Car 67

[1] The song is a ballad revolving around a cab driver who had split up with his girlfriend the previous day and how he is refusing to make a particular pick-up at 83 Royal Gardens (the passenger, unbeknownst to the controller, is the woman in question).

The record company were very eager to have the song, so in September, Phillips negotiated a three-month deal for the one single, "Car 67", meaning that Logo could have the option to tie down the band for an album, so long as they did so within the three months.

However, the record company failed to press enough copies and only managed to get a fraction of the 120,000 orders into the shops, meaning that the single actually dropped in position on the chart.

[4] The follow-up single "Headlights" was released in May 1979 and was played once on Radio 1, before being banned because of its controversial subject matter about a driver stalking and terrorising a woman.

In August 1980, the Queen Mother announced that "Car 67" was "her favourite pop record", describing it as "telling a warm and human story", and this led the single to be re-released.