Blue Monday (New Order song) explained

Blue Monday
Cover:NewOrderBlueMonday.jpg
Caption:Original die-cut sleeve
Type:single
Artist:New Order
Album:Power, Corruption & Lies
B-Side:
Released:7 March 1983[1]
Recorded:1982
Studio:Britannia Row, Islington
Length:7:29 (12-inch version)
4:09 (7-inch version)
Label:Factory (12-inch version)
Tonpress (7-inch version)
Producer:New Order
Prev Title:Temptation
Prev Year:1982
Next Title:Confusion
Next Year:1983

"Blue Monday" is the fifth single by the British rock band New Order. It was released as a 12-inch single on 7 March 1983 through Factory Records. It appears on certain cassette and CD versions of New Order's second studio album, Power, Corruption & Lies (1983).[2] The track was written and produced by Gillian Gilbert, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris and Bernard Sumner.

"Blue Monday" is a eurodisco, synth-pop and alternative dance song that drew inspirations from many works of other artists. The 12-inch single was backed with a primarily instrumental version of the song entitled "The Beach" on the B-side. The single's unique packaging was designed by Peter Saville and Brett Wickens. It features a die-cut sleeve designed to resemble a -inch floppy disk. The cover features no words, but instead has code, invented by Saville, in the form of coloured blocks that contains the artist, song and label information.

The original single made the top 10 in many countries. It reached number nine on the UK Singles Chart and spent 38 weeks in the top 75. It spent 186 weeks on the UK Independent Singles Chart, effectively selling for four years until the release of the Substance 1987 compilation on which it featured. The UK Indie Chart run was second only to "Love Will Tear Us Apart" by Joy Division, which clocked 195 weeks (their runs overlapped). In New Zealand, it peaked at number 2 and spent 74 weeks (spread across three calendar years) in the top 50. The 1988 remix reached number 3 on the British chart and number 4 on the Australian chart, and it topped the dance chart in the United States.

"Blue Monday" is the best-selling 12-inch single of all time.[3] In the United Kingdom, it has sold 1.16 million copies in all formats, including the 1988 and 1995 re-releases. Sales of the original 1983 12-inch release account for the bulk of the total, at over 700,000 copies.[4] It was remixed by the band twice, in 1988 and 1995. The 1988 remix reached number 1 in New Zealand and the top 10 in other countries. The song has been covered by bands including Orgy, Flunk, 808 State, the Enemy and Health. In 2021, Rolling Stone included it at number 235 on its list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".

Background and writing

New Order was formed in 1980 by the former members of Joy Division, which split after the death of their singer, Ian Curtis.[5] They later recruited Gillian Gilbert as keyboardist and second guitarist,[6] and began to explore new musical technology such as synthesisers.[7] New Order wrote "Blue Monday" in their rehearsal room in Cheetham Hill, Manchester.[8] The synth bassline was performed on a Moog Source and sequenced on a sequencer built by the singer, Bernard Sumner.[9] A Oberheim DMX drum machine was used for rhythm. The kick drum was recorded playing through a studio monitor to capture the room's natural reverb.[10] New Order bought an early sampler, the Emulator 1, and sampled choir sounds from Kraftwerk's "Uranium".[11] [12] Sumner and the drummer, Stephen Morris, learnt how to use the sampler by spending hours recording their flatulence.

New Order worked before the advent of MIDI, and so enlisted the engineer Martin Usher to design a circuit to synchronise the synthesisers and drum machine. Usher introduced them to the DMX drum machine, which had outputs that could be sent to the other instruments. The sequence was programmed using binary code. Gilbert wrote the sequence out by hand on a long roll of paper, and accidentally added an extra rest, throwing the sequence slightly out of time; the band liked the effect and kept it in the song.[13] New Order also reused some elements from their 1982 composition "Video 5 8 6".[14]

The bassist, Peter Hook, cited Kraftwerk, Giorgio Moroder and Sparks as influences, and said the song was "stolen" from the Donna Summer song "Our Love".[15] Sumner said parts were taken from "Dirty Talk" by Klein + MBO and "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" by Sylvester. Gilbert said Hook's bassline came from a film soundtrack by Ennio Morricone, a theme from For a Few Dollars More (1965).[16]

