Confusion (New Order song)
"Confusion" is the sixth single by the English rock band New Order, originally released in August 1983 on Factory Records with the catalogue number FAC 93.<ref>New Order - Confusion, Discogs.com, Retrieved 6 August 2009</ref><ref group="note">The catalogue number given here is for the UK version. For other countries, see New Order - Confusion at discogs.com Retrieved 6 August 2009</ref> The follow-up to their breakthrough hit "Blue Monday", it was produced and co-written by influential New York DJ Arthur Baker, charting at No. 1 on the UK Indie Chart, No. 12 on the UK Singles Chart and the top 10 in Ireland and New Zealand, as well as reaching No. 5 on BillboardTemplate:'s Dance Club Songs.
Music video
The video for the single features live footage of the band in concert, intercut with images of nightlife in New York City, specifically at the "Fun House", and producer Arthur Baker and DJ John "Jellybean" Benitez at work.
Other versions
An edit of the Rough Mix represents the single on the 2005 compilation Singles. A re-recorded "Confusion" as well as the original "Confusion Instrumental" appear on the group's 1987 Substance release. The track reappeared on the 1995 remix collection The Rest of New Order as an acid techno remix by Pump Panel, which was used in 1998 as part of the soundtrack for the film Blade. Samples from The Pump Panel remix are featured on the tracks "Operation Blade (Bass in the Place)" by Public Domain, "Play It Louder" by Randy Katana, and "Phatt Bass" by Warp Bros and Aquagen. The 2016 re-release of Singles includes the promo 7" edit of "Confusion".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Critical reception
Considered a disappointing follow-up to "Blue Monday" upon its release, the song has retrospectively gained critical acclaim.<ref name="guardian" />
The Guardian placed the song 29th on their list of the 30 best New Order songs, with Alexis Peditris stating that its "improved with age", and that "its wholehearted, charmingly gauche embrace of electro illustrates the impact of New York’s nightlife on the band."<ref name="guardian" />
Track listing
Template:Track listing Template:Track listing Template:Track listing Template:Track listing
- Released in 2004.
Chart positions
| Chart (1983) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australia ARIA Singles Chart<ref name=aus>Template:Cite book</ref> | 72 |
| Irish Singles Chart | 7 |
| New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart | 7 |
| UK Singles Chart | 12 |
| UK Indie Singles | 1 |
| US Billboard Dance/Disco Top 80<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> | 5 |
| US Billboard Hot Black Singles<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> | 71 |
| Chart (2002) | Peak position |
| UK Singles Chart [A] | 64 |
| UK Dance [A] | 6 |
- [A] – Whacked Records re-release
References
Notes
<references group="note"/>
- 1983 songs
- 1983 singles
- Factory Records singles
- New Order (band) songs
- Song recordings produced by Arthur Baker (musician)
- Songs written by Arthur Baker (musician)
- Songs written by Gillian Gilbert
- Songs written by Peter Hook
- Songs written by Stephen Morris (musician)
- Songs written by Bernard Sumner
- UK Independent Singles Chart number-one singles