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"Going Underground"
Single by the Jam
A-side"Dreams of Children"
Released10 March 1980[1]
Recorded16 January 1980
StudioTownhouse Studios, London
Genre
Length2:50
LabelPolydor
SongwriterPaul Weller
ProducerVic Coppersmith-Heaven
The Jam singles chronology
"The Eton Rifles"
(1979)
"Going Underground" / "Dreams of Children"
(1980)
"Start!"
(1980)
Music video
"Going Underground" on YouTube

"Going Underground" is a single by English rock band the Jam, written by lead guitarist Paul Weller and released in March 1980. It debuted at number one in the UK Singles Chart,[3] spending three weeks at the top.[4] "Going Underground" was the first of four number one singles the band were to achieve throughout their career.[5][6]

Production

[edit]

"Going Underground" and "Dreams of Children" were both recorded on 16 January 1980 at Townhouse Studios in London with Vic Coppersmith-Heaven producing.[7] Weller specifically offers a sharp condemnation of Margaret Thatcher's recently elected Conservative government, the voter apathy that led her to power, and the military–industrial complex with the song.[8]

Release

[edit]

"Going Underground" was not released on any of the band's six studio albums, although it has appeared on many compilations since the 1980s, as well as reissues of Setting Sons. The song was released as a double A-side with "Dreams of Children", which originally had been intended to be the sole A-side;[9] following a mix-up at the pressing plant, the single became a double A-side, and DJs tended to choose the more melodic "Going Underground" to play on the radio.[10]

"Going Underground" became the Jam's first UK number-one single and one of the top-selling releases of their career. At the time the single reached number one, the band were touring in the US, where they had long struggled commercially. Foxton recalled: "The record company called us up and told us we'd gone in at Number One. We said, 'Well, what are we doing here then?' We jumped on the plane and went home to where people did want to hear us. We flew back on Concorde and recorded Top of the Pops."[11]

"Going Underground" was the 15th best-selling single in the UK in 1980.[12] The song was ranked at number 2 among the "Tracks of the Year" for 1980 by NME.[13]

"Dreams of Children"

[edit]

"Going Underground" was coupled with "Dreams of Children" as a double A-side. It opens and is intermittently accentuated with a backmasked sample of the band's 1979 song "Thick as Thieves". In the US the backwards intro was edited out making the single 10 seconds shorter than the UK Version. This US edit is available on the best-of compilation Snap!.

Certifications

[edit]
Region Certification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[14] Platinum 600,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Cover versions

[edit]

The song was covered by Buffalo Tom for the 1999 Jam tribute album Fire and Skill: The Songs of the Jam. This version also was released as part of a double A-side single with Liam Gallagher's and Steve Cradock's version of "Carnation" and reached number 6 in the UK Singles Chart.[15]

Manfred Mann's Earth Band recorded their version of the song for the album Criminal Tango in 1986.

The song was covered by Amateur Transplants in 2005 with alternative lyrics about the London Underground.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Going Underground is a twice-weekly interview program hosted by British journalist Afshin Rattansi, dedicated to exploring geopolitics, economics, and current affairs through discussions that probe viewpoints often absent from Western mainstream broadcasting.[1][2] Launched on November 2, 2013, the series originated as a production of RT, a Russian state-funded international news network, but has since operated with independent elements, including podcast distribution from Dubai.[3][4] The program distinguishes itself by prioritizing extended interrogations with guests ranging from former government officials to independent analysts, frequently addressing topics such as U.S. foreign policy interventions, multipolar world dynamics, and critiques of global financial institutions—issues Rattansi contends are sidelined or framed differently in outlets aligned with NATO or Atlanticist perspectives.[1][5] Notable episodes have included debates with ex-Pentagon advisors on neoconservative influences in administrations and exchanges with intelligence veterans on Middle East conflicts, underscoring the show's format of direct confrontation over scripted narratives.[6][7] While praised by audiences seeking alternatives to perceived institutional biases in Western journalism, Going Underground's ties to RT have subjected it to sanctions and broadcasting restrictions in countries like the UK, where regulators cited national security concerns over state-backed media influence, though the program persists via online platforms and maintains a focus on empirical scrutiny of power structures.[8][2] This positioning has cultivated a niche following among viewers skeptical of consensus-driven reporting, positioning it as a counterpoint in the landscape of international discourse.[9]

