Vanilla Radio

Vanilla Radio was the first single to be released by The Wildhearts following their 2001 reformation. It reached #26 in the UK singles chart.

CD1:

  1. Vanilla Radio
  2. Putting It On
  3. Looking For The One

CD2:

  1. Vanilla Radio
  2. O.C.D.
  3. Let's Go

7" picture disc:

  1. Vanilla Radio
  2. Better Than Cable
The Wildhearts
  • Ginger
  • C.J. (Chris Jaghdar)
  • Scott Sorry
  • Ritch Battersby
  • Jon Poole
  • Danny McCormack
  • Andrew "Stidi" Stidolph
  • Mark Keds
  • Jef Streatfield
  • Bam Bam
  • Devin Townsend
Studio albums
  • Earth vs the Wildhearts
  • Fishing for Luckies
  • P.H.U.Q.
  • Endless Nameless
  • The Wildhearts Must Be Destroyed
  • The Wildhearts
  • Stop Us If You've Heard This One Before, Vol 1.
  • ¡Chutzpah!
Live albums
  • Tokyo Suits Me
  • The Wildhearts Strike Back
  • Geordie in Wonderland
Compilations
  • The Best of The Wildhearts
  • Anarchic Airwaves
  • Landmines and Pantomimes
  • Moodswings and Roundabouts
  • Anthem: The Single Tracks
  • Riff After Riff After Motherfucking Riff
  • Coupled With
  • The Works
Singles and EPs
  • Mondo Akimbo a-Go-Go
  • Don't Be Happy... Just Worry
  • "Greetings From Shitsville"
  • "TV Tan E.P."
  • "Caffeine Bomb"
  • "Suckerpunch"
  • "If Life Is Like a Lovebank I Want an Overdraft / Geordie in Wonderland"
  • "I Wanna Go Where the People Go"
  • "Just in Lust"
  • "Sick of Drugs"
  • "Red Light – Green Light EP"
  • " Anthem"
  • "Urge"
  • "Vanilla Radio"
  • "Stormy in the North, Karma in the South"
  • "So into You"
  • "Top of the World"
  • "The Sweetest Song"
  • "The New Flesh"
  • "The Only One"
  • ¡Chutzpah! Jnr.

Famous quotes containing the words vanilla and/or radio:

    If there be any man who thinks the ruin of a race of men a small matter, compared with the last decoration and completions of his own comfort,—who would not so much as part with his ice- cream, to save them from rapine and manacles, I think I must not hesitate to satisfy that man that also his cream and vanilla are safer and cheaper by placing the negro nation on a fair footing than by robbing them.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    Now they can do the radio in so many languages that nobody any longer dreams of a single language, and there should not any longer be dreams of conquest because the globe is all one, anybody can hear everything and everybody can hear the same thing, so what is the use of conquering.
    Gertrude Stein (1874–1946)