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Oh we do like to be B-side the A-side

Okay. Time to ‘fess up. The first single I ever bought was Natalie Imbruglia’s Torn. To my mind, it still stands as a great song (a recent singles collection from the Australian soapstarturned-popstar supports my faith in her greatness), and when bought it, I remember my joy possessing such a shiny, shiny object. And you know what? When I take it out of its cardboard case now (ten long taste adjusting years later) and slip it into the tray, listening to those three precision-aimed tracks pop wonderment still brings back the same giddy thrills it did then.

Vinyl collectors are always accused of geekishly fetishizing their collections, buffing grooves (or whatever), and it seems that CD owners will soon go the same way. I try to

Josh Farrington and Verity Simpson debate the pros and cons of the B-side, while Varsity picks the best of the bunch

stay away from eroticising compact discs, but my innate selfishness and agnostic attachment to earthly possessions leads me to value my CD collection more than just about anything else I own. An mp3 file on a computer just isn’t the same – I can’t search for it in a shop (where it will be, invariably, hidden away behind a discount ska compilation), then take it triumphantly to the till, rushing home with it to place it on the stereo like a sacrifice upon an altar, and sitting back to worship. People rave about the download revolution because it means we can cut out only the sharpest, but this is a bad thing. You don’t cut your favourite chapters from a book, or the best scenes from a film. Albums are recorded as a unified work of art to be taken and appreciated as a whole, and singles B-sides aren’t just castoffs tagged on to encourage people to buy something they already own, they’re of surplus creativity for  dedicated fans of musical experiments that work in an album sometimes, just they’re better by themselves.

Josh Farrington

I’m not ashamed of my first single. It was the Manic Street Preachers, If You Tolerate This, Then Your Children Will Be Next. Okay, not their best, but I can honestly say that I have no recollection of its B-side. I didn’t listen to them then, and I certainly don’t listen to them now. The CD B-side is dead, and its ashes have been scattered over iTunes, where a phoenix has risen from them to take on the form of a sort of ‘pick and mix’ attitude to the purchase of music. You hear a single
somewhere, and if you like it enough you buy it on iTunes (or you download it from your music savvy friend) and that’s that. The reason most bands had a B-side was due to the demands of their record labels, but let’s face it - the majority of them just weren’t very good. Or, more irritatingly, there were just three remixes of the same song. Or worse, an instrumental version. Crap. However, this isn’t meant to be an essay condemning the B-side, or at least the concept of a B-side. I have nothing against an added bonus for your money, as long as it’s actually a decent track. But let’s bear in mind that we need to