BOOK OF LOVEâS FOUR SIRE ALBUMS REISSUED ON NOBLE ROT, SELF-TITLED FIRST ALBUM CONTAINS BONUS DISK OF DEMOS
2009-06-03 00:13:10 -
Seminal â80s synth-pop enjoys revival as they reunites and take to the road LOS ANGELES, Calif. â One of the premiere first wave electronic groups, Book of Love emerged out of the New York City scene in the mid80s in the wake of UK synthpop stalwarts Yaz, Erasure and Depeche Mode. Signed to a label deal with Sire Records by the legendary Seymour Stein, art-students-turned-musicians Ted Ottaviano, Susan Ottaviano (oddly no relation), Jade
Lee and Lauren Roselli recorded just four albums, but their influence can heard today more powerfully than ever, from the chart-storming dance pop of Ladyhawke and La Rouxto the darker leanings of indie electro darlings Little Boots and Goldfrapp. Yet as these albums â Book of Love, Lullaby, Candy Carol and Lovebubble â are readied for a July 21 reissue on Collectorsâ Choice Musicâs Noble Rot label, the reunited bandmates are preparing their first tour since 2001.
The reissues were annotated by Michael Paoletta, former editor and dance music columnist at Billboard magazine, who observed: âMemorable melodies and provocative lyrics reigned supreme. Book of Loveâs songs were cathartic, ebullient and life-affirming: solemn celebrations if you will
Between 1986 and 1993, the band delivered 12 singles culled from the four studio albums about to be reissued. Songwriting duties were handled primarily by Susan and Ted though Lauren contributed more to this process on Candy Carol and Lovebubble, while Jadeâs writing chops were showcased on the first and final albums.
⢠Book of Love: Book of Loveâs 1986 eponymous debut album contained the hits âBoy âBook of Love âI Touch the Rosesâ and âModigliani (Lost in Your Eyes all chart-topping Billboard dance hits. The album got them on the road with Depeche Mode twice at the height of that groupâs popularity. Seymour Stein signed the band to Sire Records upon hearing the demo of the song âBoy which joins ten other demo tracks on a bonus album, making the Book of Love reissue a 2-CD set. Other bonus tracks include rare demos âI Touch Roses (Daniel Miller Mix âBoy (Dub Version and âModigliani (Instrumental Version
⢠Lullaby: This 1988 release became the bandâs highest-charting album, thanks in large part to the two killer cuts that lead off the record. The first was a beat-fortified remake of Mike Oldfieldâs classic âTubular Bells (Theme From The Exorcist and âPretty Boys, Pretty Girls which was quite possibly the first song about AIDS ever to hit the charts. The deluxe reissue includes the bonus extended mix of âPretty Boys and Pretty Girls âTubular Bells/Pretty Boys Pretty Girlsâ (Reganâs house medley), âLullaby (Pleasant Dream Mix âWitchcraft (Extended Mix and âEnchantra The album spent nine weeks on the Billboard 200 albums chart, peaking at 156 and crossing over from club dance floors to adventurous pop radio stations.
⢠Candy Carol: Highlighted by the tracks âAlice Everyday âCounting the Rosariesâ and âSunny Dayâ (which was featured in the film The Silence of the Lambs), this 1991 album shifted into a more psychedelic direction and was rewarded with another Billboard album chart entry; the single âAlice Everydayâ missed Billboardâs Hot Dance Club Play chart by one point. âWe were working on Candy Carol when Jonathan Demme was working on Silence says Lauren, âI played him a rough mix and he felt he could use it in the film Bonus tracks include the âEveryday Glo Mixâ and the âSam the Butcher Mixâ of âAlice Everyday plus the single remix of âSunny Dayâ and the âHappiness and Love Mixâ of âCounting the Rosaries
⢠Lovebubble: Book of Loveâs final album in 1993 shows the members moving in different directions, making it an interesting, eclectic listen, full of cognitive dissonance. Included are âBoy Popâ Swinging Boy Bop Mix, âHunny Hunny (the bandâs ABBA tribute in its âSweet and Sticky MixPop Mix plus âChatterboxâ The Late Nite Chat Mix. Lovebubble was the only Book of Love to feature vocal work by all four members. According to annotator Paoletta, the band âcould decide to move creatively forward or back. So they went both ways âWe were cordial while making Lovebubbble but the camaraderie was gone says Ted. âYou canât make magic with four cordial people
The groupâs last proper tour was in 2001, in support of Candy Carol. If all goes according to plan, Book of Love will take to the road in the coming months including a hometown New York show.
âIn the meantime writes Paoletta, âwe will, collectively, continue to touch roses
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