Slade – Gudbuy T’Jane
Raucous farewell that turns goodbye into celebration, swagger, and survival Released in late 1972, Gudbuy T’Jane arrived as a standalone single by Slade, racing up the UK Singles Chart to…
Raucous farewell that turns goodbye into celebration, swagger, and survival Released in late 1972, Gudbuy T’Jane arrived as a standalone single by Slade, racing up the UK Singles Chart to…
Reckoning with the Morning After, Where Desire Gives Way to Consequence Released by SLADE at the close of the nineteen seventies, LOOK AT LAST NITE arrived not as a chart…
A plea that turns into a celebration of connection, noise, and the joy of being heard. When Slade released Skweeze Me, Pleeze Me in early 1973, the song surged straight…
A raw confession of longing, where fame fades and the heart asks only for home When Slade released Take Me Bak ‘Ome, the song rose to the top of the…
A band known for volume pauses long enough to ask what remains when the noise fades Released by Slade at a moment when their public identity was inseparable from glam…
A call for unity that turns the season inward and asks listeners to stand together rather than sing along Released in late 1984, ALL JOIN HANDS arrived as a UK…
A Reckoning Spelled in Sound That Confronts What We Have Done In 1972 Slade captured the restless tension of longing and confrontation with Look Wot You Dun, a song that…
Vulnerability That Carries You Through the Quietest Days of Love Everyday by Slade entered the world in March 1974 as an unexpected outpouring of tenderness from one of Britain’s fiercest…
A thunderous Christmas warning disguised as celebration, where childhood magic collides with Slade’s unapologetic roar Released in December 1981, SANTA CLAUS IS COMING TO TOWN by SLADE arrived not as…
A communal farewell and a vow of endurance, where memory, hope, and solidarity are sung as one. Released by Slade at a moment when the band had already become part…