Often the title of the song is indicated as being misspelled. While the correct spelling of the word is resurrection, Jamie Stewart stated that he accidentally misspelled the word when designing the single's picture sleeve and the misspelled title was retained as the "official" song title. On some subsequent compilation releases, the group's label has spelled the word in conventional form.
Song Origins
The song was originally written and performed when the group was still Death Cult under the title "The Ressurection Song." The earliest versions bore no resemblance, musically or lyrically, to the final version. The song was gradually transformed into the final version during the later months of 1983, while the group was on its second concert tour of the United Kingdom.
B-Side
The B-side of the seven-inch single is a remixed version of the song entitled "Ressurection Joe ". The title of the remix comes from a lyric in the song and is, in turn, a reference to a 1940s slang term. The A-side to the twelve-inch single is labelled as "Side One" and features an extended version of the song entitled "Ressurection Joe ". The B-side to the twelve-inch single is labelled as "Side Two" and features the title song along with an extended and remixed version, entitled "Ressurection Joe ".
Music video
An official music video was produced for the song. For years this fact was unknown, due to no exposure or promotion of the music video, until it was released on the music video collection Pure Cult: The Singles 1984-1995. The music video, filmed at Kirkstall Abbey Museum, is set in a semi-Victorian/Dickens period with Ian Astbury as "Joe", a snake oil salesman hawking "Joe's Ressurection Elixir". Astbury is initially rejected by patrons of a bar as he tries to hawk his elixir. The band's other members appear as invalids that are miraculously "cured" by the elixir. After seeing the others "cured", the people Astbury had been trying to sell the elixir to earlier gladly accept bottles and drink it. They are all promptly turned from adults to infants as Astbury and the rest of the group exit the tavern. Interspersed in the music video is live footage of the group performing. The live footage is from their concert filmDreamtime Live At The Lyceum. The footage is spliced from different songs they performed, as "Ressurection Joe" was not performed during that concert.
Chart Positions
Track listing
Release information pertains to the United Kingdom release only.
The picture sleeve to both the seven-inch and twelve-inch releases were produced in both die-cut and non die-cut versions. Further both die-cut and non die-cut versions were produced with untextured and textured sleeves. To date there is no explanation as to why this was done.
Double Pack
In 1991 a record store in England advertised for sale, in Goldmine Magazine, the layout for a seven-inch "double pack" gatefold version of "Ressurection Joe". The layout carried the catalogue number BEG 122D and was allegedly to have collected all four versions of "Ressurection Joe" on two seven-inch records. This packaging version was never released and, to date, the validity of the item has never been verified. However, the group's label did release other seven-inch "double pack" versions of some of the group's future singles in exactly the same format which lends some credibility to the claim that the item was "in the works".
Japanese Release
"Ressurection Joe", as a single, was released only in the United Kingdom and Japan. The Japanese version was only issued in the twelve-inch EP format and was distributed by the Nexus International/Jade Music label. It was released in 1985, but the specific day and month of the release is unknown. The track listing is radically different from the United Kingdom single as follows: