Penetration lyrics
Artist · 18 320 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Don't Dictate - The Best Of Penetration
1995 · compilation
Coming Up For Air
1979 · album
Race Against Time
1979 · album
Moving Targets
1978 · album
Resolution
2015 · album
Attitude
2011 · compilation
Live 19789
2010 · album
The Feeling / Guilty
2010 · single
BBC In Concert (27th June 1979)
2010 · album
John Peel Session
2010 · single
Don’t Dictate
2009 · single
Our World
2008 · single
The Best Of Penetration
2005 · compilation
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Biography
The only summation one can make of the career of English punks Penetration is, what a disappointment. In 1977, Penetration released a classic chunk of punk rock defiance titled "Don't Dictate." With Pauline Murray's impassioned vocals (sounding a bit like X-Ray Spex's Poly Styrene) leading the way, this was a blazing piece of anti-authoritarian rant: loud, snotty, and proud. Sadly, it was to be the one song they remained best noted for (assuming there are people who still remember Penetration). The problem was that they traded in barely competent but energetic bashing and thrashing for a more "mature" new wave/"punk-ish" rock sound. As a result, their debut LP, Moving Targets, although it has its moments, never lived up to the promise of "Don't Dictate." Still, Pauline Murray was a force to be reckoned with. Easily one of the best singers to come out of English punk rock, she made the band interesting even when the songs weren't there, the production was overwrought, and the whole enterprise was terribly uneven. It was to the surprise of no one that by 1980 she was fronting a new band, the Invisible Girls, who based on Murray's strengths became known as Pauline Murray and the Invisible Girls. Still, major success eluded Murray, and she later moved into singing more elegant, mainstream pop/rock, remaining one of England's best unknown singers. ~ John Dougan, Rovi