On February 17, 2023, a 3CD deluxe edition of A Flock of Seagulls was released to commemorate its 40th anniversary. The 3CD featured a remastered version of the original album, B-sides, single versions, remixes, BBC sessions and a BBC concert from The Paris Theatre, London, which was originally transmitted in January 1982. It also featured sleeve notes by Classic Pop writer John Earls, including a new interview with lead singer and founding band member Mike Score. In addition, the remastered album was also available as a limited-edition transparent orange vinyl LP.[7]
The album received good reviews upon its release and radio airplay.[15][10] In his retrospective review for AllMusic, Tom Demalon gave the album 4.5 stars, calling it "great fun and a wonderful collection of new wave ear candy."
Critic Robert Christgau was also happy with it, giving it an A− and saying that it is "so transparently, guilelessly expedient that it actually provides the hook-chocked fun most current pop bands only advertise."[14] Other reviews pointed out the bands "pioneering sounds, compelling hooks and undeniably addictive gimmicks."[10]
John Gentile of Punknews.org has described the album as an example of early, experimental electronica, and stated that while its sound is "not strictly punk, or even post-punk," it contains elements of both genres and "uses them to their greatest extent."[16]
The band, and particularly this album, were influential during the 1980s for their image[17] and for their production techniques. Record producer Phil Spector called the album "phenomenal."[18]
When compared to the UK version, the US version of the album dropped the track "Tokyo", used an edited version of "I Ran (So Far Away)", scrambled the track order, and also had minor mix differences or slightly earlier fade-outs for a few other tracks.
↑Rubin, Nick (November 2011). "US college radio, the 'New British Invasion' and media alterity". Radio Journal: International Studies in Broadcast and Audio Media. 9 (2): 127–143. doi:10.1386/rjao.9.2.127_1. ISSN1476-4504.
↑Gentile, John (19 March 2013). "A Flock of Seagulls". Punknews.org. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
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