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  1. Fine Young Cannibals - Johnny Come Home (Official Video) 'Johnny Come Home' taken from the album 'Fine Young Cannibals', available on all platforms:...

    • 4 min
    • 632.7K
    • London Records
    • Getting Noticed
    • FYC Legacy
    • Love For Sale
    • The Flame
    • I’m Not Satisfied
    • Don’T Look Back
    • I’m Not The Man I Used to Be
    • Ever Fallen in Love
    • Suspicious Minds
    • Johnny Come Home

    The inspiration behind the name Fine Young Cannibals came from All the Fine Young Cannibals, which was a movie filmed by Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood in 1960. At first, the group had trouble earning a recording contract until the members took it upon themselves to film and released a music video for “Johnny Come Home.” Serving as the breakthrough...

    Also dubbed FYC, the Fine Young Cannibals released two studio albums. The first was in 1985, which was named after the band had since become certified platinum with Music Canada and gold with the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). This album brought forth four hit singles, starting with “Johnny Come Home.” In 1989, The Raw & the Crooked, became t...

    As a tribute to Cole Porter, the Fine Young Cannibals performed and recorded “Love for Sale” as their contribution to the album, Red Hot + Blue. Proceeds of the album, which featured a collection of Cole Porter songs performed by a variety of artists, went to AIDS research. “Love for Sale” was a song that was featured in the 1930 musical, The New Y...

    In 1996, members of the Fine Young Cannibals reunited, four years after they officially disbanded. It was featured on the group’s compilation album, The Finest. On the UK Singles Chart, “The Flame” became a number seventeen hit, marking a decent comeback for FYC as the trio released their first greatest hits album. Sung as a lovestruck victim, the ...

    In 1989, “I’m Not Satisfied” peaked at number ninety on the US Billboard Hot 100 as FYC’s final hit on this particular music chart. In Ireland, this song charted the highest on its official singles chart at number nineteen. It was also a number forty-six hit on the UK Singles Chart. In this song, the narrator expressed his disappointment as a man f...

    1988’s “Don’t Look Back” featured amazing guitar riffs that felt like they could have been something borrowed from the biggest pop bands of the 1960s. This self-pity tune of the narrator wanting to ditch his past as a means to move forward served as a heartfelt favorite among the fans who found this song a great contrast to FYC’s previous hits. Wha...

    Coming from The Raw & the Crooked, “I’m Not the Man I Used to Be” became one of six singles from it to become a hit. In 1989, this powerful tune peaked as high as number eight on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart and on the Irish Singles Chart. In the UK, it peaked as high as number twenty. Globally, this song also charted within the top fort...

    When the Fine Young Cannibals covered the Buzzcocks 1978 original, “Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve),” this was for the 1986 movie, Something Wild. “Ever Fallen in Love” was an international hit for FYC, even surpassing Buzzcock’s number twelve peak ranking on the UK Singles Chart at number nine. On the US Billboard Hot Dance Clu...

    Originally performed by Mark James in 1968, then popularized by Elvis Presley in 1969, “Suspicious Minds” was a hit single for Fine Young Cannibals that also featured the guest vocals of Jimmy Somerville. This song was released by FYC in 1985 from their self-titled debut album and it peaked as high as number six in Australia and number eight in the...

    When the Fine Young Cannibals first came together as a band in 1984, the trio had a difficult time getting a recording contract. After the video to “Johnny Come Home” was made public, this changed. This mix of rock and ska once again demonstrated the distinction of Roland Gift’s amazing voice as he shared the story of a young runaway who found the ...

  2. "Johnny Come Home" is a song by British band Fine Young Cannibals, released as the first single from their debut album, Fine Young Cannibals (1985). It is similar to the style of many other of the band's hits, a mixture of rock and ska with Roland Gift 's distinctive vocals, as well as a jazz -type trumpet solo.

  3. Top Of The Pops performance broadcasted June 20th 1985Listen to “Johnny Come Home”: https://fineyoungcannibals.lnk.to/JohnnyComeHomeFollow Fine Young Canniba...

    • 4 min
    • 962.6K
    • London Records
  4. Music. album: Fine Young Cannibals [London 1985]1 Johnny Come Home2 Couldn't Care More3 Don't Ask Me to Choose4 Funny how Love Is5 Suspicious Minds6 Blue7 Move to W...

    • 3 min
    • 224
    • MOODS
  5. The song follows the story of a runaway who learns the harsh reality of a life on the streets. The title refers to his parents' desperate plea for him to come home and was likely inspired by the 1975 TV documentary about London runaways, Johnny Go Home: The Murder of Billy Two-Tone.

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  7. Aug 6, 2016 · It reached #1 in the US, UK and Australia and spawned #1 singles hits with “She Drives Me Crazy and “Good Thing.” (I remember spinning both continuously when I was a club DJ in Boston.) But this is where the story goes off the rails.