The House of Love - A Spy in the House of Love

The House of Love - A Spy in the House of Love
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Album Details

Title: A Spy in the House of Love
Artist: The House of Love
Release Date: 1990
Re-Released On: 12/31/1993
Label: Fontana Distribution, Universal Distribution
Duration: 54:46
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPCs: 042284697828, 042284867122, 042284867146
Genre: Rock
Styles: Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, Indie Pop, Noise Pop, College Rock
Moods: Autumnal, Bittersweet, Theatrical, Hypnotic, Melancholy, Plaintive, Wistful, Brooding, Earnest, Laid-Back/Mellow, Reflective, Somber, Soothing, Springlike, Fiery, Rollicking
Total Copies: 4
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Marble
  2. Safe
  3. D Song '89
  4. Scratched Inside
  5. Phone
  6. Cut the Fool Down
  7. Shine On [Second Mix]
  8. Ray
  9. Love II
  10. Baby Teen
  11. Love III
  12. Soft as Fire
  13. Love IV
  14. No Fire
  15. Love V

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1993CDUniversal Distribution8469782
1991CDFontana Distribution848671

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Chapter one: Label spends enough money on record to make a third-world country queasy. Chapter two: Record flops financially, despite its artistic triumphs. Chapter three: Label realizes financial failure of record and panics. Chapter four: Label raids band's vault and puts out hodgepodge collection cheap to help recuperate from newly incurred monetary woes. A Spy in the House of Love compiles a decent but scrapped single circa '88 ("Safe"), a handful of dolled-up tracks from the scrapped follow-up to their debut, and scraps from various ditched sessions. See a pattern? Though it sounds like a recipe for rotten cranapple pie, HOL despot Guy Chadwick was quick to toss off anything that wasn't top-rate, and occasionally his BS detector was a little off. In fact, "Marble," which comes from the initial sessions for the band's second album, was quality enough to find a spot on the band's best-of that came out eight years later. There are scattered bright spots ("Scratched Inside," "Ray") and moments where the band sounds like they're just plain bored ("Cut the Fool Down" and the appropriately titled "No Fire"). The "Love" songs (Parts II-V) peak through every other track on the second half. They veer from bluesy, stream-of-consciousness shreds to half-finished howlings and decent instrumentals. Certainly one of the least/last links in the House of Love chain, your time and money might be better spent hunting down one of their many wallet-sinking singles (like the one with a cover of the Chills' "Pink Frost" or another with a take on Cream's "Strange Brew"). A second volume of Spy is definitely called for, as the average House of Love fan's wallet sank deeper than Guy Chadwick's cheeks while scurrying for their three-part(!) singles. [The U.S. version of A Spy in the House of Love bizarrely plugs the second album's version of "Shine On" betwixt "Cut the Fool Down" and "Ray."] ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Daniel MillerProducer
Gareth JonesProducer
Paul O'DuffyProducer
Simon VinestockMixing
Suzi GibbonsPhotography
The House of LoveProducer
Tim PalmerProducer