A–Z is the debut studio album by Colin Newman, lead singer of post-punk band Wire. It was released in October 1980, through record label Beggars Banquet. "A-Z was planned as the fourth Wire album, but EMI [Wire's label] cancelled studio time in the wake of failed negotiations with the band."[1]
A–Z has been well received. Jim Derogatis and Wilson Neate, writing in Trouser Press, called Newman's solo work "the most rewarding" of any Wire member's projects outside the main band. Discussing A-Z and Not To, they wrote, "Both albums are inventive and full of hooks, and they continue the cinematic style of Chairs Missing and 154."[8] In his retrospective review for AllMusic, Andy Kellman wrote, "A–Z truly deserves to be held in the same regard as Pink Flag, Chairs Missing and 154".[2] Jason A. Parkes of Head Heritage wrote that it was "probably the best album [released] between the first and second phases of Wire".[9] Richard Cook of the British music magazine NME was less positive, calling the album, along with Newman's subsequent work Provisionally Entitled the Singing Fish, "erratic and needlessly fussy affairs that creak under pretensions to alchemy when studio pottering is nearer the mark."[10]