Background and Writing

Inspiration and Development

"Going Underground" was primarily inspired by the political climate in Britain following the 1979 general election victory of Margaret Thatcher's Conservative Party. Paul Weller, the song's writer and The Jam's frontman, described it as emerging from a sense of national peril, including the prioritization of military spending—particularly nuclear missiles—over social services like the National Health Service, as reflected in the lyric "kidney machines replaced by rockets and guns."[10] Weller perceived the country as "on the brink of devastation" due to escalating nuclear armament, especially the push for more U.S. missiles stationed in the UK, framing the track as a protest against governmental hypocrisy and voter disillusionment.[10][10] The song's development involved collaborative input from the band rather than a fully composed piece brought into the studio. Weller noted that it "wasn’t one of those tunes where I came in the studio and had it all written," instead evolving through jamming sessions with bassist Bruce Foxton and drummer Rick Buckler to refine its structure and energy.[10] Elements like the key change were attributed to Weller's contributions during arrangement, lending the track its dynamic drive. Released as a single on 10 March 1980, it marked The Jam's first UK number-one hit, debuting directly at the top amid unique chart circumstances requiring high daily sales volumes.[10][10]

Political Context

The song "Going Underground" was released on March 10, 1980, by Polydor Records as a double A-side single with "Dreams of Children," amid the early implementation of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government policies following her election victory on May 3, 1979.[10] Thatcher's administration pursued monetarist economics, including public spending cuts and privatization efforts, which contributed to rising unemployment—from 1.5 million in mid-1979 to over 1.9 million by early 1980—and exacerbated industrial unrest after the "Winter of Discontent" strikes of 1978-1979 under the prior Labour government.[11] These conditions fueled widespread disillusionment among working-class youth, a demographic central to The Jam's audience, as economic stagnation and perceived elite detachment intensified social divisions.[12] Paul Weller, the band's lead songwriter, composed the track as a direct rebuke to Thatcher's policies, which he viewed as prioritizing wealth concentration among the affluent at the expense of the working class, framing it as a "call to arms" for those alienated by systemic inequities.[10] The lyrics explicitly decry governmental deceit ("Government lies"), capitalist materialism ("We talk and talk about it but nothing ever seems to change"), and nuclear armament ("Atomic crimes"), reflecting Weller's broader left-wing critique of Thatcherism's perceived erosion of social welfare and embrace of individualism over collectivism.[13] This stance aligned with The Jam's mod-revival ethos, which blended 1960s working-class rebellion with punk-era urgency, positioning the band against voter apathy that Weller believed enabled Conservative dominance despite public hardships.[14] The track's release coincided with escalating tensions, including opposition to Thatcher's proposed increases in defense spending and reductions in trade union power, which Weller and contemporaries saw as symptomatic of a rigged political order favoring corporate interests.[12] By advocating withdrawal—"I'm going underground (going underground)"—Weller expressed personal and collective frustration with electoral politics, interpreting participation as futile amid entrenched power structures, a sentiment echoed in contemporaneous youth subcultures rejecting mainstream assimilation.[10] Despite achieving number-one status on March 23, 1980, the song's anti-establishment message highlighted paradoxes in chart success under the very system it assailed, underscoring Weller's ongoing class-conscious activism that later evolved through his Style Council phase.[11]