Composition

"Blue Monday" has been labelled a "synth-pop classic"[17] [18] and described as cementing the group's movement from post-punk to alternative dance.[19] It has been noted as an example of the hi-NRG style of club music,[20] and the 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide called it "the ultimate in flawlessly programmed, LSD-driven, push-button dance-pop".[21]

The song begins with a semiquaver kick drum, followed by a sequenced melody.[22] "Blue Monday" does not feature a standard verse-chorus structure. After a lengthy introduction, the first and second verses are contiguous and are separated from the third verse only by a brief series of sound effects. A short breakdown follows the third verse, which leads to an extended outro.

"Blue Monday" was described by the BBC Radio 2 "Sold on Song" feature as "a crucial link between Seventies disco and the dance/house boom that took off at the end of the Eighties."[23] Synth-pop had been a major force in British popular music for several years, but "Blue Monday", with encouragement by the band's manager Rob Gretton, was a dance record that also exhibited influences from the New York club scene.

Packaging

The 1983 edition artwork is designed to resemble a inch floppy disk. The sleeve does not display either the group name or song title in plain English anywhere; the only text on the sleeve is "FAC SEVENTY THREE" on the spine. Instead the legend "FAC 73 BLUE MONDAY AND THE BEACH NEW ORDER" is represented in code by a series of coloured blocks. The key enabling this to be deciphered was printed on the back sleeve of the album, Power, Corruption & Lies.[24] "Blue Monday" and Power, Corruption & Lies are two of four Factory releases from this time period to employ the colour code, the others being "Confusion" by New Order and From the Hip by Section 25.

The single's original sleeve, created by Factory designer Peter Saville and Brett Wickens, was die-cut with a silver inner sleeve.[24] It cost so much to produce that Factory Records actually lost money on each copy sold. Matthew Robertson's Factory Records: The Complete Graphic Album[25] notes that "[d]ue to the use of die-cutting and specified colours, the production cost of this sleeve was so high that the single sold at a loss." Tony Wilson noted that it lost 5p per sleeve "due to our strange accounting system"; Saville noted that nobody expected "Blue Monday" to be a commercially successful record at all, so nobody expected the cost to be an issue." In Shadowplayers: The Rise and Fall of Factory Records, Saville states "I am so bored with this story. We didn't even know how many of these expensive covers were ever made anyway."[26]

Robertson also noted that "later reissues had subtle changes to limit the cost" (the diecut areas being replaced with printed silver ink).[27] Saville commented in 2013 that the printers "banged out a cheaper version. I don't know how many thousands were sold [the original] way, or whether Factory were charged the full price for something they didn't get, which would be very Factory."[28] Peter Saville Associates charged Factory £538.20 for the sleeve design.[29] The artwork was so late that Saville sent it straight to the printer, unreviewed by either the band or the label.[30] The 1988 and 1995 versions were packaged in conventional sleeves.

Music videos

A music video for a shortened version of the original was created in 1983, featuring military clips with false colour, simple computer-generated graphics such as colour blocks and geometric lines, digitised video of band members at very low resolution and framerate, a brief amount of footage taken from Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and a short appearance of the video game Zaxxon. The colour blocks were created using Peter Saville's colour-coded alphabet.[31]

The music video for "Blue Monday '88" appears on the Substance video collection (released as a companion to the album of the same name). The video features sketches by photographer William Wegman and his Weimaraner dog named Fay Ray doing balancing acts intercut with hand-drawn animation by Robert Breer. The band members are shown standing around doing various tasks, such as walking a wooden plank over a floor that is painted blue, holding wire-mesh constructed art and milk crates over their faces, being hit by tennis balls, and standing still while they flip through various flip books (tying into the hand-drawn animation sequences).[32]

In September 2012, New Order headlined a festival at Portmeirion in North Wales and festival organisers recruited the support of the local Brythoniaid Male Voice Choir to produce a cover version and accompanying video.[33]

Legacy

In the decades since its release, "Blue Monday" has been commonly cited as one of the greatest songs of all time.[34] [35] In 2022, "Blue Monday" was included in the list "The story of NME in 70 (mostly) seminal songs", at number 21. Mark Beaumont wrote that with this song, "Britain's formative alternative dance culture found its way" in the mainstream and "stayed there until the acid house explosion obliterated clubland".[36] In 2021, Rolling Stone included it at number 235 on its list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[37] It has been covered by bands including Orgy, Flunk, 808 State, the Enemy and Health.

