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- Paul Brannigan
- Warning: contains spoilers!
- NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS – Red Right Hand. (Peaky BlindersTheme) First appearing as the soundtrack to Peaky Blinders’ iconic opening scene – with a suited and booted Thomas Selby riding a black horse into a post-World War I Birmingham slum – Nick Cave’s doomy, ominous 1994 single from the superb Let Love Inalbum could hardly be a more perfect fit for the series, with the lyric “On a gathering storm comes a tall handsome man, in a dusty black coat with a red right hand” offering a portentous glimpse of the drama set to unfold.
- THE WHITE STRIPES – Black Math. (Season 1, Episode 2) When news spreads that Thomas Shelby is fixing races for his horse Monaghan Boy, the residents of Small Heath can’t hand over their money to the Shelby family’s illegal bookies quickly enough.
- THE RACONTEURS – Broken Boy Soldier. (Season 1, Episode 4) Jack White’s occasional side project supply the music to a dramatic scene where Thomas Shelby’s nemesis Chief Inspector Campbell order a raid upon the Shelby’s storage warehouses in search of stolen guns.
"Red Right Hand" is a song by Australian rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. It was released as a single from their eighth studio album, Let Love In (1994), on 24 October 1994. A condensed version was included in the single, while the longer version was included with the album.
Dec 16, 2021 · Nick Cave was the one who wrote and released the song in 1994 as part of his band, the Bad Seeds. While Red Right Hand has become a pop culture reference associated with Peaky Blinders, there’s a deeper meaning to this song that traces back its origins to almost three centuries ago in the poem Paradise Lost by John Milton.
Jul 31, 2019 · And for the soundtrack geeks among you, that means a return of the eerie opening Peaky Blinders main theme (‘Red Right Hand’), written by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. It’s a huge compliment that we’re amazed the track – famous for its pulsating, repeated intro and Nick Cave’s deliciously dark, baritone voice – wasn’t written ...