Recording and Production

Studio Sessions

The recording of "Going Underground" occurred at Townhouse Studios, located at 150 Goldhawk Road in Shepherd's Bush, London, during sessions in early 1980.[10] The studio, a frequent venue for The Jam, was chosen for its state-of-the-art facilities, which suited producer Vic Coppersmith-Heaven's production approach.[10] Coppersmith-Heaven, who had previously collaborated with the band on their album Setting Sons, oversaw the sessions, emphasizing a raw, energetic capture of the band's performance.[15] Unlike many of Paul Weller's compositions, the song was not fully written prior to entering the studio; instead, it evolved through extended jamming among Weller on guitar and vocals, bassist Bruce Foxton, and drummer Rick Buckler. Weller later recalled that the band "jammed on it quite a bit," with structural elements such as the key change developing organically during these improvisational takes.[10] This spontaneous process contributed to the track's urgent, propulsive feel, blending punk aggression with mod influences in a single, continuous arrangement without a traditional chorus. The B-side, "Dreams of Children," was recorded concurrently, forming a double A-side single.[10] Technical choices prioritized live-band authenticity: Weller employed a black Rickenbacker 330 guitar amplified through a Vox AC30, achieving overdrive via natural tube distortion rather than pedals, while harmony lead lines utilized a custom Les Paul Junior. Techniques from prior sessions, such as positioning corrugated iron sheets around amplifiers to enhance brightness (as on "The Eton Rifles"), may have influenced the guitar tones here.[10] The result was a tightly executed performance completed efficiently, reflecting The Jam's disciplined rehearsal habits and enabling a March 1980 release.[10]

Technical Details

"Going Underground" was recorded on January 16, 1980, at Townhouse Studios in Shepherd's Bush, London, a facility equipped with a 72-input Helios mixing console, Studer 24-track tape machines, and Eastlake monitoring systems.[16][10] The session was produced by Vic Coppersmith-Heaven, who emphasized live basic tracks followed by overdubs to capture the band's energetic performances, including drums, bass, and guitars laid down initially before additional layers.[16] Paul Weller played a black Rickenbacker 330 guitar through a cranked Vox AC30 amplifier, achieving natural overdrive without stompboxes or effects pedals to maintain an organic tone; harmony lead lines were recorded using a custom Les Paul Junior.[10] Vocal recording involved multiple takes to infuse the desired intensity, with the chorus re-vocaled after initial dissatisfaction, using a Neumann U67 microphone equipped with a pop shield and 14dB pad.[16] Guitar amplification was miked with an AKG D12 and Neumann U67, potentially enhanced by surrounding the amp with corrugated iron sheets to produce a bright, metallic edge similar to prior tracks.[10][16] Mixing drew from the multitrack tape to create a stereo master on an Ampex ATR100 tape machine, with segments lifted and adjusted for balance; an initial vinyl mastering cut was rejected due to excessive tweaking and subsequently re-cut for improved clarity and dynamics.[16] Coppersmith-Heaven's approach prioritized meticulous experimentation with microphones and performance refinement, ensuring the final production retained the raw power of the band's mod-influenced punk sound while achieving professional polish.[16]

Musical Composition

Structure and Instrumentation

"Going Underground" employs a straightforward verse-chorus structure typical of punk and mod revival songs, commencing with a riff-based introduction that establishes the driving rhythm before transitioning into the first verse.[13] The verses build tension through cyclical chord progressions, leading to choruses marked by a key change that heightens the melodic lift, as noted by songwriter Paul Weller: "The chord sequence just lent itself to that key change."[10] This progression repeats with variations, including harmony lead guitar lines in later sections, culminating in an energetic outro that reinforces the song's propulsive momentum without extended solos or bridges. The track's development stemmed from band jamming sessions rather than a fully preconceived composition, allowing organic interplay among members.[10] As a power trio, The Jam's instrumentation centers on guitar, bass, and drums, eschewing additional elements like keyboards for a raw, guitar-led sound. Paul Weller handled lead vocals and guitar, utilizing a black Rickenbacker 330 through a cranked Vox AC30 amplifier for rhythm parts to achieve natural overdrive without pedals, while employing a modified Les Paul Junior for harmony leads.[10] Bassist Bruce Foxton's contributions feature inventive, frenzied patterns that propel the track's foundation, interlocking tightly with the guitar riff described as jaunty and reminiscent of The Beatles' mid-1960s style.[13] Drummer Rick Buckler provided exciting percussion effects, maintaining a high-energy 4/4 time signature at an approximate tempo of 133 beats per minute to underscore the song's urgent pace.[13] Recording at Townhouse Studios in London under producer Vic Coppersmith-Heaven incorporated techniques such as potential placement of corrugated iron sheets around the amplifier to enhance a bright, metallic guitar tone.[10]