Releases

Blue Monday 1988
Cover:Blue_Monday_1988_Cover_Art.jpg
Type:single
Artist:New Order
B-Side:Beach Buggy
Released:25 April 1988
Recorded:1982
Length:
  • 4:57 (7-inch)
  • 7:10 (12-inch)
Label:Factory
Prev Title:Touched by the Hand of God
Prev Year:1987
Next Title:Fine Time
Next Year:1988
Blue Monday-95
Type:single
Artist:New Order
Album:The Rest of New Order
Released:24 July 1995
Length:8:35
Label:London
Producer:New Order
Prev Title:1963
Prev Year:1995
Next Title:Video 5 8 6
Next Year:1997

"Blue Monday" has been a hit several times in the UK. In 1983, it charted twice, initially reaching number 12, then re-entering the chart later in the year and climbing to number 9, helped by the fact that neither side of the single (the B-side "The Beach" was an instrumental re-working of "Blue Monday", whose lyrics include the line "I thought I told you to leave me when I walked down to the beach") was featured on the UK version of the group's subsequent album, Power, Corruption & Lies. Despite selling well it was not eligible for an official gold disc because Factory Records was not a member of the British Phonographic Industry association. According to the Official Charts Company, its total sales stand at 1.16 million in the United Kingdom alone, and "Blue Monday" came 69th in the all-time UK best-selling singles chart published in November 2012.[38] As of March 2023 total consumed units across all formats have reached 2 million units sold in United Kingdom.[39]

New Order appeared on the BBC's Top of the Pops, on 31 March 1983,[40] to promote the song. New Order insisted on performing "Blue Monday" live. The performance was dogged by technical problems, and was unrepresentative of the recording. In the words of Morris, "Blue Monday was never the easiest song to perform, anyway, and everything went wrong. The synthesisers went awry. It sounded awful."[41]

In 1985, "Blue Monday" and "Thieves Like Us" were released in Poland as a 7" single in a different sleeve by Tonpress under license from Factory Records and sold over 50,000 copies and reached number 5 on the year-end single chart.[42]

Alternative versions

In the mid-80s, New Order accepted to use "Blue Monday" in a commercial for the soft drink Sunkist, with new lyrics: "How does it feel / When a new day has begun? / When you're drinking in the sunshine/ Sunkist is the one".[43]

In 1988, "Blue Monday" was remixed by Quincy Jones and John Potoker as "Blue Monday 1988". Jones was the owner of Qwest Records, New Order's record label in the United States. The single reached number 3 on the British chart, number 4 on the Australian chart, and topped the dance chart in the United States.

A 1995 reissue, with a mix by Hardfloor as the lead track, also made the UK top 20. The song has sold 1.21 million copies in the UK as of October 2015.[44]

Compilations

The single was not originally on Power, Corruption & Lies, but was included on the Gap Records Australia/New Zealand cassette version (though listed only on the cassette itself, not on the card), and the 1983 Qwest Records US CD version.

In 2008, Collector's Editions of all New Order's 1980s albums were released, with remastered versions of the original 12" "Blue Monday" and its B-side "The Beach" appearing on the Collector's Edition of Power, Corruption & Lies. Meanwhile, two versions of "Blue Monday '88" appear on the Collector's Edition of 1986's Brotherhood.

Compilation appearances include

Track listing

All tracks written by Gillian Gilbert, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris and Bernard Sumner.

