The Top (1984)

Welcome to the We Love the Eighties Community

This community is dedicated to the music, movies, television, games, radio, and pop culture that defined the 1980s. It is a place for people who lived the decade and for those who appreciate what made it unforgettable. Guests are welcome to browse selected discussions, while full participation requires registration. If you would like to understand the intent behind this community and how it is curated, you can read more about it here: About This Community. Explore current conversations, share your memories, and take part in a community built around real 80s experiences.

Join the discussion

See what members are talking about right now
Free registration. Facebook and Google login available.

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
Title: The Top
Artist: The Cure
Genre: Alternative Rock
Released: 1984

Tracks:
1 - Shake Dog Shake - 4:55
2 - Birdmad Girl - 4:05
3 - Wailing Wall - 5:17
4 - Give Me It - 3:42
5 - Dressing Up - 2:51
6 - The Caterpillar - 3:40 -
7 - Piggy in the Mirror - 3:40
8 - The Empty World - 2:36
9 - Bananafishbones - 3:12
10 - The Top - 6:50

Overview:
The Top is the fifth studio album by British band The Cure, released in 1984.
The Top was the studio album to follow Pornography. After Pornography, Robert Smith found himself without his friend Simon Gallup, who departed the band due to a fight.
Smith then took a radical shift in his music. Just months after the bleak Pornography, the band released the single "Let's Go to Bed" which just featured Smith, Lol Tolhurst and session drummer Steve Goulding. Following this was "The Walk", and then "The Love Cats". These three singles and their b-sides were compiled and became Japanese Whispers (1983). The Top is the first conventional studio album to follow this new side of The Cure. It marks a change from the upbeat synthpop of Japanese Whispers to a psychedelic, experimental sound.
Due to the conflicts and band lineup troubles, Smith wrote almost all of the music himself, and played almost all the instruments (except the drums). As such, this is closer to a Robert Smith solo album than any other album in the band's history, seen as experimental and transitional.
Music information in first post provided by The AudioDB
Back
Top