- Hong Kong Garden (song)
Infobox Single
Name = Hong Kong Garden
Artist =Siouxsie & the Banshees
from Album = and The Scream (reissue)
B-side = "Voices (On The Air)"
Released =August 18 ,1978
Format = 7" single
Recorded = 1978
Genre =Post-punk
Length = 02:52
Label = Polydor
Writer = Sioux / Severin / McKay / Morris
Producer =Nils Stevenson Steve Lillywhite
Chart position = * #7 (UK)
Last single = —
This single = "Hong Kong Garden" (1978)
Next single = "The Staircase (Mystery) " (1979)"Hong Kong Garden" was the debut single released by English band
Siouxsie & the Banshees . Issued in the UK byPolydor Records in 1978, the track was written by Banshees membersSiouxsie Sioux ,Steven Severin , John McKay andKenny Morris and produced by their manager Nils Stevenson and a young sound-engineerSteve Lillywhite .The song was named after the Hong Kong Garden Chinese takeaway in
Chislehurst High Street. Siouxsie is quoted as explaining the lyrics with reference to the racist activities of skinheads visiting the takeaway:cquote|"I remember wishing that I could be likeEmma Peel from "The Avengers" and kick all the skinheads' heads in, because they used to mercilessly torment these people for being foreigners. It made me feel so helpless, hopeless and ill." Source: "Uncut" [http://www.thebansheesandothercreatures.co.uk/thescreamtrivia.htm link] , 01/O5.The lyrics "Slanted eyes meet a new sunrise / A race of bodies small in size / Chicken Chow Mein and Chop Suey / Hong Kong garden takeaway" and the song itself could be interpreted as an ode to Chinese food restaurateurs whose culture is or was regarded with contempt by some non-Chinese in Britain.
The song was released as a stand-alone single and hit number seven in the
UK singles chart . When the Banshees' debut album "The Scream" was released later in the year, "Hong Kong Garden" was not included. It later surfaced on the singles compilation album "". When "The Scream" was re-mastered and re-issued in2005 with bonus material, "Hong Kong Garden" was included in the package.In March 2005, "Q" magazine placed the song at number 90 in its list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks. It was also included on the soundtrack for Sofia Coppola's 2006 film "Marie Antoinette". The version on the soundtrack features an orchestral string intro.
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