Blue MondayBlue Monday 1988Blue Monday 1988Blue Monday-95

Personnel

New Order

Technical

Charts

Weekly charts

"Blue Monday"

Chart (1983–1985)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[47] 13
Belgium (VRT Top 30 Flanders)[48] 7
France (SNEP)[49] 38
Ireland (IRMA)[50] 4
UK Singles (OCC)[51] 9
UK Indie (OCC)[52] 1
US Hot Dance Club Play (Billboard)[53] 5
West Germany (Official German Charts)[54] 2

"Blue Monday 1988"

Chart (1988)Peak
position
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[55] 14
Belgium (VRT Top 30 Flanders)[56] 6
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[57] 6
Finland (Suomen virallinen lista)[58] 11
Ireland (IRMA)2
New Zealand (RIANZ)[59] 1
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[60] 9
UK Singles (OCC)3
UK Indie (OCC)1
US Billboard Hot 10068
US Cash Box Top 100[61] 75
US Hot Dance Club Play (Billboard)
1
US Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales (Billboard)
9

"Blue Monday-95"

Year-end charts

"Blue Monday"

Chart (1983)Position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[62] 53
Belgium (Ultratop)[63] 23
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[64] 1
UK Singles (OCC)[65] 18
West Germany (Official German Charts)[66] 12

"Blue Monday 1988"

Chart (1988)Position
Australia (ARIA)[68] 50
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[69] 63
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[70] 78
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[71] 74
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[72] 11
UK Singles (OCC)[73] 57
West Germany (Official German Charts)[74] 41

Cover versions

Orgy versions

Blue Monday
Cover:Bluemonday.PNG
Type:single
Artist:Orgy
Album:Candyass
Released:14 December 1998
Genre:
  • Industrial rock
  • nu metal[75]
Length:4:25
Label:
Producer:
Prev Title:Stitches
Prev Year:1998
Next Title:Fiction (Dreams in Digital)
Next Year:2000
Blue Monday / Stitches
Type:single
Artist:Orgy
Released:9 February 1999
Length:48:04
Label:
Producer:

"Blue Monday" was covered by American alternative metal band Orgy.[76] It was released on 14 December 1998. Internationally, the song was a hit,[77] appearing on music charts worldwide. It has been attributed with providing industrial and metal music with a fresh connection.[78]

Background

In an interview with Billboard guitarist Amir Derakh said that upon working on the song they "wanted to do the original 'Blue Monday' justice" and had expected more criticism. He went on to say that they felt lucky to have covered it and that they felt it could have been something that they had written.[79] The fact that their first major hit was a cover of the 1980s electronica/dance song did not bother the band.

Their first official single release featured various versions of "Blue Monday" and upon the success of the song the band decided to include their previous single "Stitches" on the second release. With the label's support this release was an enhanced CD that featured the music video for "Blue Monday" on 9 February 1999,[79] which was in QuickTime format. "Blue Monday" has been made into several dance remixes, some which were produced to appeal to the underground dance club scene,[79] and was even advertised under "Club Mix" 2000, a popular dance compilation series.[80]

The music video for "Blue Monday" also appeared on several music television stations, and the song was also released on vinyl.[81]

Success

The song appeared on modern rock radio stations,[82] and was a hit on MTV;[77] it appeared on MTV's alternative music program 120 Minutes[79] and TRL, in which it debuted at number eight on 22 February 1999.[83] The song was perceived as the band's gateway to success, allowing them to tour in Ozzfest.[84] and in the Family Values Tour[77] and led to the rerelease of the song "Stitches".[79] The song appeared in Spin magazine's "Hits of the Year" for 1999.[85] "Blue Monday" is also said to have helped pave the way for the cyberpunk trend, as best exemplified in the popularity of the 1999 science fiction film The Matrix, which appeared soon afterwards.[86] In an interview of Joel Gallen in Los Angeles magazine, the music supervisors were discussing the use of Orgy's "Blue Monday" for a football scene in Not Another Teen Movie (2001), among others.[87] Stating that the song "had energy", they eventually selected it for the movie,[88] and it appeared in the soundtrack as well.[89]

"Blue Monday" charted internationally, some of which included CMJ's "Commercial Alternative Cuts"[90] and Billboard's Alternative, Pop, and Dance song charts as well as others. It also appeared in Time[91] and Newsweek[92] in 2000 as featured song clips.

