The Bangles were an all-female pop band from California, and the first version of the band formed in 1980. Several name changes took the band from the Colours to the Supersonic Bangs to just the Bangs. A legal issue forced the final name change, to the Bangles, when their independent label EP was released in 1983.
"Going Down to Liverpool" was off the band's debut LP, 1984's All Over the Place. While the song did receive some radio play, it did not chart -- in fact, the band's first charting single was 1986's "Manic Monday," which hit #2. Interestingly, the original version of "Going Down to Liverpool" was written by Kimberley Rew and recorded by his band, Katrina and the Waves (of "Walking on Sunshine" fame). The song appeared several times on early recordings of theirs and caught the attention of Vicki Peterson and Michael Steele of the Bangles, who decided to put it on their record.
The video features Leonard Nimoy, whose son was a friend of Susanna Hoffs (hence his connection to the band). Hoffs also enlisted her mom, indie film director Tamar Simon Hoffs to direct the video. While the video did not launch the band to stardom (that would come later), it was a solid effort. Of course, the band would have some major success in the mid to late 1980s before breaking up.
We're pretty big fans of the original as well:
Note that The Bangles excellent cover of "If She Knew What She Wants" was posted on ERV in December 2014.
In addition, we posted Katrina and the Waves' "Do You Want Crying?" in July 2015.