MESSAGES
LOCOMOTION
sleeve
CATALOGUE VS 660
FORMAT 7" SINGLE
LABEL DINDISC
RELEASE DATE 02/04/84
CHART 5
SLEEVE DESIGN Peter Saville Associates
CURRENT VALUE £4
 
RUN-OUT A -
RUN-OUT B -
TRACK LISTING WRITERS PRODUCER RECORDED
LOCOMOTION OMD Brian Tench Air Studios, Montserrat
HER BODY IN MY SOUL OMD Brian Tench & OMD Air Studios, Montserrat

NOTES

'Locomotion' was written in the last week in Montserrat and was typical of the songwriting method of Andy McCluskey. Often a word or a phrase would lodge in his head and would be added to his notebook of possible lyrical ideas. One such phrase was "Across every ocean, for the sake of locomotion".

'Locomotion' was recorded in the last week during the Montserrat sessions before overdubbing the drums at ICP Studios, Brussels. The original song was combined with a steel drum rhythm that Paul had written the previous week and a bass line and piano that then-manager Gordian Troeller contributed. The track was mixed and enhanced with a brass arrangement at Wisselood, Holland. Tony Visconti did the brass arrangements.

'Her Body In My Soul' was actually one of two songs created from one original track. The second being 'Love And Violence'.

There are three distinct variations for this release:

Glossy card sleeve.

  • Scratch competition on the reverse.
  • "Manoeuvres" spelt as "Manoeuvers" on the sleeve.
  • "Manoeuvres" spelt as "Manoeuvers" on the record label.


Glossy card sleeve.

  • No scratch competition on the reverse.
  • "Manoeuvres" spelt as "Manoeuvers" on the sleeve.
  • "Manoeuvres" spelt as "Manoeuvers" on the record label.


Thin paper sleeve.

  • "Manoeuvres" spelt correctly on the sleeve.
  • "Manoeuvres" spelt correctly on the A-side record label.
  • "Manoeuvres" spelt as "Manoeuvers" on the B-side.

 

TRIVIA

Initial releases of this single featured a 'scratch' competition on the rear sleeve. If by scratching off a square it revealed the image of a train, by sending the whole sleeve to Virgin a random first prize winner would receive a CD player and 3 signed OMD CD's. All other winning entries received a signed copy of the Junk Culture album.

The fact that the winner had to send off the entire sleeve to claim their prize means that copies of the sleeve bearing the winning train logo are probably the rarest version of this release.

Gordian Troeller was OMD's manager at the time.