Reception

Orgy's "Blue Monday" has been called the "aggro-fied-for-the-1990s" version of New Order's song,[93] and it is considered to be part of a resurgence of new wave covers by hard rock bands, along with Dope's cover of Dead or Alive's "You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)".[94] Many critics attribute the success of the album Candyass to "Blue Monday", and some anticipated that Orgy would become a one-hit wonder, believing that it would be difficult for the band to follow up with another hit song.[79] Many critics believed it to be their best song.[95] Porter W. Richards of Sputnik felt that even though many of the songs off of Candyass sounded similar, "Blue Monday" was a great song that should not be overlooked.[78] While the New Order song is viewed positively by the author of the comic book series Blue Monday, Chynna Clugston, in an interview she expresses dislike for the misconception that she borrowed the title for her book from Orgy's cover version rather than the original.[96]

In a January 2000 Spin interview, Buckcherry's vocalist Josh Todd and guitarist Keith Nelson did not speak highly of the song, likening its sound to a Nine Inch Nails rip-off and calling the sound "mechanical".[85]

Track listing

Information on Blue Monday (single).

Information on "Blue Monday" and "Stitches".[97]

Weekly charts

Chart (1998–1999)Peak
position
Canadian Singles Chart5
CMJ Commercial Alternative Charts4
US Billboard Hot 100 Singles Sales30
US Billboard Hot Dance Club Play2
US Billboard Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales1
US Billboard Top 40 Mainstream32

Year-end charts

Flunk version

Blue Monday
Cover:Flunk Blue Monday single.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Flunk
Album:Blue Monday
Released:
  • 8 April 2002
  • 3 June 2002
Genre:Electronic
Label:
Prev Title:2002
Prev Year:Miss World
Next Title:On My Balcony
Next Year:2004

Flunk covered the song and released it as a single in 2002. In this version, Flunk slows down "Blue Monday", making it a popular hit for Flunk,[99] based in part on the song's wide recognition. The lyrics become the focus for this version rather than the danceable beat (which was emphasized in the original version). The single received generally positive reviews by electronic music critics,[99] but Mallory O'Donnell of Stylus Magazine commented that Flunk "only showed the paucity of melody" of the original New Order song.[100] The song was subsequently remixed, with at least 7 remixes along with the original version available. The original release was on the 2002 EP titled Blue Monday.

Appearances

2002 EP track listing

  1. "Blue Monday"
  2. "Eight Days a Freak"
  3. "Blue Monday" (Howard Maple Mess Up Mix)

