In Quintessence: Squeeze (Difford & Tilbrook) Song-by Song Thread

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by prymel, Jul 7, 2022.

  1. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    The purpose of this thread, starting Sunday, July 10 is to discuss the music of Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford (i.e., Squeeze) on a song-by-song basis. I will be going through all of the songs by Squeeze, one song per day, to include all principal album tracks, the Packet Of Three EP songs, the Difford & Tilbrook duo album, bonus material that was included on reissued releases, b-sides from singles and cover songs. I will also allow one day for each of their live albums.

    Each day I will hold up a song for discussion/comment. I will be rating songs on a 1-5 scale (5 is highest), and participants are encouraged to provide ratings as well, although rating songs is not required to participate. The primary thread objective is to visit in-depth the music of this fantastic band, whether you choose to post numerical ratings, simply provide comments and opinions, or just follow along without posting. Song/album ratings will be tallied and averaged each day.

    What will not be covered (generally, could be exceptions): live and demo versions of released studio material, remixes and alternate versions of studio songs covered, bootlegs, or any other solo or side projects not envisioned above. Some of this material may be posted as additional links to applicable songs or at appropriate points in the discussions. However, these will not be the principal focus of the thread.

    Additionally, Difford and Tilbrook solo albums will not be covered.

    Changes to the above are conceivable as we move along, but this is the general template.

    I'm starting this thread because I am a huge fan of Squeeze's music and wanted to do a deep dive into their catalog with folks on SHF. That said, my appreciation of Squeeze begins and ends with their music - I know next to nothing about their biography and career or stories about how the music was made. I am a fan first and only, not an expert on the group, so if you are well-versed in all things Squeeze "behind the music", you are highly encouraged to share your knowledge, experience and anecdotes. Additional content that provides background and context is always welcome.

    That said, this thread is not meant to be an academic course on Squeeze, and one need not know a thing about the group to participate. If this is your first exposure to Squeeze, feel free to dive right in!

    Here are the albums that will be covered (song-by-song, except where noted):
    • Packet Of Three (EP)
    • Squeeze (aka UK Squeeze)
    • Cool For Cats
    • Argybargy
    • East Side Story
    • Sweets From A Stranger
    • Difford & Tilbrook (duo LP)
    • Cosi Fan Tutti Frutti
    • Babylon And On
    • Frank
    • Play
    • Some Fantastic Place
    • Ridiculous
    • Domino
    • Spot The Difference (one day - album only)
    • Cradle To The Grave
    • The Knowledge
    In between each primary album, we'll be covering applicable bonus material and b-sides.

    Additionally, the following live albums will be covered (one day for each):
    • A Round And A Bout
    • Live At The Royal Albert Hall
    • Five Live: On Tour In America
    • Live At The Fillmore
    If I've left anything out, or if you have any suggestions, feel free to chime in.

    I hope to see you back on July 10!

     
  2. Fred68

    Fred68 Loves Music

    Location:
    USA
    Count me in. Squeeze are my favorite band.
     
  3. therunner

    therunner Forum Resident

    Location:
    England
    Me too. I enjoyed the REM thread you took over - great job - so I'm looking forward to this one.

    Presumably non-album singles are included, like Chrismas Day, Annie Get Your Gun, Down In The Valley ? There may be others, I'm not an expert by any means.
     
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2022
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  4. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    Non-album singles, b-sides, bonus tracks, all will be covered. As each album winds down, I'll be posting the extra tracks that will be covered between albums. If I'm missing anything (and chances are good that I will), please let me know and I'm happy to add songs to the itinerary. Or, if there's a specific reason a cut is being excluded, I'll indicate the rationale.

    Each of the songs you mention are slated to be discussed.
     
  5. bRETT

    bRETT Senior Member

    Location:
    Boston MA
    I'm in for this. Perfect excuse to pull out some of those old singles, and get my "Squeeze Song by Song" book out of the closet.
     
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  6. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    Pursuant to the previous post, I've already identified several songs for which I've been unable to locate You tube links:

    "Heartbreak" (U.K. Squeeze bonus)
    "Ain't It Sad" (Cool For Cats bonus)
    "The Axe Has Now Fallen" (East Side Story bonus)
    "Whenever We Meet" (Sweets From A Stranger bonus)
    "Tomorrow's World" (Sweets From A Stranger demo)

    If anyone has a link for any of these, it would be definitely appreciated.

