"Down in the Tube Station at Midnight" is a single by The Jam, and was the second single from their third album, All Mod Cons. Released in October 1978, it reached No. 15 in the UK Singles Chart.[1] The single was backed by a cover version of The Who's song "So Sad About Us", and the song "The Night", written by Bruce Foxton.
"Down in the Tube Station at Midnight" | ||||
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Single by The Jam | ||||
from the album All Mod Cons | ||||
B-side | "So Sad About Us / The Night" | |||
Released | 13 October 1978 | |||
Genre | Mod revival | |||
Label | Polydor (UK) | |||
Songwriter(s) | Paul Weller | |||
Producer(s) | Vic Coppersmith-Heaven | |||
The Jam singles chronology | ||||
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Back cover | ||||
![]() Keith Moon, who died shortly before the single's release | ||||
Originally Paul Weller had wanted to exclude the song from the All Mod Cons album,[2] on the grounds that the arrangement had not sufficiently developed during the recording sessions.[3] He was persuaded to include it by the record's producer Vic Coppersmith-Heaven.[3][4]
The song tells the story of an unnamed narrator travelling on his own who enters a London Underground tube station at midnight to get the last train home, where he is attacked by a gang of men who 'smell like pubs, and Wormwood Scrubs, and too many right-wing meetings' as he buys a ticket from an automated machine.[5] The song starts with the atmospheric sounds of a London Underground station, then a tense, syncopated beat carried by the bass guitar. The lyrics are sentimental, contrasting the warmth of home and domestic life with the dangers of 1970s London's urban decay and casual late-night violence. Tension is heightened by a heartbeat audio effect in the left stereo channel at points during the song.[6]
The sound of an Underground train at the beginning and end of the song was recorded at St John's Wood Station.[5]
The front cover photograph was taken at Bond Street tube station, on the westbound Central line. On the back cover was a portrait photograph of Keith Moon who had died a month prior to the single's release.[7] The Who's "So Sad About Us" was included as a tribute to Moon.[8]
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