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.rhino.com/article/watch-new-order-reveal-how-blue-monday-was-made
  2. New Order, 'Power, Corruption & Lies' 100 Best Albums of the Eighties . 18 April 2011 . . 27 January 2018.
  3. News: An indie label releases Blue Monday, the biggest selling 12-inch single ever . Alexis Petridis . . 14 June 2011 . . 0261-3077 . 60623878 . 8 July 2011.
  4. News: The history of the Official Charts: the Eighties . . . 19 January 2011.
  5. Web site: Ankeny . Jason . New Order: Biography . 20 July 2013 . AllMusic.
  6. Rambali . Paul . A Rare Glimpse into a Private World . July 1983 . . 30.
  7. Web site: 15 April 2022 . The machine that helped New Order invent 'Blue Monday' . 15 March 2023 . . en-UK.
  8. Web site: Nicolson . Barry . 2015 . New Order — How we wrote 'Blue Monday' . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20170107063925/https://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/new-order-how-we-wrote-blue-monday-762505 . 7 January 2017 . 31 August 2016 . NME.
  9. Web site: Flint, Tom . April 2004 . Recreating New Order's 'Blue Monday' Live . 18 August 2020 . Sound on Sound.
  10. Web site: Murray . Andy . 13 October 2014 . Bernard Sumner talks to Northern Soul . 12 March 2023 . Northern Soul . en-GB.
  11. Web site: Horton . Matthew . 30 July 2018 . How New Order's 'Blue Monday' Changed Music Forever . NME.
  12. Web site: Leatham . Thomas . 21 November 2022 . How Kurt Vonnegut, Fats Domino and flatulence inspired New Order's 'Blue Monday' . 8 May 2023 . . en-US.
  13. Web site: The story behind New Order's Blue Monday - the UK's biggest-selling 12-inch single . 12 March 2023 . . en.
  14. Encyclopedia: Blue Monday . Songlexikon - The Encyclopedia of Songs . . 12 November 2015 . Hall . Marko M. . October 2013 . Fischer . Dr. Dr. Michael . Hörner . Prof. Dr. Fernand . Jost . PD Dr. Christofer.
  15. Web site: Heylin . Clinton . 2 July 2015 . The great rock'n'roll swindle – 10 classic stolen pop songs from Saint Louis Blues to Blue Monday . 11 June 2018 . . en.
  16. Web site: This is how Ennio Morricone inspired New Order's iconic song 'Blue Monday' . 7 July 2020 .
  17. News: 50 songs to make you dance . 7 February 2016 . . 27 January 2018.
  18. Web site: Return of the '80s! Synth-Pop Bands Stage a Middle-Aged Comeback . Williams . Alex . 11 October 2017 . . 27 January 2018.
  19. Web site: John Bush . Blue Monday review at Allmusic . . 12 September 2012. "Still the best-selling 12" single of all time, "Blue Monday" cemented New Order's transition from post-punk to alternative dance with vivid sequencers"
  20. [Barney Hoskyns|Hoskyns, Barney]
  21. Book: Gross, Joe . New Order . The New Rolling Stone Album Guide . The Rolling Stone Album Guide . Brackett . Nathan . Nathan Brackett . Hoard . Christian . Christian Hoard . . 4th . 2004 . 0-7432-0169-8 . 582–83.
  22. Web site: Simpson. Dave. How we made: New Order's Gillian Gilbert and designer Peter Saville on Blue Monday. The Guardian. 23 August 2017. 11 February 2013.
  23. Web site: BBC Radio 2 website . April 2005 . Sold on Song - "Blue Monday" . 12 August 2012.
  24. Web site: Deciphered: Peter Saville . Paul Hetherington . Upon Paper . Uponpaper.com . London . October 2012 . 24 July 2013 . dead . https://archive.today/20130216234810/http://www.uponpaper.com/features/deciphered-peter-saville/ . 16 February 2013 . dmy-all .
  25. Book: Matthew Robertson . Factory Records: The Complete Graphic Album . 2007 . Chronicle Books . San Francisco . 978-0-8118-5642-3 . 224.
  26. Book: James Nice . Shadowplayers: The Rise and Fall of Factory Records . 2011 . Aurum Press . 978-1-84513-634-5 . 210 .
  27. 24 Hour Party People DVD, director's commentary, Wilson interviews Saville
  28. News: Simpson . Dave . How we made: New Order's Gillian Gilbert and designer Peter Saville on Blue Monday . 27 September 2015 . The Guardian.
  29. Web site: Peter Saville Associates stationery. Cerysmatic Factory. 10 June 2017.
  30. Web site: Peter Saville: "I never had to answer to anyone" . The Talks . 22 May 2013 . 20 July 2013 . New Order didn’t approve it, they rarely saw it. More often than not they would go directly from me; "Blue Monday" for example went directly from me to the printer..
  31. Web site: Peter Saville's Alphabet – AOL Video . Video.aol.com . 19 January 2011.
  32. Web site: Blue Monday by William Wegman and Robert Breer with New Order . Electronic Arts Intermix . 24 July 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071128075245/http://www.eai.org/eai/tape.jsp?itemID=4159 . 28 November 2007 .
