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Frankie Goes To Hollywood - Welcome To The Pleasuredome (CD)

Album Details: Welcome To The Pleasuredome

Release Date:10/04/2005
Label:Ztt
UPC:827912024180

Other Available Formats: Welcome To The Pleasuredome

User Reviews: Welcome To The Pleasuredome

  • Overall:

    War !

    By DrewFountain  Jul 29, 2001

    These Liverpool tarts used Trevor's studio wizardry, and borrowed from Freddie Mercury's flambouyant style, and gave us a pretentious and avant garde record. It's MUCH more accessible than Midge Ure, WAY more Rockn'Roll than Roxy Music, and BLEEDING... rawer than Spandau Ballet. This rock music meteor was quickly turned to a clothing line (with a Malcolm McLauren effeciency) and left only one way for the band to go : down. The covers ("ferry", "Born", "San Jose") are wonderful romps, while the Colleredge interp on "pleasuredome" and the dance-styled tracks of "Relax" and "Two Tribes" ramain sone of the brightest spots in '80's british music seen. Their other Frankie records don't have the cohesion that theis record does, and I much prefer listening to this record over the greatest hits record any day. This is superb '80's Brit-pop. This is openly "pro gay" band imagery, but isn't the limp wristed pop(like Haircut 100), it's more like the Yello dance / trance. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Don' t do it...

    By Christian  Sep 26, 2000

    Hm, nice production by Trevor Horn. The four singles lifted from the album are all classics, but it is obvious that the other tracks cannot match this high level, there is much filler in the Pleasuredome.Nevermind: This is one of a few cool Eighties... dance albums... Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Welcome To The Pleasuredome

  • All Music Guide

    Strip away all the hype, controversy, and attendant craziness surrounding Frankie most of which never reached American shores, though the equally bombastic "Relax" and "Two Tribes" both charted well and Welcome to the Pleasuredome holds up as an outrageously overthetop, bizarre, but fun release. Less well known but worthwhile cuts include bydefinitioncamp "Krisco Kisses" and "The Only Star in Heaven," while U.K. smash "The Power of Love" is a gloriously insincere but still great hyperballad with strings from Anne Dudley. In truth, the album's more a testament to Trevor Horn's production skills than anything else. To help out, he roped in a slew of Ian Dury's backing musicians to provide the music, along with a guest appearance from his fellow Yes veteran Steve Howe on acoustic guitar that probably had prog rock fanatics collapsing in apoplexy. The end result was catchy, consciously modern almost to a fault arenalevel synth rock of the early '80s that holds up just fine today, as mu...ch an endlessly listenable product of its times as the Chinn/Chapman string of glam rock hits from the early '70s. Certainly the endless series of pronouncements from a Ronald Reagan impersonator throughout automatically date the album while lending it a giddy extra layer of appeal. Even the series of covers on the album at once make no sense and plenty of it all at once. While Edwin Starr's "War" didn't need redoing, Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run" becomes a ridiculously overthetop explosion that even outrocks the Boss. As the only member of the band actually doing anything the whole time (Paul Rutherford pipes up on backing vocals here and there), Holly Johnson needs to make a mark and does so with appropriately leering passion. He didn't quite turn out to be the new Freddie Mercury, but he makes a much better claim than most, combining a punk sneer with an ear for hyperdramatic yelps. - Ned Raggett, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Frankie Goes to Hollywood

On the back of an enormous publicity campaign, Frankie Goes to Hollywood dominated British music in 1984. Frankie's dancepop borrowed heavily from the thencurrent HiNRG movement, adding a slick pop sensibility and production. What really distinguished the group was not their music, but their marketing campaign. With a series of slogans, Tshirts, and homoerotic videos, t... Read more