    For non-album songs that can't be linked, those songs will be skipped.
     
  7. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    Perhaps more importantly, I have searched far and wide for a YT link to either the UK Squeeze version of "Model", or to the full album. Since "Model" is a primary album track, it won't be skipped if no link is located, but, if it comes to that, I will post the "Cool For Cats" b-side remake as a proxy, and folks with Spotify or other streaming service can use those for access to the original.
     
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  8. bRETT

    bRETT Senior Member

    Location:
    Boston MA

    I don't have the links, but 'm glad that those of us who shelled out for Six of One got something fairly exclusive.

    To my memory though, none of the newly uncovered tracks was very good save for the cover of Lookin' for a Love.
     
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  9. therunner

    therunner Forum Resident

    Location:
    England
    I think this might be it...
     
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2022
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  10. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    I'm getting a "Video unavailable" link, might not be available in the U.S.
     
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  11. therunner

    therunner Forum Resident

    Location:
    England
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  12. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    Perfect, that works!
     
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  13. kwadguy

    kwadguy Senior Member

    Location:
    Cambridge, MA
    When I read that there would be a Squeeze song-by-song thread, I couldn't stop my heart from beating bang bang.
     
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  14. Mr. D

    Mr. D Forum Resident

    Indeed.
     
  15. Stillin Rockville

    Stillin Rockville "it's not the band, it's the fans"

    Location:
    a farm in Iowa
    "Present." Always liked what I heard of Squeeze on "top 40" and MuchMusic/MTV but always seemed to have two-three other things going that kept me from going deeper. Glad to have the opportunity to do so now.
     
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2022
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  16. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    The first daily song post will go up around 6-8 p.m. U.S. Central Time this Sunday. That will be the timing of subsequent daily posts (give or take an hour, but I will try to be consistent). I will always allow 20-24 hours between posts to give participants from different time zones the opportunity to weigh in on each song.

    Definitely looking forward to discussing Squeeze's music with everyone!
     
    Last edited: Jul 8, 2022
  17. TomBart

    TomBart Forum Resident

    Location:
    freehold NJ
    Great . looking forward to reading and sharing. my second favorite band
     
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  18. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    Following are the dates that songs will be held up for discussion from the Packet Of Three EP and Squeeze, the debut full length LP. If there is any bonus material that I've missed related to these releases, or in the timeline of their releases, please let me know and I will add/modify as applicable:

    Packet Of Three
    7/10 - "Cat On A Wall"
    7/11 - "Night Ride"
    7/12 -"Back Track"
    7/13 - Packet Of Three (full EP discussion)

    Squeeze (aka U.K. Squeeze)
    7/14 - "Sex Master"
    7/15 - "Bang Bang"
    7/16 - "Strong In Reason"
    7/17 - "Wild Sewerage Tickles Brazil"
    7/18 - "Out Of Control"
    7/19 - "Take Me I'm Yours"
    7/20 - "The Call"
    7/21 - "Model"
    7/22 - "Remember What"
    7/23 - "First Thing Wrong"
    7/24 - "Hesitation (Rool Britannia)"
    7/25 - "Get Smart"
    7/26 - Squeeze (full album discussion)

    Extras
    7/27 - "Deep Cuts" (unreleased bonus track from Squeeze)
    7/28 - "Night Nurse" (b-side to "Take Me I'm Yours")
    7/29 - "All Fed Up" (b-side to "Bang Bang")
    7/30 - "Disco Kid" (b-side to withdrawn original single of "Take Me I'm Yours")
     
  19. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    Squeeze Biography (from Wikipedia)

    Career
    First incarnation: 1974–1982
    The band's founding members in March 1974 were Chris Difford (guitar, vocals, lyrics), and Glenn Tilbrook (vocals, guitar, music). Difford claims that in 1973, he stole 50p from his mother's purse to put a card in a local sweetshop window to advertise for a guitarist to join his band, although he was not actually in a band at the time. Tilbrook was the only person who responded to the advertisement. Difford and Tilbrook began writing songs together, and soon added Jools Holland (keyboards) and Paul Gunn (drums) to form an actual band. The group performed under several names, most frequently "Captain Trundlow's Sky Company" or "Skyco", before selecting the band name "Squeeze" as a facetious tribute to the Velvet Underground's oft-derided 1973 album Squeeze.

    Gilson Lavis replaced Gunn on drums, and Harry Kakoulli joined on bass in 1975.

