"Smalltown Boy" | ||||
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Single by Bronski Beat | ||||
from the album The Age of Consent | ||||
B-side |
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Released | 25 May 1984 (UK)[1] | |||
Studio | The Garden (London) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length |
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Label | London | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) | Mike Thorne | |||
Bronski Beat singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Smalltown Boy" on YouTube |
"Smalltown Boy" is the debut single by the British synth-pop band Bronski Beat, released in May 1984 by London Recordings. It was included on their debut album, The Age of Consent (1984). The lyrics describe a young man who is forced to leave home. "Smalltown Boy" is a gay anthem and is associated with the rise of British gay culture in the 1980s. The music video was directed by Bernard Rose and filmed in East London. In 2022, Rolling Stone named it the 163rd-greatest dance song.
As Bronski Beat's falsetto leader, Somerville made gay politics a hot pop topic with such hi-NRG dance floor staples as "Why?" and "Smalltown Boy"
The trio had met as friends and performed as a hoot, but their first single, "Smalltown Boy" (an autobiographical tale of a gay youth fleeing homophobia for the tolerance of the big city), became a Hi-NRG disco fave on both sides of the Atlantic.