↑Rob Fitzpatrick (August 2012), "Robert Smith interview", The Word, http://craigjparker.blogspot.fr/2012/07/robert-smith-interview-with-word.html, adalwyd 15 August 2016, "I played with the Banshees [after their guitarist John McGeoch suddenly left] through our first tour, and it allowed me to think beyond what we were doing. I wanted to have a band that does what Steve Severin and Budgie do, where they just get a bassline and the drum part and Siouxsie wails."
↑Binelli, Mark (7 February 2008). "The Future According To Radiohead How they ditched the record business and still topped the charts". Rolling Stone (1045). "By the last weeks of December, the band was beginning to rehearse for its 2008 tour. The rehearsals included a number of covers: Siouxsie and the Banshees, The Smiths, "The Night" by Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons."
↑McCormick, Neil (2006). U2 by U2. HarperCollins Publishers. tt. 56, 58 and 96.
↑O'Kane, Josh (18 September 2008). "Talking Bloc during Harvest Jazz – Bloc Party frontman Kele Okereke talks life, love, music and Ultimate Fighting". [Here] New Brunswick. Archifwyd o'r gwreiddiol ar 8 July 2011. Cyrchwyd 8 July 2012. With the new record, he said he was inspired by a song written years ago by Siouxsie and the Banshees called Peek-a-Boo. 'I heard it for the first time, and it sounded like nothing else on this planet. This is just a pop song that they put out in the middle of their career that nobody knows about, but to me it sounded like the most current but most futuristic bit of guitar-pop music I've heard. I thought, that'd be cool, to make music that people might not get at the time, but in ten years' time, people would revisit it."Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (help)