Playing with a Different Sex | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | May 1981 | |||
Recorded | April 1981 | |||
Studio | Jacobs (Surrey, England) | |||
Genre | Post-punk | |||
Label | Human | |||
Producer |
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Au Pairs chronology | ||||
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Playing with a Different Sex is the debut studio album by English post-punk band Au Pairs. It was released in 1981 by Human Records.
In its retrospective review, AllMusic described the album as "one of the great, and perhaps forgotten, post-punk records." [1] The album peaked at No. 33 in Britain and produced the single "It's Obvious", which reached No. 37 on the Club Play Singles chart in America in 1981.
Many of the songs on the album deal with sexual politics. In "Repetition", a David Bowie cover, domestic violence is explored ("I guess the bruises won't show/If she wears long sleeves"), and the possessiveness underlying an open relationship is pilloried in "We're So Cool" ("you must admit/I'm prepared to share/At off-peak times"). [2]
Allegations of rape and torture of Irish women imprisoned in the city of Armagh in Northern Ireland are the core content of the song "Armagh", which challenges the notion that "civilized nations" do not torture. [3] The refrain, "We don't torture, we're a civilized nation / We're avoiding any confrontation / We don't torture..." is repeated throughout the song. The lyrics point out that the "American hostages in Iran, [are] heard daily on the news..." while "You can ignore the 32." They continue: "There are 32 women in Armagh jail / Political prisoners here at home," before describing alleged incidents of abuse. The song led to limited distribution of the album in Ireland, when Northern Irish record distributors refused to carry it. [4]
The song "Come Again" refers to the social pressure to "achieve orgasmic equality"; [5] a 1982 profile in Mother Jones notes that the song depicts sex "as a dreary ritual in which partners as joyless as lab rats press bars and nose buttons in the hopes of an orgasm as dry and quantifiable as kibble." [6] The song, directed at "those who changed the game" and "brought in new rules", asks "is it real? Are you feeling it?", before turning into a dialogue between the female lead singer and male back up who is evidently attempting to satisfy her: "Am I doing it right?" he asks, and the woman reassures him, "You're not selfish/You're trying hard to please me – please, please me/Is your finger aching?/I can feel you hesitating." The song was banned from the BBC, who feared parental backlash. [7] [8]
The album was reissued in 1992 on CD by RPM Records, a subsidiary of Cherry Red Records, with an additional eight tracks, consisting of singles, remixes and previously unreleased songs.
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Record Mirror | [9] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [10] |
The Village Voice | B+ [11] |
In a 1981 review for Record Mirror , Mark Cooper wrote that the Au Pairs' "critique of all forms of possession and sexual stereotyping assumes a devastating power." [9] Playing with a Different Sex was ranked at number 17 on NME 's list of the best albums of 1981. [12]
Describing the album in The Rough Guide to Rock (2003), Owen James referred to the band's mix of humour and righteous anger, stating "They don't make them like this anymore." [13] In 2002's She's a Rebel: The History of Women in Rock & Roll, Gillian G. Gaar suggested that "the taut rhythms and aggressive lyrics of Different Sex make it a classic example of how the influence of punk could steer rock into exciting new areas." [2] The song "Diet", originally released as a single in 1980 and recorded for a session for BBC Radio 1 in 1981, was later released on Equal but Different (1994), a compilation of twenty of the band's BBC performances, and included on the extended reissue of Playing with a Different Sex; it was described by Fact as a "masterpiece of feminist rock" with an almost unparalleled "power and pathos". [14]
All tracks are written by Paul Foad, Peter Hammond, Jane Munro and Lesley Woods, except where noted.
Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes. [15]
Au Pairs
Technical
Chart (1981) | Peak position |
---|---|
UK Albums (OCC) [16] | 33 |
UK Independent Albums (Record Business) [17] | 1 |
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