The first single "
X Offender" was originally titled "Sex Offender", but since radio stations would not play a song with such a provocative title, the band renamed the song. After disappointing sales and poor publicity, the band ended their contract with Private Stock and signed with
Chrysalis Records in mid-1977. The album was reissued on the Chrysalis label in September 1977, simultaneously with Blondie's second album
Plastic Letters, and the single "
In the Flesh".
Blondie reached No. 14 in Australia, where the band had already had a top-3 entry with "In the Flesh". The album also charted at No. 75 in the UK in early 1979, where the band had become immensely popular. Through the production of
Richard Gottehrer, who had worked with
the Angels and other artists of the 1950s and 1960s, much of the music is suffused with the
girl group sound of that era.
Debbie Harry told an interviewer in 1978 that the band never intended to be
retro and when some journalists described them that way, it was "quite a shock". Likewise she rejected any attempt to brand the music as pop, insisting that Blondie played
new wave music.
Blondie was first digitally remastered by
Chrysalis Records UK in 1994. In 2001, the album was again
remastered and reissued, this time along with five bonus tracks. "
Out in the Streets" (
The Shangri-Las cover), "The Thin Line" and "Platinum Blonde" are three of five tracks from a 1975 demo recorded by
Alan Betrock; all five were first issued on the 1994 compilation
The Platinum Collection. Bonus track "Platinum Blonde" was the first song that Harry wrote. Original single versions of "X Offender" and "In the Sun" are both sides of Blondie's first single, issued on Private Stock, and are different mixes from the album versions. The two Private Stock versions are both remastered from vinyl. ==Critical reception==