| "Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before" | November 1987 | |
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Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before Girlfriend in a Coma Germany 7" [Line LIS1.00025B (in grey, white or yellow vinyl)]
Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before Canada 7" [Sire 92 81367]
Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before Australia 7" [CBS 651284-7]
Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before Germany 12" [Line 609 438 (black vinyl)]
Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before Australia 12" [CBS 651284-6]
Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before Japan CD5 [Victor VDP-28025]
Additional information:
Artwork information: The Dutch grey 7" and 12" have the same artwork on both sides. The yellow Australian singles have the "Strangeways Here We Come" cover on the back (in small).
Etchings on vinyl:
Additional release date information:
Chart peak information:
Promotion: Canada: The promo version of this 7" single was identical to the stock one, it was also distributed inside a generic WEA sleeve, but the record's middle had a small hole with promo text next to it instead of the stock version's larger hole. Germany: The white vinyl edition of the 7" was dispatched to media with an Ariola 'Single Facts' sheet. Japan: Promo cds of the original 1988 edition of this EP have SAMPLE printed in red on the inner rim and a red promo sticker over the barcode on the back. The promos for the 1990 reissue are marked as SAMPLE on the obi and on the cd's inner ring. USA: The promo counterpart to the 7" was similar to the stock version, but it had the title track on both sides and promo text added on the record's label in place of the barcode. A 12" of "Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before" was also produced by Sire specifically to promote the "Strangeways Here We Come" album. This is covered on the "Strangeways Here We Come" page. The video for "Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before" was included on a various artists video promo compilation from the record label dated 12-01-87. This also served indirectly to promote the "Strangeways Here We Come" album.
Quote: Morrissey, in an interview to journalist Len Brown published in the 13 February 1988 issue of the NME, on why this single wasn't released in the UK like in the rest of the world: "I desperately desperately wanted that to be released. Rough Trade sent white labels along to Radio One but they said they would never under any circumstances play it because of the line about mass murder. They said people would've instantly linked it with Hungerford and it would've caused thousands of shoppers to go out and buy machine guns and murder their grandparents. I think Rough Trade should've released 'Death Of A Disco Dancer' instead just to be stroppy."
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