It's Going to Happen!

For the film in which this phrase is said, see Lawrence of Arabia (film).
"It's Going to Happen!"
Single by The Undertones
from the album Positive Touch
Released 2 May 1981 (1981-05-02)
Format Vinyl record (7")
Recorded 1981
Genre Punk rock
Length 3:30
Label Ardeck-EMI
Writer(s) Damian O'Neill
Michael Bradley
The Undertones singles chronology
"Wednesday Week"
(1980)
"It's Going To Happen!"
(1981)
"Julie Ocean"
(1981)
Rear cover
Rear cover of single, depicting the Undertones in 1981

"It's Going to Happen!" is a punk rock song originally written and recorded by Northern Irish band The Undertones. The song was written in the winter of 1980 and recorded at Wisseloord Studios in the Netherlands in January, 1981. The song was the eighth single released by the band, and the second single released to be co-written by lead guitarist Damian O'Neill and bassist Michael Bradley.

Unlike any of the previous singles released by The Undertones, all of which focused on teenage angst and romance, It's Going to Happen! was written in reference to the 1981 hunger strikes in Northern Ireland. The single is also notable for its inclusion of brass instruments in the recording.

The song was released as a single on 2 May 1981, two weeks before the release of the Undertones' 3rd LP, Positive Touch, and reached number 18 in the UK Singles Chart on 24 May.[1] The single also peaked at number 7 in Irish Singles Chart, making the single the band's highest positioning single in any Singles Chart.

It's Going to Happen! was performed on Top of the Pops on 5 May 1981, the day one of the hunger strikers, Bobby Sands, died. To mark his death, Damian O'Neill wore a Black Armband.[2][3][4]

Track listing

Side one
No. TitleWritten by Length
1. "It's Going to Happen!"  Damian O'Neill, Michael Bradley 3:39
Side two
No. TitleWritten by Length
1. "Fairly in the Money Now"  Tommy Tate & The Torpedoes 2:34

References

  1. Official Charts.com 24 May - 30 May 1981
  2. YouTube.com
  3. Martin, Gavin (2002-03-29). "Pop: Songs in the key of real life". The Independent. London. p. 15.
  4. O'Hearn, Denis (2006-05-06). "A Hunger for Justice". The Nation.

External links

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