Where It Is
Where It Is | ||||
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Studio album by The Beloved | ||||
Released | 1987 | |||
Recorded | January 1986 – June 1987 | |||
Genre | New wave, post-punk | |||
Label | Flim Flam Productions | |||
Producer |
Michael Johnson The Beloved | |||
The Beloved chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Where It Is is the debut album by British new wave band The Beloved, first released as a vinyl LP in October 1987 on the Flim Flam Productions label. For the initial LP release, a limited number of the albums included a free 7" EP included with purchase (containing three demo tracks: "Forever Laughing", "Falling on My Face" and "The Last Detail"). The album was then reissued on CD in 1988 as an expanded edition with a different track order, containing most of the original tracks plus rerecorded versions (for example, "If Only '88") and "A Kiss Goodbye" from the Happy Now EP (the latter was not included on the original LP)
At the time the material was recorded, the band was a quartet, and had a guitar-oriented sound; at times resembling New Order, Joy Division, Nick Cave, and Pornography-era Cure. The album was produced by New Order's engineer Michael Johnson, except for "Forever Dancing" and "If Only '87", which were produced by the band themselves.
This album has sometimes been referred to as a compilation album, since it actually compiles all the singles and related B-sides previously released by the band between April 1986 and August 1987. The CD edition includes all of the group's early singles ("A Hundred Words", "This Means War" and the double A-side "Surprise Me"/"Forever Dancing") as well as the Happy Now EP, all of which made the Top 30 on the UK Indie Chart, but failed to reach the UK Top 75. Although Where It Is does not include any lyric sheet, and features spare, black and white cover art, each song is neatly accompanied by essential notes including recording and release dates. It didn't chart on the UK Albums Chart, but it reached Number 17 on the UK Indie Chart.[2]
Track listing (1987 Original LP Release)
- "If Pennies Came from Heaven Could Karl Marx Have Been Mistaken?" (Havard)
- "A Hundred Words" (Gauson/Havard/Marsh/Waddington)
- "Surprise Me" (Marsh)
- "Let It Begin" (Gauson/Havard/Marsh/Waddington)
- "Forever Dancing" (remix/edit) (Marsh)
- "Righteous Me" (remixed June 1987) (Marsh)
- "Slow Drowning" (Gauson/Havard/Marsh/Waddington)
- "This Means War" (Gauson/Havard/Marsh/Waddington)
- "If Only '87" (Gauson/Havard/Marsh/Waddington)
- "In Trouble and Shame" (Gauson/Havard/Marsh/Waddington)
Track listing (1988 CD Reissue)
- "A Hundred Words"
- "Slow Drowning"
- "In Trouble and Shame"
- "This Means War" (radio mix)
- "Let It Begin"
- "If Only" (original)
- "Surprise Me"
- "Righteous Me" (remixed April 1987)
- "A Kiss Goodbye" (bonus track)
- "If Pennies Came From Heaven Could Karl Marx Have Been Mistaken"
- "Forever Dancing" (final overdubs)
- "If Only '88" (bonus track)
Singles from the album
Chart placings are not from the UK Singles Chart, but from the UK Indie Chart.[2]
- April 1986 - "A Hundred Words" (#15)
- September 1986 - "This Means War" (#22)
- March 1987 - Happy Now EP (#22)
- 13 June 1987 - "Surprise Me" / "Forever Dancing" (#15)
Credits
Band
- Jon Marsh
- Steve Waddington
- Tim Havard
- Guy Gausden
Production
- Michael Johnson: production except #5 and #9
- The Beloved: production on #5 and #9
Staff
References
- ↑ Allmusic review
- 1 2 Lazell, Barry (1997). Indie Hits 1980-1999. Cherry Red Books. ISBN 0-9517206-9-4.