  33. Festival No.6 presents the Brythoniaid Male Voice Choir - 'Blue Monday' . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211222/wa4JWzEPJe8 . 22 December 2021 . live. . 16 August 2012 . 12 September 2012.
  34. Web site: The Top 500 Songs of All Time, according to NME. 11 February 2014 .
  35. All-TIME 100 Songs. Time . 21 October 2011 . Wolk . Douglas .
  36. Web site: Mark . Beaumont . The Story of NME in 70 (mostly) Seminal Songs . NME . 7 March 2022 . 7 March 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220307110139/https://www.nme.com/features/music-features/story-of-nme-in-70-seminal-songs-3176759 . 7 March 2022 . dead.
  37. 15 September 2021 . The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time . Rolling Stone . en-US . 18 July 2022.
  38. News: UK's million-selling singles: the full list. Ami Sedghi. 4 November 2012. 4 November 2012. Guardian.
  39. News: The story behind New Order's Blue Monday - the UK's biggest-selling 12-inch single. Andre Paine. 7 March 2023. 11 August 2023. Music Week.
  40. Web site: "Top of the Pops" Episode dated 31 March 1983 (TV Episode 1983) . IMDb . 31 March 1983 . 24 July 2013.
  41. Web site: You woke up on a Thursday and it smelled like a Top of the Pops day. Dave Simpson, Dorian Lynskey . The Guardian . 29 July 2006 . 24 July 2013.
  42. Andrzej Buda Historia rocka, popu i hip-hopu wedlu krytykow, Wydawnictwo Niezalezne: 33, 2006,
  43. Web site: 29 January 2022 . When New Order re-wrote Blue Monday for Sunkist drink advert . 23 September 2022 . faroutmagazine.co.uk . en-US.
  44. Web site: Quiz: Who sold more?. Myers. Justin. 24 October 2015. Official Charts Company. 25 October 2015.
  45. http://www.superdeluxeedition.com/news/new-order-updated-and-improved-singles-compilation-on-the-way New Order / Updated and improved Singles compilation on the way June 23, 2016 by Paul Sinclair
  46. https://superdeluxeedition.com/news/now-yearbook-83-new-compilation-revisits-the-year-it-all-started/ Now Yearbook ’83: new compilation revisits the year it all started – SuperDeluxeEdition May 25, 2021 by Paul Sinclair
  47. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1970-1992. 1993 . Australian Chart Book. St Ives, NSW, Australia. 0-646-11917-6. 215.
  48. Web site: Blue Monday - NEW ORDER . Top30-2.radio2.be . nl . 26 July 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120409063716/http://top30-2.radio2.be/ . 9 April 2012 . Hoogste notering in de top 30 : 7
  49. Web site: InfoDisc : Tous les Titres par Artiste . InfoDisc . 23 June 2013 . fr . 23 June 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110918030555/http://www.infodisc.fr/Bilan_N.php . 18 September 2011 . You have to use the index at the top of the page and search "New Order"
  50. Web site: The Irish Charts - All there is to know . . 24 July 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100105231849/http://www.irishcharts.ie/search/placement . 5 January 2010 . 1st, 2nd and 4th results when searching "Blue Monday"
  51. Web site: New Order . . 23 June 2013.
  52. Web site: Indie Hits "N" . Cherry Red Records . 2 October 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090926064331/http://www.cherryred.co.uk/books/indiehits/n.htm . 26 September 2009 .
  53. Web site: New Order awards at Allmusic . . 23 June 2013.
  54. Web site: Blue Monday - New Order. GfK Entertainment. de. 30 August 2022.
  55. Web site: Ultratop.be - New Order – Blue Monday 1988 . Ultratop . 23 June 2013.
  56. Web site: Blue Monday '88 - NEW ORDER . Top30-2.radio2.be . nl . 26 July 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120409063716/http://top30-2.radio2.be/ . 9 April 2012. Hoogste notering in de top 30 : 6
  57. Eurochart Hot 100 Singles. Music & Media. 5. 24. 22. 11 June 1988. 14 September 2020.
  58. Book: Nyman, Jake. 2005. Suomi soi 4: Suuri suomalainen listakirja. 1st. Tammi. Helsinki. 951-31-2503-3. fi.
  59. Web site: Charts.nz - New Order – Blue Monday 1988 . charts.nz . 29 July 2019.
  60. Web site: New Order – Blue Monday 1988 . swisscharts.com . 23 June 2013.
  61. Web site: Cash Box Top 100: May 28, 1988. cashbox.com. 16 March 2022.
  62. Web site: Kent Music Report – National Top 100 Singles for 1983 . . Imgur.com . 22 January 2023.
  63. Web site: Jaaroverzichten 1983. Ultratop. nl. 14 September 2020.
  64. Web site: End of Year Charts 1983. Recorded Music NZ. 14 September 2020.
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