    Squeeze's early career was spent around Deptford in south-east London, where they were part of a lively local music scene which included Alternative TV and Dire Straits. Though the group was initially signed to Miles Copeland III's BTM Records, the label went under in late 1976, and so their early singles and debut EP, 1977's Packet of Three, were released on the Deptford Fun City label.

    Squeeze's first EP and most of their self-titled debut album (1978) were produced by John Cale for A&M Records. Cale had been a member of Velvet Underground from whose album Squeeze took their name. However, the debut album's two hit singles ("Take Me I'm Yours" and "Bang Bang") were produced by the band themselves, as the label found Cale's recordings uncommercial.

    In the United States and Canada, the band and album were dubbed UK Squeeze owing to legal conflicts arising from a contemporary American band called "Tight Squeeze". The "U.K." was dropped for all subsequent releases. In Australia, the same name change was used due to legal conflicts arising from an existing Sydney-based band also called "Squeeze". Albums in Australia were credited to UK Squeeze up to and including 1985's Cosi Fan Tutti Frutti.

    The band's second album, Cool for Cats (1979), contained the band's two highest charting UK singles in "Cool For Cats" and "Up The Junction", both of which peaked at No. 2. John Bentley replaced Harry Kakoulli on bass in 1979 following the release of the LP.

    Argybargy (1980), the band's third album, was also a UK hit. It was additionally a mild breakthrough in North America, as the single "Another Nail in My Heart" was a No. 56 hit in Canada, and second single "Pulling Mussels (from the Shell)" received airplay on US rock radio stations. The video for the former was frequently shown on independent video music shows in the US.

    Keyboardist Jools Holland left the band for a solo career in 1980. He was replaced by highly rated singer-keyboardist Paul Carrack, a former member of both British soul-pop band Ace and progressive rock band Roxy Music.

    In 1981, the band released East Side Story. It was produced by Elvis Costello and Roger Bechirian, and featured Carrack's lead vocals on the radio hit "Tempted". Carrack himself left after the release of East Side Story, and was replaced by Don Snow. This line-up recorded the Sweets from a Stranger LP in 1982. Negative reviews, the stresses of touring, and conflict between band members led Difford and Tilbrook to break up the band later that year, after releasing a final single, "Annie Get Your Gun".

    Difford and Tilbrook years: 1983–1984
    Difford and Tilbrook continued to work together, and released one self-titled album as the duo Difford & Tilbrook in 1984. Although it is not officially a Squeeze album, to many fans Difford & Tilbrook is considered a "lost" Squeeze LP because Difford and Tilbrook were themselves the only constant members of Squeeze.[19] Several Difford & Tilbrook tracks have been featured on officially sanctioned Squeeze compilations, and Tilbrook's official site lists Difford & Tilbrook as a Squeeze album.

    The duo also contributed to a musical written and staged in Deptford during this period, entitled Labelled with Love and based in large part on the music of Squeeze.

    Second incarnation: 1985–1999
    Squeeze re-formed to play a one night charity gig in 1985, with all five members from the 1980 Argybargy period—Difford, Tilbrook, Holland, Lavis, and Bentley. The performance was such a success that the band unanimously agreed to resume recording and touring as Squeeze. Searching for a different sound, the band replaced Bentley with bassist Keith Wilkinson from the Difford & Tilbrook sessions. This line-up released the 1985 LP Cosi Fan Tutti Frutti.

    The new LP featured complex double-tracked keyboard parts which could not be duplicated by a single keyboard player in a live setting; hence, Jools' brother Christopher Holland, then aged 17, played and toured as a second keyboardist in 1985. Christopher had also played Hammond organ on the album's fourth single "Heartbreaking World", which was sung by Jools Holland. However, Christopher Holland's tenure was short-lived, for he had signed to I.R.S. Records and was pursuing a solo career, so he was replaced by an official new member: Andy Metcalfe of The Soft Boys and The Egyptians. A bassist in those groups, Metcalfe played keyboards with Squeeze. His tenure as the band's sixth member lasted until 1988.

    In 1987, the sextet recorded the album Babylon and On. A successful release on both sides of the Atlantic, this album contained the band's only US top 40 hits in "Hourglass" and "853-5937".

    Metcalfe left the band in 1988, leaving the Difford/Tilbrook/Holland/Wilkinson/Lavis line-up to record 1989's Frank. The LP was a commercial disappointment, from which no charting singles were taken in the UK, and the band was dropped from their long-time label A&M.