Style and Influences

"Going Underground" exemplifies The Jam's fusion of punk aggression with mod revival aesthetics, characterized by its rapid tempo of approximately 144 beats per minute, driving bassline from Bruce Foxton, and Paul Weller's staccato rhythm guitar riffs delivered via a Rickenbacker 330, creating a raw, urgent sound that prioritizes propulsion over polish.[17][18] The track's primitive edge evokes early punk recordings from 1977, distinguishing it from contemporaneous new wave productions by bands like Blondie or The Police through its stripped-back intensity and absence of synthetic elements.[17] Rick Buckler's drumming provides tight, relentless fills that underscore the song's restless momentum, while Weller's shouted vocals add to the visceral, street-level immediacy.[19] The song draws heavily from 1960s British mod forebears, particularly The Who's power-chord guitar techniques and windmill strumming style, which Weller emulated in his angular, high-energy playing.[19][20] Influences from The Kinks' concise, riff-driven rock also inform the track's sharp structure and rhythmic bite, blending these with punk's DIY ethos to revive early 1960s beat music sounds amid the late 1970s post-punk landscape.[20] This mod revival approach, as spearheaded by The Jam, mixed punk's raw energy with the tailored precision of 1960s R&B and soul-inflected rock, evident in the song's economical arrangement and emphasis on collective interplay over individual virtuosity.[21] Weller's broader stylistic palette, including nods to American rock 'n' roll pioneers like Chuck Berry, further enriched the band's sound but manifests subtly in the track's hook-laden guitar work.[19]

Lyrics and Themes

Lyrical Content

"Going Underground" was written by Paul Weller, the lead vocalist and guitarist of The Jam.[22] The lyrics open with the protagonist asserting personal contentment despite external judgments: "Some people might say my life is in a rut / I'm quite happy with what I got / People might say that I should strive for more, but / I'm so happy I can't see the point."[22] This sets a tone of rejection toward societal expectations, followed by observations of a "show of strength" and acquiescence to demands for increased funding: "You want more money, of course I don't mind / To buy nuclear textbooks for atomic crimes."[22] The chorus, repeated throughout, declares withdrawal from the collective: "I'm going underground (going underground) / Well, if the brass bands play and feet start to pound / Going underground (going underground) / Well, let the boys all sing and let the boys all shout for tomorrow."[22] The second verse shifts to interpersonal and political dynamics, dismissing derived pleasure from hate and tension while highlighting consequences of misplaced trust: "What you see is what you get / You've made your bed, you better lie in it / You choose your leaders and place your trust / As their lies wash you down and their promises rust / You'll see kidney machines replaced by rockets and guns / And the public wants what the public gets / But I don't get what this society wants."[22] A bridge section intensifies frustration with discourse and media: "We talk and we talk until my head explodes / I turn on the news and my body froze / These braying sheep on my TV screen / Make this boy shout, make this boy scream."[22] The song concludes by reiterating the chorus and evoking imagery of persistent societal noise against the narrator's retreat, interspersed with "la-la-la" refrains.[22]

