Killer on the Loose chords by Thin Lizzy

Song's chords A, B, Bm, E

Album Chinatown

Info about song

Although not an overt publicity seeker, bass player, lyricist and principal composer Phil Lynott realised early on in his career that gimmicks and outrageous shenanigans generate considerably more publicity than saintly behaviour. "Killer On The Loose" was obviously written with the intention of courting controversy, and it succeeded. The lady killer on the loose in this song was Jack The Ripper, which would have been bad enough, but when it was released on the Vertigo label in September 1980, backed by the arguably even more provocative "Don't Play Around", there was a real Ripper on the loose in the UK. Although his reign of terror started some years before, the first documented murder by the Yorkshire Ripper was of prostitute Wilma McCann on October 30, 1975, but unlike the original Jack The Ripper, who is generally credited with five victims, all of them prostitutes, Peter William Sutcliffe murdered twelve women before he was caught, and his victims were not exclusively whores; in 1979 he murdered two decent young women, which aroused extreme public anger especially in Leeds, which was at that time a stronghold of the more loony type of feminists. All of this was obviously known to Lynott, whose band was even bigger in the UK than in Ireland at the time. "Killer On The Loose" was re-released the following year as the B Side of "Hey You"; the band also made a suitably tasteless video to promote the song. Peter Sutcliffe was arrested by chance in January 1981, in the company of a Sheffield prostitute. Convicted of thirteen murders, he was subsequently gaoled for life. Killer On The Loose charted at #10 in the UK and #5 in Ireland. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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