Mike and the Mad Dog and Disintegration (The Cure album): Difference between pages
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{{otheruses4|the album by The Cure}}
{{Infobox Album <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Albums -->
| Name = Disintegration
| Type = studio
| Artist = [[The Cure]]
| Cover = TheCureDisintegration.jpg
|
| Recorded =
|
|
| Label = [[Elektra Records]], [[Fiction Records]]
| Producer = [[Dave Allen|David M. Allen]], [[Robert Smith (musician)|Robert Smith]]
| Reviews =
*[[All Music Guide]] {{rating-5|4.5}} [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=Ai1ug6j5h7180 link]
*''[[Rolling Stone]]'' {{rating-5|4}} [http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/album/230617/disintegration link]
| Last album = ''[[Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me]]'' <br /> (1987)
| This album = '''''Disintegration''''' <br /> (1989)
| Next album = ''[[Mixed Up (Cure compilation)|Mixed Up]]'' <br /> (1990)
}}
'''''Disintegration''''' is the eighth studio album by rock band [[The Cure]], released in 1989. It peaked at #12 on ''[[Billboard Music Charts|Billboard]]'''s Top 200 Album countdown.
==History==
The album is considered part two of Robert Smith's "trilogy", also including ''[[Pornography (album)|Pornography]]'' and ''[[Bloodflowers]]''. In 2002, they performed all three albums in their entirety to a [[Berlin]] audience, and it was released on DVD as ''[[The Cure: Trilogy|Trilogy]]'' in 2003.
[[The Cure]] had established themselves as a dark and brooding band in the early 80s with albums such as ''[[Faith (Cure album)|Faith]]'' and ''[[Pornography (album)|Pornography]]''. They broke away from this image with light pop singles, such as "[[Let's Go to Bed (The Cure song)|Let's Go to Bed]]" and "[[The Lovecats]]" and their accompanying [[Tim Pope]] videos. The following albums ''[[The Top (album)|The Top]]'', ''[[The Head on the Door]]'' and ''[[Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me]]'' had largely continued the pop experimentation, although all three showed elements of Smith's darker side, both musically and lyrically. ''Disintegration'' represented a return of the darker styles while still expanding on the newer concepts.<ref>Stephen Thomas Erlewine [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=Ai1ug6j5h7180 ''All Music Guide'' review of ''Disintegration''].</ref><ref>Michael Azzerad [http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thecure/albums/album/230617/review/5940349/disintegration Rolling Stone Disintegration Review]</ref>
It was the first Cure album to be specifically recorded for [[CD]] and this is the reason that the vinyl release is without the songs "Last Dance" and "Homesick". The CD version is over 71 minutes in length, well over the average rock album's length. In fact, half of the songs on the 12-song album are over six minutes in length.
The album debuted at #3 in the UK and slowly climbed to #12 in the US during a 55 week stay on the Billboard Album Chart. It was certified gold by the [[RIAA certification|RIAA]] on [[June 28]], [[1989]]. The album was also certified platinum on [[October 20]] of the same year. On [[July 1]], [[2004]], the album was multi-platinum twice.
In the [[South Park]] episode [[Mecha-Streisand]], [[Kyle Broflovski]] declares Disintegration "the best album ever".
{{RS500|326}}
==
All songs by Gallup, O'Donnell, Smith, Thompson, Tolhurst and Williams.
#"Plainsong" – 5:12
#"[[Pictures of You]]" – 7:24
#"Closedown" – 4:16
#"[[Lovesong]]" – 3:29
#"Last Dance" – 4:42
#"[[Lullaby (The Cure song)|Lullaby]]" – 4:08
#"[[Fascination Street]]" – 5:16
#"Prayers for Rain" – 6:05
#"The Same Deep Water as You" – 9:19
#"Disintegration" – 8:18
#"Homesick" – 7:06
#"Untitled" – 6:30
"Last Dance" and "Homesick" are only on the CD and cassette versions.
==Personnel==
*[[Simon Gallup]] – bass, keyboards
*[[Robert Smith (musician)|Robert Smith]] – guitar, keyboards, six string bass guitar, vocals, producer, engineer
*[[Porl Thompson]] – guitar
*[[Laurence Tolhurst]] – "other instruments", but confirmed to have contributed nothing
*[[Boris Williams]] – drums
*[[Roger O'Donnell]] – keyboards
*Dave Allen – producer, engineer
*Richard Sullivan – assistant engineer
*Roy Spong – assistant engineer
==Singles==
*"[[Fascination Street]]", released only in the [[United States|U.S.]] in December, 1988
*"[[Lullaby (song)|Lullaby]]" released in April, 1989
*"[[Lovesong]]" released in August, 1989
*"[[Pictures of You]]" released in January, 1990
==Charting singles==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Year || Single || Chart || Peak<br>position
|-
| 1989 || "Fascination Street" || The Billboard Hot 100 || 46
|-
| 1989 || "Lullaby" || The Billboard Hot 100 || 74
|-
| 1989 || "Fascination Street" || Mainstream Rock Tracks || 24
|-
| 1989 || "Fascination Street" || Modern Rock Tracks || 1
|-
| 1989 || "Lovesong" || The Billboard Hot 100 || 2
|-
| 1989 || "Lovesong" || Modern Rock Tracks || 2
|-
| 1989 || "Lullaby" || Modern Rock Tracks || 23
|-
| 1989 || "Fascination Street" || Hot Dance Music/Club Play || 7
|-
| 1989 || "Lovesong" || Hot Dance Music/Club Play || 8
|-
| 1989 || "Lullaby" || Hot Dance Music/Club Play || 31
|-
| 1989 || "Fascination Street" || Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales || 13
|-
| 1990 || "Pictures of You" || The Billboard Hot 100 || 71
|-
| 1990 || "Pictures of You" || Modern Rock Tracks || 19
|-
| 1990 || "Pictures of You" || Hot Dance Music/Club Play || 33
|}
==Sample==
{{Listen
|filename=TheCureLovesong.ogg
|title="Lovesong" (1989)
|description=Sample of "[[Lovesong]]" by [[The Cure]]
|format=[[Ogg]]}}
==References==
<!--<nowiki>
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the <ref> and </ref> tags, and the template below.
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{{Reflist|2}}
{{TheCure}}
[[Category:The Cure albums]]
[[Category:1989 albums]]
[[Category:Post-punk albums]]
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