Interpretations and Analyses

The primary interpretation of "Going Underground" centers on its role as a vehement critique of the British Conservative government's policies following the 1979 general election victory of Margaret Thatcher. Paul Weller, the song's writer, has described it as emerging from the "political state we were in at the time," highlighting disillusionment with official hypocrisy, particularly the sale of arms to authoritarian regimes while espousing democratic values.[10][23] Lyrics such as "The high rise blocks built in the '70s failed / My high rise dreams replaced by big cars" evoke resentment toward urban decay and unfulfilled promises of modernization, while "We talk and talk about it but nothing ever seems to change" underscores skepticism toward electoral politics, with lines like "We vote every time for a different face / But it seems just the same old lies" targeting perceived continuity in governmental deceit.[13] Analyses further emphasize the song's anti-militaristic stance, interpreting references to "leaders' lies and atomic crimes" as condemnation of nuclear armament and foreign policy inconsistencies, including arms exports that contradicted anti-repressive rhetoric.[23] The titular phrase "I'm going underground" symbolizes personal withdrawal from a corrupt system, rejecting societal pressures to "strive for more" amid materialism and media-driven aspiration, as Weller contrasts contentment with one's lot against jingoistic propaganda and consumerist "rat race."[23] This opt-out ethos aligns with punk-era individualism, though delivered through The Jam's mod-revival lens, blending working-class alienation with broader systemic indictment rather than endorsing revolutionary action.[17] Some commentators view the track as a broader existential rebellion, with aphoristic lyrics questioning life's purpose under political duress—"I'm gonna try and get away from the everyday"—prioritizing inner authenticity over public conformity.[13] However, Weller has downplayed its artistic pinnacle, noting in reflection it "wasn't one of those great songs that fell out fully formed," suggesting the raw urgency stemmed more from contemporaneous frustration than polished intent.[10] These readings, drawn from Weller's statements and period context, portray the song not as partisan ideology but as causal critique of power structures enabling moral contradictions, resonant in an era of economic stagnation and rising unemployment.[23]

Release and Commercial Performance

Single Release

"Going Underground" was released as the A-side of a double A-side 7-inch vinyl single alongside "The Dreams of Children" on 10 March 1980 by Polydor Records in the United Kingdom.[24] The single carried the catalogue number POSP 113 and was produced by Vic Coppersmith-Heaven at Townhouse Studios in London.[15] Both tracks were newly recorded non-album songs, with "Going Underground" written by Paul Weller as a critique of political apathy and urban alienation.[25] A limited edition double-pack version included the standard single plus a bonus 7-inch EP with three live tracks recorded at the Rainbow Theatre in London on 22 December 1979: "It's Too Bad", "Saturday's Kids", and "The Modern World".[26] This packaging featured custom die-cut sleeves and was aimed at enhancing collector appeal during the band's rising popularity in the mod revival scene.[27] The single's artwork depicted a stark black-and-white image aligned with The Jam's punk-influenced aesthetic, emphasizing raw energy over elaborate production.[28] International releases followed shortly after, including versions in Europe and the United States under Polydor and sister labels, often mirroring the UK configuration but with variations in labeling and pressing.[28] For instance, the Spanish edition used catalogue number 20 59 216, maintaining the 45 RPM format.[28] Promotional copies circulated with distinct red labels in some markets, such as the US, to target radio play.[29] The release preceded The Jam's album Sound Affects by eight months, positioning it as a standalone hit that capitalized on the band's momentum from prior singles like "The Eton Rifles".[11]

Chart Performance and Sales

"Going Underground", released on 10 March 1980, debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart dated 22 March 1980, marking the first time a single had entered at the top position since Slade's "Merry Xmas Everybody" in December 1973.[30][31] The track remained at number one for three consecutive weeks, demonstrating strong initial sales momentum amid competition from established acts.[32] It accumulated nine weeks in the UK top 40 overall, reflecting sustained popularity in the post-punk era.[33] Internationally, the single achieved modest chart success outside the UK, reaching number six in France and number 18 on Sweden's alternative chart, but it failed to crack major markets like the United States.[34] In the UK, sales estimates place cumulative physical sales at approximately 735,000 units, underscoring its commercial viability as a non-album single.[35] The British Phonographic Industry certified "Going Underground" gold in February 1983, recognizing shipments exceeding 250,000 copies under the threshold applicable at the time.[34]

Certifications

"Going Underground" by The Jam was certified Gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) on November 14, 2004, for 400,000 units sold in the United Kingdom.[36] The single's certification was upgraded to Platinum on January 13, 2023, after accumulating over 600,000 units in combined physical sales and streaming equivalents, with historical sales data indicating approximately 640,000 units sold during the 1980s alone and a total of 1.24 million units by that point.[36] No certifications have been awarded by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) or equivalent bodies in other major markets such as Australia or Canada.

B-Side Analysis

"Dreams of Children"

"Dreams of Children" is a song written by Paul Weller for The Jam, recorded on January 16, 1980, at Townhouse Studios in London and released as the intended A-side to the band's March 10, 1980, single, though a printing error at Polydor's French pressing plant resulted in it being labeled as the B-side to "Going Underground".[23][37] The track runs approximately 3:06 in length and departs from The Jam's characteristic mod revival and punk influences, adopting a psychedelic aesthetic with backward guitar intros and a stark, experimental delivery influenced by mid-1960s bands like The Beatles during their Revolver period.[38][39] The song opens with a deceptive false start featuring winding, reversed guitar effects, creating a disorienting atmosphere that builds into tense, guitar-driven verses.[17] Lyrically, Weller evokes imagery of isolation and faded idealism, as in the opening lines: "I sat alone with the dreams of children / Weeping willows and tall dark buildings / I've caught a fashion from the dreams of children."[40] The content reflects on the erosion of youthful optimism amid urban decay and adult disillusionment, with references to "strange emotions" and a "strange devotion" suggesting a nostalgic yet critical gaze at lost innocence.[41] Critics have noted its pastiche of psychedelic rock, positioning it as a deliberate nod to backward-looking influences amid The Jam's evolving sound in 1980, though it contrasts sharply with the politically charged directness of "Going Underground".[38] This atypical style, owing much to The Beatles' experimental techniques, underscores Weller's interest in sonic innovation, even as the band maintained a focus on concise, energetic pop structures.[42] Despite its secondary billing due to the mishap, the track contributed to the single's double A-side appeal, reaching number one on the UK Singles Chart.[25]

Relationship to A-Side

"Dreams of Children" was originally intended as the lead track for the single released on March 10, 1980, but a labeling error at the pressing plant designated "Going Underground" as the A-side, transforming it into an inadvertent double A-side release.[17][43] This mishap elevated "Going Underground" to greater prominence, as it received more radio play aligned with its high-energy punk-infused style, while overshadowing the more atmospheric B-side.[17] Thematically, both tracks, penned by Paul Weller, reflect disillusionment amid early Thatcher-era anxieties, with "Going Underground" channeling raw anger against political hypocrisy, consumerism, and nuclear threats through urgent lyrics like "I'm going underground" to evade societal deceit.[17] In contrast, "Dreams of Children" evokes a loss of innocence and creeping paranoia, portraying modern life as a nightmarish erosion of youthful optimism via imagery of distorted dreams and urban dread.[17][41] This shared undercurrent of societal critique underscores their pairing, illustrating Weller's multifaceted response to contemporary malaise—direct confrontation in the A-side versus introspective dread in the B-side.[43] Musically, the songs highlight The Jam's stylistic versatility: "Going Underground" drives with tight, fast-paced guitars and a mod-punk propulsion suited to chart dominance, whereas "Dreams of Children" incorporates psychedelic elements like chiming riffs, backward guitar effects, and a eerie, Revolver-era Beatles influence, evoking a horror-film ambiance akin to post-punk contemporaries such as Joy Division.[17][43][38] The B-side's experimental texture foreshadowed The Jam's evolving sound on subsequent releases like Sound Affects, positioning it as a subtle counterpoint to the A-side's immediacy rather than a mere adjunct.[43] Together, they exemplify the band's ability to balance commercial punch with artistic depth, though the error ensured the pairing's asymmetry in public reception.[17]

