Bizarre Love Triangle - New Order
Pages
- 2 (1)
- 3-5 (10)
- 5-50 (7)
Sheet type
- original (14)
- transcription (1)
File type
- image (11)
- pdf (3)
- (1)
Parts
- chords (8)
- lyrics (5)
- guitar (1)
10 members have this sheet
4 members want it
| last added by | pages | info | sheet | file | lyrics | chords | guitar | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| nathanpeterman (83) | 2 | Piano only; no lyrics. | transcription | |||||
| typicalmitch (55) | 2 | i might give it for free but trading much appreciated | original | |||||
| briggs813 (51) | 2 | transcription | image | |||||
| adominant7 (12) | 2 | easy | ||||||
| Animac (16) | 3 | original | image |

"Bizarre Love Triangle" is a single released in 1986 by New Order. A version is included on their album Brotherhood.
Though generally regarded as one of the group's best singles, it failed to make the UK Top 40, only reaching #56. It was, however, a surprise hit in Australia, reaching #5 and initiating a string of five consecutive Top 20 hits. In the U.S, the song's popularity has only climbed steadily since 1986 and it is considered a classic in many circles.
In 2004 the song was ranked #201 in Rolling Stone's "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". Read more
The 12-inch version appears on the compilation Substance and a remix by Stephen Hague features on their Best Of album.
The music video was directed by American artist Robert Longo. It prominently featured shots of a man and a woman in business suits flying through the air as though propelled by trampolines; this is based directly on Longo's "Men in the Cities" series of lithographs.
The single mix features a cleaner sound with more electronics than the album version, notably the Fairlight CMI music workstation, the premier sampling keyboard workstation of the eighties, used to provide novel sounds, such as the orchestral hits that were so popular, but also to sequence the song. All instruments minus bass and voice were sequenced.[3]
A version is on the soundtrack of the 1988 film Married to the Mob.
User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.
Though generally regarded as one of the group's best singles, it failed to make the UK Top 40, only reaching #56. It was, however, a surprise hit in Australia, reaching #5 and initiating a string of five consecutive Top 20 hits. In the U.S, the song's popularity has only climbed steadily since 1986 and it is considered a classic in many circles.
In 2004 the song was ranked #201 in Rolling Stone's "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". Read more
The 12-inch version appears on the compilation Substance and a remix by Stephen Hague features on their Best Of album.
The music video was directed by American artist Robert Longo. It prominently featured shots of a man and a woman in business suits flying through the air as though propelled by trampolines; this is based directly on Longo's "Men in the Cities" series of lithographs.
The single mix features a cleaner sound with more electronics than the album version, notably the Fairlight CMI music workstation, the premier sampling keyboard workstation of the eighties, used to provide novel sounds, such as the orchestral hits that were so popular, but also to sequence the song. All instruments minus bass and voice were sequenced.[3]
A version is on the soundtrack of the 1988 film Married to the Mob.
User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.
People who play this song, also play
- Concerning Hobbits by Lord of the Rings Soundtrack
- I Miss You by Haddaway
- I Left My Heart In San Fran by Tony Bennett
- Daybreak by Ayomi Hamasaki
- March Of TheSlave Children by John Williams
- Antarctica - Echoes by Vangelis
- Ouverture by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- Dayton,Ohio 1903 by Randy Newman
- London London by Caetano Veloso
- We Can Last Forever by Chicago
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