"Can't Be Sure" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by The Sundays | ||||
from the album Reading, Writing and Arithmetic | ||||
B-side | "I Kicked a Boy", "Don't Tell Your Mother" | |||
Released | January 1989 | |||
Recorded | 1989 | |||
Genre | Indie pop, dream pop | |||
Length | 3:22 | |||
Label | Rough Trade | |||
Songwriter(s) | David Gavurin, Harriet Wheeler | |||
Producer(s) | The Sundays, Ray Shulman | |||
The Sundays singles chronology | ||||
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"Can't Be Sure" is the 1989 debut single by the British indie pop group The Sundays. [1] [2] It was the first (and in the United Kingdom, only) single to be released from their album Reading, Writing and Arithmetic , which was released a year later. The B-side was "I Kicked a Boy", which also appeared on the album. The 12" single contained an additional, non-album track, "Don't Tell Your Mother". The single reached number 45 on the UK Singles Chart and number 74 in Australia, and it was voted number one in John Peel's Festive Fifty for 1989. [3]
The song's lyrical theme is "desire", treated as a general concept rather than being directed towards anything or anyone in particular. [4]
By the song's closing refrain, the song's narrator appears to have come to terms with, if not necessarily resolved, the dichotomy: [4]
Chart (1989–1990) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (ARIA) [5] | 74 |
UK Singles (OCC) [6] | 45 |
Fine Young Cannibals (FYC) was a British pop rock band formed in Birmingham, England, in 1984, by bassist David Steele, guitarist Andy Cox, and singer Roland Gift. Their self-titled 1985 debut album contained "Johnny Come Home" and a cover of "Suspicious Minds", two songs that were top 40 hits in the UK, Canada, Australia, and many European countries. Their 1989 album, The Raw & the Cooked, topped the UK, US, Australian, and Canadian album charts, and contained their two Billboard Hot 100 number ones: "She Drives Me Crazy" and "Good Thing".
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