New Order wrote and recorded "True Faith" and "1963" during a 10-day studio session with producer Stephen Hague. The two songs were written as new material for New Order's first singles compilation album,
Substance 1987. After the two songs were recorded, the band's US management decided that "True Faith" was the stronger track and would be released as the new single, with "1963" as the B-side ("1963" was remixed and issued as a single in its own right in 1994). "That wasn't really a happy period in New Order's life," recalled
Peter Hook. "Let's just say it was a bit of a battle for me to get on there at all, apart from in the sense of helping write the song. Musically, we were moving more towards straight dance and I was keen on keeping the New Order I'd known and loved. I eventually managed to get my bass on the original version. But, of course, the first thing any remixers do is take off my bass and put their own on. I sometimes feel like attaching a note saying, How about keeping the bass?" While never appearing on an original album, it was included on most of the band's "best of" collections (
Substance 1987,
The Best of New Order,
Retro,
International,
Singles and
Total). The first public performance of the song took place at the 1987
Glastonbury Festival; this version appears on the group's
BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert album. The original 7-inch version of the song did not appear on any album until 2011's
Total: From Joy Division to New Order. ==Composition==