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Disintegration by The Cure is an amazing album

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There was a thread on it from last year, but I didn't want to bump a year old thread, so...

Yeah, checked this album out after it got name-checked in Ant-Man and Mr Robot. Gorgeous music. It kind of feels like a soundscape at times, you know? I've never really listened to any music by The Cure beforehand, but this album is pretty fantastic.

Disintegration

Cover art is terrible though:

disintegration.jpg
 

cheststrongwell

my cake, fuck off
I hate that Robert tried to shoehorn it into a trilogy. Some of the songs on the other two albums were pretty good, but it felt forced.
 
A girl I liked in Junior High school introduced me to them and let me borrow her Bloodflowers CD. I loved it! Then I went and grabbed Disintegration. I was floored. Incredible album. I own all of their albums now. They are all fantastic, but I think you should definitely check out Wish and Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me as well. Oh and The Top is severely underrated.
 
Might grab some of the early stuff. I like new wave from late 70s/early 80s but I get the impression The Cure didn't take off until later on - in which case I'm a bit skeptical.

Oh wait - this has Fascination Street? I remember really liking that one.
 

cheststrongwell

my cake, fuck off
Might grab some of the early stuff. I like new wave from late 70s/early 80s but I get the impression The Cure didn't take off until later on - in which case I'm a bit skeptical.

Oh wait - this has Fascination Street? I remember really liking that one.

You should check out The Head on the Door. Has some great and weird as hell new-wavy pop songs.
 
I've meant to listen to this album fully for a long time, probably since I first saw that South Park episode, but this thread inspired me to finally do it. Thanks OP!
 
I saw this topic and expected Mr.Robot to play into the reason for it.

I haven't heard the album in like 14 years, probably more because it was one of several that were stolen from me.
 
The best album by The Cure, and one of my top five albums of all time. Can't believe it's 26 years old. Bloody magnificent.
 
Disintegration is awesome, but Wish really sets the mood a lot better. The first track, Cut, is one of their best songs you've never heard.

It's hard to pick their best album, because I've been listening to them since the early 90s. I have memories with most of them. Instead, I'll list a few suitable songs that are off the beaten path.

1. Cut
2. Jupiter Crash
3. More Than This
4. Big Hand
5. Strange Days
6. All I Want
7. Last Day of Summer
8. Signal to Noise
9. Push
10. Other Voices
11. Piggy in the Mirror
12. Only One

That's it for now.
 
Mesmerizing is a great way to put it. The calm beginning to the album before it just explodes is incredible.

And as for favorite track: Fascination Street.

Very fun and relaxing playing that on GH: Warriors of Rock.

My gf introduced me to The Cure years back, such a great sound, love em. Thanks OP, revisiting the album now!
 

Cosmic Bus

pristine morning snow
I think you should definitely check out Wish and Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me as well. Oh and The Top is severely underrated.

Chris Ott's reworking of Wish, using new mixes and swapping out some of the album tracks for superior b-sides, is one of the best things I've gotten a hold of.

When I re-posted my twist on Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me earlier this week, I forgot I’d gone through a similar exercise with 1992's Wish. As with Kiss Me, many fans responded more strongly to Wish’s B-sides than certain album tracks.

The main problem was the incredibly strong “High” maxi-single, released in advance of the record. Between the slipcase version’s crashing mix of “Open” and the nonpareil pyschedelic bliss of “This Twilight Garden” and “Play”, hopes were out of all proportion for the forthcoming parent LP. The “High” EP seemed to indicate a logical progression from “The Big Hand”, a mysterious instrumental track that played over the end credits of the Picture Show video compilation. Many years ago, I made an “extended remix” of the song, which has tonight traveled all the way around the Internet and back. You can download it here, but do not expect high fidelity…

Where Kiss Me suffered less from poor choices than technology—early MIDI sequencing, weak compression algorithms and a surplus of headroom—the problem with Wish is simple: there is no treble response above 8000KHz. It is a shockingly muddy record that sounds like a superior version of itself played through a cotton helmet. The shattering crispness of “This Twilight Garden” and even the slipcase mix of “Open” made the final product all the more jarring. I considerably boosted the high end for Wished, and excited the heavier tracks (I’m most proud of “Doing the Unstuck” and “End”).

Editorially, Wish is not as daunting as Kiss Me but I’ve always felt “Trust” was facile, and never understood why the band beat their heads against “Wendy Time” for two or three years in different iterations. I don’t hear whatever spark everyone else does, and certainly not enough ebullience to warrant pushing either of the “High” flipsides or “Halo” off the running order. I’ve never published this, but revisiting it, I’m really giddy hearing back my imaginary version of the Cure’s answer to expectation, coming off the worldwide success of Disintegration and “Lovesong”.
https://twitter.com/shallowrewards/status/431244066622164992
 

Dead

well not really...yet
Top ten of all time easy. Pornography is real fucking good too though. Kiss me Kiss me Kiss me too is superb.

Edit: Seconded on Fascination Street being the best track.
 

PillarEN

Member
Yes. A definite favorite. Crazy to think the original vinyl prints were missing a few tracks. Can't imagine losing "Last Dance" and "Homesick"
 

Henke

Member
A phenomenal album. I have to agree with the poster who said that Disintegration is the best track on the album too. I was introduced to this album by a guy I worked with ten years ago and I'm still a huge Cure fan. I owe that guy so much.
 

ramyeon

Member
Grew up listening to this record as it was one of many vinyls that my parents used to play in our house when I was a child. Rediscovering a lot of that music in my teenage years was a fantastic experience as it was all so familiar to me. Still one of my favourites to this day.

I'm also very partial to The Cure's brief post-punk material and really, really enjoy Three Imaginary Boys.
 

liquidtmd

Banned
Im not a big Cure fan overall but it's an accomplished album and the title track, particularly the en treat live version, is in my top 10 of all time.
 

Tokubetsu

Member
One of my absolute favorites. As far as Cure's discog goes too, it's tied with Pornography and everything else are significant levels below them.
 
I never got the Disintagration hype. I much prefer other Cure albums. Kiss, me, kiss me, kiss me being my own favourite, shit mixing be damned.
 
The Deluxe Edition released a few years ago has been remastered and sounds a lot less muddy than the original CD release.

Not only the deluxe edition. All The Cure albums have been remastered around 2005, you can find them quite cheaply. I have a non-remastered copy of Disintegration though, and for a 1989 album it doesn't sound bad at all.
 

Sorcerer

Member
Faith is the best Cure album followed by Seventeen Seconds.
Pornography is not an easy listen, but I keep coming back to it.
 
Robert Smith was taking a ridiculous amount of LSD as a method for coping with extreme depression, holed himself up and began writing most of this.

I love when the mythology or history of making a record lends itself to the record itself, like the story of Black Sabbath's Vol. 4, where they'd receive daily shipments of speakerboxes that were actually filled with cocaine. Or the total depravity of Exile on Main Street.
 
D

Deleted member 47027

Unconfirmed Member
I loved Disintegration moreso than Pornography, which was what I was absolutely crazy about when I was miserable.

Overall I'd say even though Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me isn't the perfect album and not my favorite Cure album, it's probably the perfect Cure album. It's just everything they're all about.
 
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