Reception

Contemporary Reviews

"Going Underground," released on March 10, 1980, garnered favorable notices from UK music weeklies upon its debut. Smash Hits praised the track's unerring quality, querying in its review, "Can they put a foot wrong?" amid the band's streak of hits.[44] The single's urgent rhythm and Paul Weller's pointed lyrics on societal disillusionment aligned with the mod revival's ethos, earning it acclaim for capturing Thatcher-era discontent.[38] NME recognized its impact by awarding "Going Underground" Best Single at its 1980 ceremony and ranking it second on the publication's Tracks of the Year list, behind only Joy Division's "Love Will Tear Us Apart."[45][46] Such endorsements underscored the song's commercial breakthrough as The Jam's first number-one single, which debuted atop the UK charts on March 23, displacing Blondie's "Atomic" in a rare midweek entry.[38] While some critics noted its derivative nods to The Who's style, the prevailing view affirmed its pop potency and cultural timeliness.[38]

Long-Term Critical Assessment

Retrospective analyses have consistently positioned "Going Underground" as a pinnacle of The Jam's output, emblematic of their fusion of mod revival aesthetics with punk urgency and sociopolitical commentary. Critics highlight its incisive lyrics, which decry consumerist escapism and governmental indifference under Margaret Thatcher's premiership—phrases like "I'm going underground" symbolizing withdrawal from a system prioritizing profit over public welfare—as prescient captures of early 1980s British malaise. The track's double A-side release on March 10, 1980, not only debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart, a rarity at the time, but has endured as a benchmark for protest rock, with musicologists noting its role in elevating The Jam to the vanguard of Thatcher-era dissent.[47][48] In rankings of The Jam's catalog, the song frequently tops lists for its instrumental drive, particularly Steve Brookes' riff-heavy guitar work layered over Bruce Foxton's bass propulsion and Paul Weller's raw vocal delivery, which convey alienation without descending into nihilism. Publications have lauded it as the band's finest guitar moment and among their top three compositions overall, crediting its chart-topping success—holding number one for three weeks—with solidifying The Jam's commercial apex while amplifying working-class frustrations. RateYourMusic users, aggregating thousands of ratings, score it at 4.0 out of 5, deeming it arguably the UK's finest number-one single for its apocalyptic tone and structural innovation, originally conceived as a B-side.[18][49][50] Despite this acclaim, nuances emerge in creator reflections and scholarly scrutiny; Weller himself downplayed it in a 2022 interview as "not one of my favourites," attributing its resonance more to zeitgeist alignment than personal attachment, amid the band's internal pressures during U.S. touring. Some analyses critique the lyrics' binary worldview—opposing "crawling" conformity to defiant retreat—as rhetorically potent yet philosophically limited, potentially oversimplifying systemic incentives for individual disengagement. Nonetheless, its inclusion in retrospective compilations and covers by acts like Buffalo Tom underscores sustained influence, with no substantial critical backlash eroding its status as a enduring mod-punk staple.[10][51][47]

Legacy and Impact

Cultural Significance

"Going Underground" emerged as a potent symbol of youth disillusionment during the early Thatcher era, capturing widespread frustration with governmental priorities that favored military escalation over social welfare. Released on March 10, 1980, the song's lyrics, penned by Paul Weller, lambast societal apathy toward pressing issues such as nuclear armament—"To buy nuclear textbooks for atomic crimes"—and critique the media's role in perpetuating public indifference, as in the line "The media sells emotionless games." This resonated deeply with working-class British youth navigating economic stagnation and political alienation following the Conservative Party's 1979 election victory, positioning The Jam as a voice for generational discontent.[13][23] The track's raw punk-infused mod style amplified its cultural reach, blending melodic accessibility with urgent social commentary to bridge punk's aggression and the mod revival's sharp sartorial rebellion. Its accidental promotion to A-side status—due to a labeling error on the double A-side single with "Dreams of Children"—propelled it to the UK number-one spot upon debut, underscoring public appetite for such unfiltered expression amid rising tensions over policies like monetarism and the Falklands buildup. Weller's declaration "I want nothing this society's got" encapsulated a defiant rejection of establishment norms, influencing perceptions of rock as a platform for direct political critique rather than mere entertainment.[13][23] Enduringly, "Going Underground" has retained relevance as an archetype of British protest music, emblematic of how 1980s pop could articulate class-based grievances without descending into overt didacticism. Frequently invoked in discussions of Thatcherism's societal fallout, it inspired subsequent acts in Britpop and indie scenes to adopt similar lyrical candor, while its anthemic quality ensured playback at rallies and cultural retrospectives, affirming The Jam's role in sustaining mod-punk's legacy as a conduit for working-class agency.[52][13]

