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We Are All Prostitutes

1979 single by The Pop Group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

We Are All Prostitutes
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"We Are All Prostitutes" is a song by English post-punk band The Pop Group. It was released as the band's second single on 9 November 1979 through Rough Trade Records.[1] The song is a critique of consumerism.[2]

Quick facts Single by The Pop Group, B-side ...

The song was included as the third track in the 2016 reissue of The Pop Group's 1980 album For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?

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Reception

Songwriter Nick Cave declared the song to be the band's masterpiece, saying, "It had everything that I thought rock and roll should have. It was violent, paranoid music for a violent, paranoid time."[3] Writer Mark Fisher described the song "scouring, seesawing, seasick funk, a pied piper’s exit from dominant reality, fired by a fissile compound of millenarian terror and militant jubilation."[4]

Legacy

More information Publication, Country ...

(*) designates unordered lists.

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Formats and track listing

All songs written by The Pop Group.

  • UK 7" single (RT 023)
  1. "We Are All Prostitutes" – 3:08
  2. "Amnesty International Report on British Army Torture of Irish Prisoners" – 3:08

Credits and personnel

The Pop Group

Additional musicians

Technical personnel

Charts

More information Chart (1980), Peak position ...

References

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