X Offender | |
Cover: | Blondie - X Offender (US).jpg |
Border: | yes |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Blondie |
Album: | Blondie |
Released: | June 17, 1976 |
Recorded: | 1976 |
Genre: | |
Length: | 3:15 |
Label: | Private Stock |
Producer: | Richard Gottehrer, Craig Leon |
Next Title: | In the Flesh |
Next Year: | 1976 |
"X Offender" is the debut single by American band Blondie. Written by Gary Valentine and Debbie Harry for the band's self-titled debut album, Blondie, the song was released as the album's lead single on Private Stock in June 1976.
The title of the song was originally "Sex Offender". Bassist Gary Valentine originally wrote the song about an 18-year-old boy being arrested for having sex with his younger girlfriend. Debbie Harry changed the lyrics so that the song was about a prostitute being attracted to the police officer that had arrested her. The track was co-produced by Richard Gottehrer who had worked with 1960s girl group The Angels, and the song is reminiscent of that era in its style.[1]
Private Stock insisted that the name of the single be changed to "X Offender" because they were nervous about the original title. It was released in mid-1976 with the B-side being "In the Sun". While the song did not chart, Chrysalis heard it along with the Blondie album and signed the band. "X Offender" later served as the B-side to "Rip Her to Shreds". Due to limited copies of the single being released and the subsequent popularity of the band, a copy of the original UK Private Stock single "X Offender"/"In the Sun" is a sought-after rarity with copies selling for £50 in collectors' markets since the mixes of both songs on the single are different from those on the Blondie album. These mixes appear as bonus tracks on EMI/Capitol Records' 2001 reissue of the album. No master tapes of the Private Stock versions have been kept in the archives; consequently, these bonus tracks are direct transfers from vinyl.
Cash Box said that it "is really a good tune, with a driving beat that builds to a fine point of tension," saying that Blondie reminds them of The Tubes.[2]
Music videos were produced for both "X Offender" and "In the Sun".[3]