    Adding a new second keyboard player in the person of Matt Irving, the band issued the live album A Round and a Bout on I.R.S. Records in March 1990. Jools Holland left Squeeze again in early 1990, and was not immediately replaced. In his stead, the band used session musicians such as Irving (who was no longer an official band member), Steve Nieve, and Bruce Hornsby for the 1991 release Play, which came out on the Reprise label. This release again spawned no UK hits, although in the US the singles "Satisfied" and "Crying in My Sleep" received significant airplay on modern rock stations, and in Canada "Satisfied" was a top 50 hit. However, Reprise dropped the band after this album. Following this, drummer Gilson Lavis was let go in 1992, and replaced by Nieve's Attractions bandmate Pete Thomas. Paul Carrack also returned to the band in 1993, although by this point Squeeze was not so much a band as it was a trade name for Difford and Tilbrook plus sidemen.

    Squeeze re-signed to A&M in time for 1993's Some Fantastic Place. After a period of commercial decline in the UK, lead single "Third Rail" hit No. 39, becoming Squeeze's first UK Top 40 hit in six years.

    Squeeze's line-up during the mid-1990s changed constantly. Though not an official Squeeze member, Aimee Mann was featured on vocals and guitar at many Squeeze shows during 1994. Thomas also exited the band that year, and Carrack doubled on snare and keyboards for a few gigs before session drummer Andy Newmark was brought in. Then—still in 1994—Carrack left, which allowed keyboardist Andy Metcalfe to return to the band for a short spell, playing on some live dates. Drummer Kevin Wilkinson (no relation to bassist Keith), formerly of The Waterboys and China Crisis, was also added around this time, replacing Newmark. He lasted through the 1995 album Ridiculous, which was recorded by the quartet of Difford, Tilbrook, Wilkinson and Wilkinson. The album spun off three minor hits in the UK: "This Summer", "Electric Trains" and "Heaven Knows". ("Heaven Knows" was used as the closing song in the 1995 film Hackers starring Angelina Jolie.) In addition, a minimally remixed version of "This Summer" became a No. 32 UK hit in 1996, a year after the original version peaked at No. 36. Despite this, A&M once again dropped Squeeze from their roster in late 1996.

    Following the release of Ridiculous, Don Snow (now known as Jonn Savannah) returned to Squeeze yet again as their touring keyboard player, but by 1997, the Squeeze line-up had officially dwindled down to just Difford and Tilbrook. That year the duo, billed as Squeeze, released the non-album single "Down in the Valley" as a fundraising single for Charlton Athletic F.C. Tilbrook formed the Quixotic label for this and future Squeeze-related releases, as well as releases by other artists.

    For the 1998 album Domino, the band was again a quintet consisting of Difford, Tilbrook, bassist Hilaire Penda, ex-Del Amitri drummer Ashley Soan, and yet another returning keyboardist in the person of Christopher Holland. Nick Harper often performed with this version of Squeeze as a guest touring musician, providing additional guitar and vocals. In January 1999, just days before a planned tour, Chris Difford suddenly announced that he was taking a "hiatus" from Squeeze. The last venue at which Squeeze played with Difford was at The Charlotte, Leicester, England. The band subsequently continued as a quartet led by Tilbrook, with Jim Kimberley replacing Soan on some tour dates, and Christopher Holland exiting in the autumn to be replaced by Tilbrook's other frequent writing partner Chris Braide.

    On 27 November 1999, in Aberdeen, Scotland, Squeeze played their final gig before breaking up again. Difford and Tilbrook embarked on separate solo careers shortly thereafter.

    Solo years: 2000–2006
    In 2003 Difford and Tilbrook collaborated on a song for the first time since Domino. The track "Where I Can Be Your Friend" appeared on Tilbrook's well-reviewed second solo album, Transatlantic Ping Pong. In 2004, the pair worked with music journalist Jim Drury on the retrospective Squeeze: Song By Song. In this book they declared they had become better friends since breaking up the band than they ever were while Squeeze was together.

    However, a 2004 attempt by the VH1 show Bands Reunited to reassemble the mid-1980s line-up of Squeeze (Difford, Tilbrook, Holland, Wilkinson and Lavis) ended in failure. While Difford and bassist Keith Wilkinson were both favourable to the idea and drummer Gilson Lavis expressed interest, Jools Holland felt he was too busy with current projects to participate. Even more crucially, Glenn Tilbrook eventually decided against a band reunion at that point in time.

