Smash It Up

"Smash It Up" is a song by the Damned, released as a single on 28 September 1979 on Chiswick Records. It is considered to be the band's unofficial anthem.

The single was the second release from the band's Machine Gun Etiquette album, where it was listed as "Smash It Up (Part II)". The B-side of the single was "Burglar".

Production
"Smash It Up" was produced by the band and Roger Armstrong. It is structured in two-part form: a melodic instrumental introduction segueing into an energetic pop-punk song. The song's lyrics criticise hippie culture (referring to "blow wave hairstyles" and "Glastonbury hippies" ) rather than advocate political revolution.

Release
Chiswick reissued the single on their budget Big Beat imprint in February 1982. The single was also issued in Australia, Germany, the Netherlands and Spain.

"Smash It Up" was banned from BBC Radio 1's playlist because of its perceived anarchic lyrics, stalling at No. 35 in the UK Singles Chart.

In November 2004, Ace Records reissued the single on CD, with alternate versions of the song (including the previously unreleased third and fourth parts of "Smash It Up") and a video, directed by Martin Baker, added.

Promotion
The Damned performed "Smash It Up" (as well as "I Just Can't Be Happy Today") on the BBC2 television show The Old Grey Whistle Test in 1979.

In other media
The song appeared in the console-based game Driver: Parallel Lines as a track from the 1978 era.

Track listing
All songs written by Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Ward.


 * 1979 vinyl release
 * 1) "Smash It Up" – 2:52
 * 2) "Burglar" – 3:33


 * 2004 CD release
 * 1) "Smash It Up" – 2:52
 * 2) "Burglar" – 3:33
 * 3) "Smash It Up Parts 1–4" – 8:43

Production credits

 * Producers
 * Roger Armstrong
 * The Damned


 * Musicians
 * Dave Vanian − vocals
 * Captain Sensible − guitar
 * Rat Scabies − drums, vocals on "Burglar"
 * Algy Ward − bass

Cover versions
The song was covered by Die Toten Hosen for the 1991 cover album Learning English, Lesson One.

In 1995, the Offspring covered the song for the soundtrack to the film Batman Forever and it was also released as a single. The song peaked on No. 16 on the U.S. Modern Rock Tracks chart and No. 47 on the Hot 100 Airplay (Radio Songs) chart. It was later released on the Offspring's Club Me EP and also on the "All I Want" CD single.