Tracklist
A | Do They Know It's Christmas? (12" Mix) | 6:04 | |
B1 | Do They Know It's Christmas? (Standard Mix) | 3:50 | |
B2 | Feed The World | 4:20 |
Companies, etc.
- Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Phonogram Ltd. (London)
- Copyright © – Phonogram Ltd. (London)
- Published By – Chappell Music Ltd.
- Lacquer Cut At – The Town House
- Pressed By – Orlake Records
Credits
- Artwork [Sleeve Artist] – Peter Blake (4)
- Engineer – Steve Lipsom*
- Performer [Band Aid Are] – Tony Hadley
- Performer [Band Aid Are], Featuring [Also] – Paul McCartney
- Producer – Trevor Horn
- Written-By – Ure*
Notes
UK's biggest selling single of all time until 1997, selling over 4m copies.
"Orlake" etched in runouts denotes Orlake Records pressing.
There is also a PRS Ltd. pressing, at Do They Know It's Christmas?
Issued in thin cardstock picture sleeve.
Rear of sleeve includes a group photo of almost all the artists involved, below which is a key.
Band Aid are:
1 Adam Clayton
2 Phil Collins
3 Bob Geldof
4 Steve Norman
5 Chris Cross
6 John Taylor
7 Paul Young
8 Tony Hadley
9 Glenn Gregory
10 Simon Le Bon
11 Simon Crowe
12 Marilyn
13 Keren
14 Martin Kemp
15 Jody Watley
16 Bono
17 Paul Weller
18 James Taylor
19 Peter Blake (sleeve artist)
20 George Michael
21 Midge Ure
22 Martin Ware
23 John Keeble
24 Gary Kemp
25 Roger Taylor
26 Sarah
27 Siobhan
28 Peter Briquette
29 Francis Rossi
30 Robert 'Kool' Bell
31 Dennis Thomas
32 Andy Taylor
33 Jon Moss
34 Sting
35 Rick Parfitt
36 Nick Rhodes
37 Johnny Fingers
ALSO FEATURING:
David Bowie
Boy George
Holly
Paul McCartney
Many thanks to all the fine artists who kindly donated their time and effort in the making of this record.
All proceeds of this record are to assist famine relief in Ethiopia, this includes merchandise, sales, publishing & performance contributions.
Many thanks for the aid in manufacturing this record go to:- Graphic Origination, Peter Blake, Torchlight, Robert Stace
In the lower left corner is an outline image of a "Feed The World" T-shirt. The text below reads:
Official BAND AID - FEED THE WORLD T-shirt
Send £6.00 c/o
BAND AID
Concert Publishing
166-198 Liverpool Road
London N1 1LA
"Feed The World" logo in bottom right corner.
Track A is just titled on label A-side as "12" Mix".
Track B1 is just titled on the rear sleeve as "Standard Mix".
[Labels]
Chappell Music Ltd.
Original Sound Recording made by Phonogram Ltd. (London)
℗ 1984 Phonogram Ltd. (London)
© 1984 Phonogram Ltd. (London)
Durations not printed on release.
"Orlake" etched in runouts denotes Orlake Records pressing.
There is also a PRS Ltd. pressing, at Do They Know It's Christmas?
Issued in thin cardstock picture sleeve.
Rear of sleeve includes a group photo of almost all the artists involved, below which is a key.
Band Aid are:
1 Adam Clayton
2 Phil Collins
3 Bob Geldof
4 Steve Norman
5 Chris Cross
6 John Taylor
7 Paul Young
8 Tony Hadley
9 Glenn Gregory
10 Simon Le Bon
11 Simon Crowe
12 Marilyn
13 Keren
14 Martin Kemp
15 Jody Watley
16 Bono
17 Paul Weller
18 James Taylor
19 Peter Blake (sleeve artist)
20 George Michael
21 Midge Ure
22 Martin Ware
23 John Keeble
24 Gary Kemp
25 Roger Taylor
26 Sarah
27 Siobhan
28 Peter Briquette
29 Francis Rossi
30 Robert 'Kool' Bell
31 Dennis Thomas
32 Andy Taylor
33 Jon Moss
34 Sting
35 Rick Parfitt
36 Nick Rhodes
37 Johnny Fingers
ALSO FEATURING:
David Bowie
Boy George
Holly
Paul McCartney
Many thanks to all the fine artists who kindly donated their time and effort in the making of this record.
All proceeds of this record are to assist famine relief in Ethiopia, this includes merchandise, sales, publishing & performance contributions.