    Still, Difford and Tilbrook's friendship continued, and Difford sat in for a few songs at a Tilbrook solo gig in Glasgow in December 2005.

    Third incarnation: 2007–present
    In early 2007 it was announced that Difford and Tilbrook would re-form Squeeze for a series of shows throughout the latter half of the year, in support of Universal and Warner's re-issuing of the band's back catalogue and the release of a new 'best of' album, Essential Squeeze, on 30 April. Jools Holland and Gilson Lavis were unable to take part in the series of shows, as they were touring under the "Jools Holland & His Rhythm & Blues Orchestra" name for most of the year. However, John Bentley re-joined on bass for the first time since Squeeze's last reunion show in 1985. The rest of the line-up was fleshed out by members of Tilbrook's touring band, the Fluffers: Stephen Large (keyboards) and Simon Hanson (drums).

    On 7 July 2007, at the "Return to the Summer of Love Party" at Hawkhurst, Kent, Difford and Tilbrook, each singing and playing acoustic guitars, played a seven-song set. They played, in order, "Take Me I'm Yours", "Pulling Mussels (From the Shell)", "Is that Love?", "Tempted", "Labelled with Love", "Cool for Cats" and "Up the Junction". The first actual full-band Squeeze show since 1999 took place less than a week later, at their old haunt The Albany (in Deptford) on Thursday 12 July; this was actually billed as a "warm up" gig prior to the upcoming US tour, and was followed by GuilFest 2007. They toured the US in August 2007, supported on various dates by Fountains of Wayne, Will Hoge, Big Head Todd and the Monsters, Aimee Mann, and Cheap Trick.

    In November 2007, the band released Five Live: On Tour in America, a live CD consisting of recordings from the American tour. Television appearances and live shows in the US and UK followed in 2008, 2009 and 2010.

    The band were honoured with a Heritage Award by PRS for Music in March 2010. A plaque was erected at Greenwich Dance's The Borough Hall on Royal Hill in Greenwich, London where they had performed their first gig.

    Squeeze embarked on their 'Spot The Difference' tour of the US in July 2010, which continued in the UK in November and December. The CD Spot The Difference, a re-recording of Squeeze's classic hits, was released in August 2010 to accompany the tour.

    On the US tour, during a performance of "Pulling Mussels (From the Shell)" live on the Late Night with Jimmy Fallon show, Stephen Large played the keyboard solo on an Apple iPad.

    In September 2010, Stephen Large left the band and was replaced by Steve Nieve, who had played as a session musician with Squeeze and Difford in the past, but had not—until this line-up change—ever been an official member of the group. However, within a matter of months, Large returned to the Squeeze line-up as Nieve left the band.

    This line-up of Difford/Tilbrook/Bentley/Large/Hanson continued to tour throughout 2011 and 2012. A 20-track live recording, Live at the Fillmore, was issued on iTunes and as a limited-edition white vinyl double LP in April 2012.

    Prior to their 2012 UK tour, Squeeze announced on the Radcliffe & Maconie show on BBC Radio 6 Music that they would be selling live recordings of every night's show on the tour at each venue via a 'Pop up Shop'. When the tour commenced, each live recording the band sold also came with a 4-song bonus disc entitled Packet of Four; these were studio recordings of new Squeeze songs, their first studio recordings of new material in 14 years.

    On 11 February 2013, Tilbrook and Difford performed a live cover of the Beatles' song "Please Please Me" on BBC Radio 2. They were joined by Paul Jones on harmonica. Alongside other contemporary artists, the performance was part of a 50th anniversary celebration of the original recording of the first Beatles album of the same name in the same period of time. A documentary of the recordings was shown by BBC Four on 15 February 2013.

    Beginning in the autumn of 2014, Difford and Tilbrook began touring as a duo, playing Squeeze hits in smaller venues in the UK. Squeeze, still operating as a full band, also continued to play occasional festival shows through 2014 and 2015.[22] In early 2015, Squeeze announced that bassist John Bentley would play his final gig with the band on 24 July. In an interview, Bentley announced his replacement will be Lucy Shaw (also the bassist for Tilbrook's backing band The Fluffers), which was officially confirmed by Squeeze in August.

    In 2016–2018 the band continued to tour, in the US, Australia and extensively in the UK.

