Banana Republic (song)

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"Banana Republic"
Single by The Boomtown Rats
from the album Mondo Bongo[1]
B-side "Man at the Top"[2]
Released 1980 (UK)
Format 7" vinyl
Genre New wave, reggae
Length 3:24 (album version 5:01)
Label Ensign Records (UK)[2]
Columbia Records (USA)
Writer(s) Pete Briquette, Bob Geldof[2]
Producer(s) Tony Visconti[2]
The Boomtown Rats singles chronology
"Someone's Looking at You"
(1980)
"Banana Republic"
(1980)
"Up All Night"
(1981)

"Banana Republic" was the first single from The Boomtown Rats' album Mondo Bongo.[1] It peaked at number three in the UK Singles Chart.[3]

Breaking from the band's previous new wave sound the song opens with a ska-reggae hook (that repeats at the close of the much longer album version).[4] However, the song itself is a more mainstream piece musically. The 'banana republic' which the song describes is actually a deliberately scathing portrait of the Republic of Ireland, the band's country of origin, and was written in response to the band being banned from performing there.[5] This in turn was reputedly because of Geldof's "denunciation of nationalism, medieval-minded clerics and corrupt politicians" in a memorably controversial 1977 interview/performance on Ireland's The Late Late Show with Gay Byrne.[6][7]

References

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  5. [1] Archived July 8, 2009 at the Wayback Machine
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  7. [2] Archived May 17, 2008 at the Wayback Machine