Many thanks for the aid in manufacturing this record go to:- Graphic Origination, Peter Blake, Torchlight, Robert Stace
In the lower left corner is an outline image of a "Feed The World" T-shirt. The text below reads:
Official BAND AID - FEED THE WORLD T-shirt
Send £6.00 c/o
BAND AID
Concert Publishing
166-198 Liverpool Road
London N1 1LA
"Feed The World" logo in bottom right corner.
Track A is just titled on label A-side as "12" Mix".
Track B1 is just titled on the rear sleeve as "Standard Mix".
[Labels]
Chappell Music Ltd.
Original Sound Recording made by Phonogram Ltd. (London)
℗ 1984 Phonogram Ltd. (London)
© 1984 Phonogram Ltd. (London)
Durations not printed on release.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 1): FEED + 112 + As ORLAKE TOWNHOUSE
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 1): FEED + 112 + Bs ORLAKE TOWNHOUSE
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 2): FEED + II2 + A5 ORLAKE TOWNHOUSE
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 2): FEED + II2 + B6
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 3): FEED + 112 + A6 ORLAKE
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 3): FEED + 112 + B5 ORLAKE TOWNHOUSE
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 4): FEED + 112 + A5 ORLAKE TOWNHOUSE
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 4): FEED + 112 +B6 ORLAKE
Other Versions (5 of 116)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Do They Know It's Christmas? (12", 45 RPM, Maxi-Single, Stereo) | Mercury | 880 502-1 Q | 1984 | ||||
Recently Edited
|
Do They Know It's Christmas? (7", 45 RPM, Single, Paper Labels) | Phonogram | FEED 1 | UK | 1984 | ||
Recently Edited
|
Do They Know It's Christmas? (7", 45 RPM, Single, Stereo) | Mercury | 880 502-7 | Netherlands | 1984 | ||
Recently Edited
|
Do They Know It's Christmas? (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Single, Stereo, Pitman Pressing) | Columbia | 44 05157, 44-05157 | US | 1984 | ||
Recently Edited
|
Do They Know It's Christmas? (7", 45 RPM, Single, Styrene, Stereo, Pitman Pressing) | Columbia | 38-04749 | US | 1984 |
Recommendations
Reviews
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2024, and people are offended by this song. I'm not offended by it myself but the song has weird lyrics. Of course it doesn't snow in Africa at christmas time. I think it's a cracking song, I just don't think we need new rerecordings of it. You only ever hear the original on the radio.
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Edited 20 years agoWhile the song itself may not be the most catchy, its a testament to the love & comion one man (Geldof) can have to come up with a way to help people he's never met (the starving citizens of Ethiopia) and to convince other people of incredible power (the of Band Aid) to come together to use their collective power to help people on the other side of the world (so to speak) simply because they know that there's need for help and they can do something to help that would otherwise take years to come to fruition. Top it off with the fact that ultimately it captured the sound of the 'cutting edge British pop' scene of the day and even more important it gave rise to other equally monumental acts of comion such as USA for Africa, Geldof's own Live AID and Mellencamp's similarly styled Farm AID, Hands Across America, the AIDS Walks both in America and other nations around the globe.
People saw this trend as just a fad, due primarily to the hoopla (positive and subsequently negative) hoopla around America's sister effort, "We Are The World." The bad press was a result of the way the American top 40 charts were calculated at the time; unfortunately because of the size of the American population at the time, a different formula had to be used to keep the data accurate, which also meant there was a lag time between actual sales and airplay and the result appearing in Billboard or Cashbox. This allowed "We Are The World" to sell 2 million copies before even debuting on the top 100, even then at #3, not #1. It did move to #1 for a couple weeks and then dropped off the charts entirely a few weeks after for the same aforementioned reasons. Ultimately it was a success, but the song's short run was the primary catalyst for Billboard and the now defunct Cashbox to search for a better method to calculate the charts so that they would be more accurate and not misrepresent what was actually happening in the American music markets, which "We Are The World," when compared to "Do They Know It's Christmas?," helped to expose the gross misrepresentation.
Even given that "We Are The World" and the subsequent benefit records and events that came and went in the following years became fewer and fewer, to this day they still are recorded - a trend (not fad) that Geldof and Band Aid initiated.
And the best part of all it? Even in America, "Do They Know...?" has become a modern holiday standard that gets played on almost every top 40 station in the US, like Lennon's "Give Peace A Chance," McCartney's "Wonderful Christmastime," or anything off the first "A Very Special Christmas" album... and every time you hear it you there are others less fortunate than you, no matter how bad off you are, and that you have another opportunity to do something to help them.
Thank you Bob.
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