Little Miss Disaster

"Little Miss Disaster" is a song by punk rock band the Damned, released 1 December 2005 on their own Lively Arts label. It was the band’s first single release since "Shut It" in 1996.

"Little Miss Disaster"
Single by The Damned
from the album So, Who's Paranoid?
A-side"Little Miss Disaster"
B-side"Anti-Pope (Live)"
Released1 December 2005
RecordedChapel Studios, South Thoresby, 2005
Length4:47
LabelLively Arts Records
Songwriter(s)Captain Sensible, Louisa Carr
Producer(s)The Damned
The Damned singles chronology
"Shut It"
(1996)
"Little Miss Disaster"
(2005)
"A Nation Fit for Heroes"
(2010)

The band's lineup shifted again, with Stu West making his recording debut on bass guitar for the group, having taken over on live dates from Patricia Morrison, who had begun to concentrate on her daughter Emily and managing the band.

The song continued the style the band established for their Grave Disorder album, with their unique gothic/punk/psychedelic sound, fast guitars and swirling keyboards topped off with a dramatic vocal.

From 11 November 2005, the band began selling copies of the single on their Little Miss Disaster Tour. The sleeve featured Emily Strange as a result of a collaboration between the band and the Emily Strange website.[1] On 1 December, the single was made available via the band’s website, with a limited edition of 1,000 vinyl copies (with a red-splattered vinyl pattern), and on CD. The B-side, a live version of "Anti-Pope", was taken from the DVD MGE25, recorded live at Manchester Academy on 4 December 2004 to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their album Machine Gun Etiquette.

Track listing

7” version: -

  1. "Little Miss Disaster" (Sensible, Carr) – 4:47
  2. "Anti-Pope (Live)" (Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Ward) – 3:31

CD version: -

  1. "Little Miss Disaster" (Sensible, Carr) – 4:47
  2. "Anti-Pope (Live)" (Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Ward) – 3:31
  3. "The History of the World (Part 1)" (Scabies, Sensible, Vanian, Gray) (video track, taken from the MGE25 DVD)

Production credits

gollark: Skynet's `send` and `receive` functions handle the connection and listening stuff automatically, yes.
gollark: <@94122472290394112> EXT vs Skynet:Skynet:* wildcard channel - allows listening to all system messages* API may be nicer to use, as you don't *need* to call skynet.listen anywhere - you do need to call EXT.run somewhere, in parallel or something* Skynet's backend (not the CC side) assigns each connected socket an ID, and tells you which IDs recevied messages. This is not much use.EXT:* messages only readable by people on same channel or server operator* somewhat more complete API - allows closing channels - Skynet can do this but the CC side doesn't handle it
gollark: Yeeep.
gollark: No, because the storage system just lets you pull out items by their name.
gollark: Modern plethora-based item systems just allow you to deposit and withdraw items by name, that doesn't make sense.

References

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