsie And The Banshees, โ€œSwitchโ€ was released on the bandโ€™s debut 1978 album The Scream. This gothic rock outfit changed their sound and style numerous times throughout the years, but thereโ€™s just something about that first record that really shines in the history of progressive music.

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