Political Legacy and Debates

"Going Underground," released on March 14, 1980, emerged as a defining anthem of resistance against the early Thatcher administration, capturing widespread frustration with political leadership and systemic priorities. Paul Weller's lyrics explicitly condemn voter complicity in electing "leaders" whose "lies wash you down and their promises drown," while highlighting resource misallocation from healthcare ("kidney machines") to armaments ("rockets and guns"), reflecting real economic shifts under the 1979 Conservative government that prioritized defense spending amid cuts to social services. This resonated amid rising unemployment, which climbed from 5.3% in 1979 to 11.9% by 1984, fueling youth alienation in a post-punk milieu skeptical of institutional trust.[53][47] The song's political legacy lies in its role propelling The Jam to the vanguard of music's opposition to Thatcherism, with Weller positioning it as a "call to arms" for those disillusioned by policies exacerbating class divides and eroding public services. Its chart-topping success—debuting at number one on the UK Singles Chart despite a manufacturing labeling error swapping A- and B-sides—amplified its reach, selling over 350,000 copies and influencing subsequent protest tracks in the antinuclear and antiwar punk scenes. Over decades, it has symbolized 1980s working-class discontent, invoked in retrospectives on the era's social upheavals, including the 1981 Brixton riots and miners' strikes, where similar themes of governmental betrayal echoed. Weller's broader oeuvre, including "Eton Rifles" (1979), reinforced this critique of elite detachment, cementing the track's enduring association with left-leaning anti-establishment sentiment.[10][54][55] Debates surrounding the song center on the tension between its radical message and commercial triumph, questioning whether topping the charts undermined the imperative to "go underground" as an act of withdrawal from a corrupt system. Critics argue this paradox illustrates pop music's inherent compromise: Weller's disdain for the "political system he hated" clashed with Polydor Records' promotion, yet the single's ubiquity arguably mainstreamed dissent, challenging left-wing orthodoxy on cultural insurgency without resolving it into actionable politics. Interpretations vary on its scope—some view it as narrowly anti-Thatcher, tied to 1980 election fallout, while others see a timeless anarchist rejection of electoralism, evidenced by lines urging personal exodus over reform. Weller himself later downplayed it as "not one of [his] favorites," suggesting retrospective ambivalence toward its politicization, amid his shift from overt socialism to broader humanism. Mainstream media retrospectives, often from left-leaning outlets, frame it uncritically as heroic protest, though this overlooks how such narratives sometimes romanticize failure to effect systemic change, prioritizing symbolic gesture over causal impact on policy.[56][57][10]

Cover Versions and Adaptations

"Going Underground" has been covered by numerous artists across rock, punk, and alternative genres, reflecting its enduring appeal in mod revival and punk circles. Manfred Mann's Earth Band released a version featuring Chris Thompson as a single from their 1986 album Criminal Tango, adapting the track with progressive rock elements including synthesizers and extended instrumentation.[58][59] Down by Law, an American punk band, recorded a cover in February 1996, preserving the original's energetic tempo while infusing skate punk aggression.[60] Buffalo Tom contributed a straightforward rock rendition in 1999 for a split charity single paired with Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher and Steve Cradock's cover of The Jam's "Carnation," benefiting War Child.[61][60] Welsh rock band Lostprophets issued their version in 2007, aligning with post-hardcore stylings on a compilation tribute.[62] The Jam tribute act From The Jam, featuring original bassist Bruce Foxton, regularly performs the song live, often closing sets to evoke the band's mod-punk energy.[60] Mike Peters of The Alarm released a solo acoustic-leaning cover on November 11, 1996, emphasizing lyrical themes of societal disillusionment.[60] No significant non-musical adaptations, such as theatrical or cinematic reinterpretations, are documented, though the track's anti-establishment lyrics have inspired live renditions at political events.[60]

References

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