Disappointingly, this smacks of 'playing safe'. When Tracey and Ben can write such perfect feeling songs as "Bittersweet", why release an insubstantial and lifeless song like this? It smacks of panic by someone - a vague attempt to emulate "Each And Everyone"'s success by putting out a song as close to it as possible but with none of its free-flowing jazzy life. EBTG have new songs far better than this and hopefully we'll be seeing them soon. (Eleanor Levy, Record Mirror, March 16, 1985)
I think Tracey Thorn sounds very similar to Siouxsie Sioux on this. It's more powerful than their usual style but still a very thoughtful record and could be the song to give them their breakthrough. (Marshall O'Leary, Smash Hits, March 14, 1985)
Apparently Ben Watt is a big Glenda Jackson fan which explains why there's a picture of her on this single sleeve. In case you were wondering, film fans, the shot is taken from The Triple Echo. A film in which Glenda's bedmate is an AWOL soldier who hides in her cottage masquerading as her sister whenever anyone comes by - an idea which backfires when Oliver Reed takes a fancy to him. Good film taste aside, this record has little going for it. Unlike 'Each And Every One' and Tracey's work with Paul Weller and Working Week, it's simply unremarkable. When all's well hopefully they'll release something else . . . (Adrian Tierney-Jones, No 1, March 9, 1985)
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