    Cradle to the Grave
    From 2008 forward, Difford and Tilbrook repeatedly stated in interviews that they planned to produce an album of new Squeeze material; they alluded to this in on-camera interviews at V Festival in both 2008 and 2011. In January 2010, it was announced that they would be spending part of the coming summer in Italy together writing songs for a new Squeeze album, and in an interview on BBC Radio Wales on 10 November 2013, Tilbrook stated that Squeeze would be recording between January and March 2014. However these sessions never took place and Tilbrook ended up recording and releasing the solo album Happy Endings.

    Around the same time, it was announced that Squeeze would be providing the music for a BBC drama called Cradle to Grave, based on the autobiography Going To Sea in a Sieve by Danny Baker.[23] Squeeze debuted the song "Cradle to the Grave" on their 2013 tour, whilst Difford and Tilbrook were photographed with Danny Baker on the set of Cradle to the Grave.[24]

    Recording for the album finally got underway sometime in 2014/2015, and in April 2015, Difford announced on his Twitter feed that he had listened to a "first mix" of the new album. In July, Squeeze announced on their Facebook page that the album was entering the mastering stage. Cradle to the Grave, the band's first album of original material since 1998 received its official release on 2 October 2015. A limited edition of 1000 copies were released through the band's own Love Records at the end of August.

    Present activity
    Squeeze performed in front of David Cameron on BBC's The Andrew Marr Show in January 2016 and used the performance to protest against the then-Prime Minister by changing the lyrics to their song "Cradle to the Grave".

    In July 2017, the band announced a North American tour, along with two line-up changes: the replacement of Lucy Shaw as bassist with Yolanda Charles and the addition of Dirty Vegas frontman Steve Smith as percussionist and backing vocalist. The band also announced an Australian tour for 2018, and revealed that they were in the midst of recording a new album.

    In August 2017, Squeeze revealed the title of their fifteenth studio album as The Knowledge. A new single, "Innocence in Paradise", was released ahead of the album. The Knowledge was released on 13 October 2017.

    The band has continued touring through the UK, Ireland and North America. A tour was announced on the official Squeeze website for 2020 in Australia and New Zealand, however it was indefinitely postponed due to scheduling problems as of November 2019.

    On 25 June 2019 The New York Times Magazine listed Squeeze among hundreds of artists whose material was destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.

    On 13 August 2019, the band officially announced the addition of a seventh member, guitarist Melvin Duffy. Duffy had played as a session musician on Squeeze's previous two albums, and at occasional live shows.

    In September 2019, Squeeze were joined at the Louisville, Kentucky Bourbon & Beyond Festival by ex-Nirvana drummer and Foo Fighters front-man Dave Grohl on drums, for a performance of the 1982 hit "Black Coffee in Bed".

    In February 2020, it was announced that Yolanda Charles had departed the band, and new bassist Sean Hurley (who had filled in for Charles on bass on a few 2019 dates, including the date Dave Grohl guested) would be replacing her. In April of that year, Tilbrook, while discussing an upcoming scheduled gig, mentioned that it would be the "very first gig with our new bass player! A chap called Owen Biddle, who used to play in a band called The Roots. However, the show in question was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The new line-up of Squeeze, with Biddle permanently replacing Hurley, began touring in 2021.
     
  20. Uncle Al

    Uncle Al Senior Member

    Location:
    Long Island, NY
    In 1979, A&M Records released a 10" EP in the U.S. called "6 Squeeze Songs Crammed into One Ten-Inch Record". It contained 5 songs from the first 2 lp's (the singles), but it contained an electric "live version" of Goodbye Girl, which I always preferred over the LP version.
     
  21. EddieMann

    EddieMann I used to be a king...

    Location:
    Geneva, IL. USA.
    That is my go to version of Goodbye Girl as well.
     
  22. therunner

    therunner Forum Resident

    Location:
    England
    There is a bonus track called "Heartbreak" on the 1997 reissue of the first album, which I assume was written in the album's original timeline, but I don't know for sure.
     
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  23. RacerX

    RacerX Forum Resident

    Location:
    DC
    Does anyone remember Squeeze performing Annie Get Your Gun on SNL. I was so thrilled it lingers in my memory to this day!
     
  24. prymel

    prymel Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Houston
    That's one of the tracks for which I was unable to find a link.
     
  25. kwadguy

    kwadguy Senior Member

    Location:
    Cambridge, MA
    Yup, that was near the peak of their "new Lennon & McCartney" hype era.
     

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