Up the Junction is also the name of a collection of short stories by
Nell Dunn, first published in 1963. Lyricist
Chris Difford said the title phrase was lifted from the
1965 TV play version of the work, directed by
Ken Loach, and the subsequent 1968
film version. The film had a soundtrack by
Manfred Mann, and a song by them, also called
"Up the Junction". Although the Squeeze song is not specifically about the plot of the films, it alludes to its themes and location. Chris Difford wrote the lyrics in
New Orleans while Squeeze were on tour. Difford passed it to Glenn Tilbrook, who then wrote the music. The title is not sung until the final line. Difford has been quoted as saying he took the lead from
Roxy Music's "
Virginia Plain", in which the title also appeared only at the end. Glenn Tilbrook has said the music was partly inspired by the
Bob Dylan song "
Positively 4th Street", and the lack of a chorus or lyrical repetitionunusual in a mainstream pop hitwas due to Tilbrook feeling a repeated section would upset the flow of Difford's narrative lyrics. The phrase 'up the junction' is London slang for being in deep trouble, as in the American 'Up the creek without a paddle'. It is also, like other lines in the song, a reference to the (at the time) working-class area of
Clapham Junction in
Battersea in London.
Clapham Commonthe "windy common" of the first verseis a popular courting spot. ==Video==