"Someone's Looking at You" | ||||
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Single by The Boomtown Rats | ||||
from the album The Fine Art of Surfacing | ||||
B-side | "When the Night Comes"[2] | |||
Released | 18 January 1980[1] | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 4:27 | |||
Label | Ensign Records (UK)[2] Columbia Records (USA) | |||
Songwriter(s) | Pete Briquette & Bob Geldof | |||
Producer(s) | Robert John "Mutt" Lange[2] | |||
The Boomtown Rats singles chronology | ||||
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"Someone's Looking at You" was the third and final single from The Boomtown Rats' album The Fine Art of Surfacing.[4] It peaked at number two on the Irish Singles Chart and number 4 on the UK Singles Chart in February 1980.[5]
It is an organ-based song that paints a humid picture of 1984-style government surveillance and has been described as a "gently humorous song about paranoia".[6] The second verse starts "They saw me there in the square when I was shooting my mouth off about saving some fish. Now could that be construed as some radical's views or some liberals' wish". This refers to singer Bob Geldof's participation in a Greenpeace anti-whaling rally in London's Trafalgar Square.[6] Geldof's website describes the song as a personal statement on fame.[7]