Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me: Deluxe Edition [Remaster]The Cure
Release Date: 08/08/2006
Original Release:
1987
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 922124_CD
UPC # 081227406424
Label: Elektra Entertainment
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
| Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping |
|
Disc: 1
Disc: 2
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: The Cure
Engineer: Dave Allen Producer: Dave Allen; Robert Smith Distributor: WEA (Distributor) Notes: The Cure: Robert Smith (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Porl Thompson (guitar, saxophone, keyboards); Laurence Tolhurst (keyboards); Simon Gallup (bass guitar); Boris Williams (drums); Roger O'Donnell. This hefty double album often sounds more like a compilation than a coherent whole, with musical ideas bouncing frantically back and forth. Nevertheless, in typical Cure style, KISS ME, KISS ME, KISS ME successfully combines catchy pop with bitter despair. Through 17 immensely sensual songs, Robert Smith is at his most poetic ("strange as angels, dancing in the deepest ocean, twisting in the water, you're just like a dream") and vitriolic ("get your fucking voice out of my head...I never wanted any of this, I wish you were dead"). The joyous pop of "Just Like Heaven" and "The Perfect Girl" still delights, and the frisson provided by "Shiver And Shake" reinforces the physical nature of this collection.
Uncut (p.102) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Glossy, even sexy, here the excesses of that decade finally caught up with Smith, which he twisted into stunning pop..."
Alternative Press (p.200) - "[With] the heartfelt 'Just Like Heaven,' one of the classic alt-rock singles of the 1980s."
Magnet (p.106) - "Smith pens the prettiest pop, unleashes seven minutes of sitar-driven stonerdom, uses accordions to punctuate Parisian travelogues, plays with psychedelic Hendrixian guitar textures and -- as always -- lets bassist Simon Gallup have all the best riffs and melodies."
CMJ (1/5/04, p.20) - Ranked #3 in CMJ's "Top 20 Most-Played Albums of 1987"
Led by depressive pop prince Robert Smith, the Cure have taken their legions of fans on a journey from post-punk to gothic to new wave to art rock, stopping only for refills of hairspray along the way. An amazing band both live and in the studio, the Cure may have shifted its lineup numerous times, but Smith has remained a consistently fascinating rock icon throughout the changes. The group's most popular work (DISINTEGRATION, THE HEAD ON THE DOOR) was recorded in the 1980s, but it has held up incredibly well, leading to continued tours and albums despite exaggerated rumors of their demise.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Altered Images Bauhaus (UK) Birthday Party (The) Bronski Beat Catherine Wheel Cave, Nick Chameleons (UK) Church (The) Cocteau Twins Comsat Angels (The) Cranes Creatures (The) Curve Dead Can Dance Deftones Depeche Mode Dinosaur Jr. Durutti Column (The) Gene Loves Jezebel Hot Hot Heat In Camera Interpol Japan (Rock) Joy Division Lines (Post-Punk) (The) Love and Rockets Lush Mighty Lemon Drops (The) Mission UK (UK) (The) Mogwai Morrissey Murphy, Peter My Bloody Valentine Names (The) New Order (UK) Nine Inch Nails O'Connor, Sinead Placebo Psychedelic Furs (The) Public Image Ltd. Rapture (The) Red Lorry Yellow Lorry Ride Sigur Rós Siouxsie and the Banshees Smiths (The) Soft Cell Swans Talk Talk The Jesus and Mary Chain The Passions (UK) The Sisters of Mercy The Smashing Pumpkins The Sound This Mortal Coil Ultravox Wild Swans Wire
Influences:
Beatles (The) Bowie, David Buzzcocks Can Clash (The) Eno, Brian Hendrix, Jimi Holiday, Billie Joy Division Kinks (The) Klee Led Zeppelin Roxy Music Sex Pistols (The) Siouxsie and the Banshees Television Ultravox Velvet Underground (The)
Similar Genres:
Gothic |