On every release of "Party Line", the song is said to be written by
Ray Davies, the main songwriter of the Kinks. However, in his critically acclaimed autobiography
Kink,
Dave Davies (who also sang "Party Line") claimed that he had written the song rather than Ray. Dave Davies has said, "On 'Party Line' I got really stuck for lyrics; I just didn't know what to write. And Ray and I got together and busted out a few things on the piano and got a lot of ideas for it. So he helped me with the lyrics on that." However, Rob Jovanovic, author of
God Save The Kinks: A Biography, wrote that "Party Line" was co-written between both Davies brothers. It bears mentioning that on the
Face to Face LP, the band's sixth US album on the Reprise label, the song is credited to both. The opening of the track (a man answering a telephone) is a remnant from the early stages of the
Face to Face album, where the songs were to be linked by sound effects (other songs, such as "Holiday in Waikiki" and "Rainy Day in June", also have these sound effects). The man answering the phone in the sound effect is Grenville Collins, one of the band's managers at the time. ==Lyrics and music==