Don't Go Down That Street

"Don't Go Down That Street" is a song by 1980s New Wave band Culture Club. It was released as the B-side to their 1984 single "The Medal Song" (a song about the 1930s American actress Frances Farmer, who was featured on the sleeve of the single). It later appeared as a bonus track on the 2003 CD reissue of the album Waking Up with the House on Fire.

In the tradition of earlier Culture Club songs, "Don't Go Down That Street" includes chatting, but instead of Jamaican patois, it features Japanese chatting by Miko, Boy George's friend at the time. That song was recorded especially to be a B-Side, after the other songs were made for the Waking Up album. There are two versions of the track: one short for the single in Japan, and another, around six minutes long, which can be found as the B-Side of various singles.

Even though the song was available as a B-side in most countries (it was also the B-side of "Mistake No. 3" in Canada and the U.S.), it still received a separate release in Japan as a single in 1985 for the Japan-only "Love Is Love EP", where it peaked at number 69.

Culture Club
  • Boy George
  • Roy Hay
  • Mikey Craig
  • Jon Moss
Albums
  • Kissing to Be Clever
  • Colour by Numbers
  • Waking Up with the House on Fire
  • From Luxury to Heartache
  • Don't Mind If I Do
Compilation albums
  • This Time – The First Four Years
  • At Worst... The Best of Boy George and Culture Club
  • Greatest Moments – VH1 Storytellers Live
  • Culture Club (Box set)
  • Greatest Hits
Singles
  • "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me"
  • "Time (Clock of the Heart)"
  • "I'll Tumble 4 Ya"
  • "Church of the Poison Mind"
  • "Karma Chameleon"
  • "Victims"
  • "Miss Me Blind
  • "It's a Miracle"
  • "The War Song"
  • "Don't Go Down That Street"
  • "Move Away"
  • "I Just Wanna Be Loved"
  • "Starman"
Related articles
  • Discography
  • Boy George discography
  • Book
  • Category


Famous quotes containing the word street:

    If the street life, not the Whitechapel street life, but that of the common but so-called respectable part of town is in any city more gloomy, more ugly, more grimy, more cruel than in London, I certainly don’t care to see it. Sometimes it occurs to one that possibly all the failures of this generation, the world over, have been suddenly swept into London, for the streets are a restless, breathing, malodorous pageant of the seedy of all nations.
    Willa Cather (1876–1947)