The Cure
Lullaby
The Cure
Source: rollingstone.com
With
their distinctive mope-rock sound — a mix of self-obsessed lyrics,
minor-key melodies, and Robert Smith's pale vocal whine — the Cure
rose from Britain's late-Seventies punk
scene to become one of the
most popular U.K. bands of the Eighties. Smith is known for wearing
death-white facial makeup, crimson lipstick, and teased black hair;
he is rivaled only by Morrissey as a heartthrob for the discontented.
Robert Smith grew up in working-class Crawley, Sussex, a suburb of London. He recalls his childhood years as difficult, a time of run-ins with his parents and the law. At 17 he formed
the Easy Cure with childhood
friends Laurence Tolhurst and Michael Dempsey as a sort of catharsis
for his feelings of frustration. The group's music has remained
therapeutic for Smith.
The Cure made its initial splash in the U.K. with the 1979 single "Killing an Arab," which stirred controversy when it reappeared on the mid-Eighties retrospective Standing on a Beach: The Singles. Some U.S. radio DJs used the song, which was inspired by Albert
Camus' The Stranger, to advance anti-Arab sentiments; the
group included a disclaimer with subsequent pressings stating that
the song "decries the existence of all prejudice and consequent
violence."
While the Cure toured in 1979 as the support act to Siouxsie and the Banshees, the headliner's guitarist quit the band. Smith was recruited to fill in on the tour, beginning an active collaboration with the Banshees. He ultimately devoted much of 1983-84 as a full-
time member of the band, recording both the live Nocturne and a
studio album, Hyaena. In 1983, he also joined Banshees bassist Steve
Severin for a side project called the Glove, releasing one album,
Blue Sunshine.
When Smith once again devoted himself to the Cure, the music evolved from the sparse punk pop of that song and other early singles ("Boys Don't Cry," "Jumping Someone Else's Train," "The Lovecats") to the dirgy, moody music of Faith and Seventeen Seconds, to the more focused hits on the later albums Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Disintegration, and Wish.
While the Cure had been a top hit-making indie band in the U.K. since the early-Eighties, it wasn't until the release of Standing on a Beach (and its CD-only counterpart, Staring at the Sea) (Number 48, 1986) that the band moved beyond cult status in the U.S. The double-
album Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me (Number 35) debuted in June
1987, spawning the minor hits "Why Can't I Be You?" (Number
54, 1987), "Just Like Heaven" (Number 40, 1987), and "Hot
Hot Hot!!!" (Number 65, 1988). In 1989, Disintegration reached
Number 12 and
included the group's biggest hit yet, "Love Song"
(Number Two). Wish is the band's most successful album to date,
reaching Number Two and including the surprisingly upbeat
"Friday
I'm in Love" (Number 18). The subsequent tour was documented on
record and a film, both titled Show (an additional live collection,
Paris, culled from the same tour was also released in 1993).
In 1996 the Cure released Wild Mood Swings (Number 12), which attempted to broaden the band's sound to include a track of Latin-flavored pop, earning mostly negative reviews, and with "The 13th" (Number 44) its highest-charting single. Another best-of, Galore (Number
32), followed in 1997. Three years later, Smith
unveiled the Cure's best-reviewed album in years, Bloodflowers
(Number 16), the third part of a trilogy they began with Pornography
and Disintegration. That same year, the Cure launched a world
tour by announcing it would
be the band's last. But Smith soon began
to hedge on that promise, saying all the subsequent attention and
sudden acclaim made him strangely...happy. He chose to keep the band
intact, but had designs on redesigning its future.
In 2001, the band released a greatest hits album and DVD on Polydor and toured extensively, doing a series of performances of Pornography, Disintegration and
Bloodflowers for a set of DVDs, The Cure:
Trilogy, released in 2003. The following year, the band released a
four-disc, seventy-song boxed set, Join the Dots: B-Sides and
Rarities, 1978-2001 (The Fiction Years) (Number 106, 2004).
Meanwhile,
the Cure signed with Geffen Records and began its new life on
the label with an album titled simply The Cure (Number 7,
2004). The record proved extremely controversial. Produced by Ross
Robinson, best known for his work with rock bands like Korn and Limp
Bizkit, the album found the Cure leaning more heavily on
guitars than recent outings. The resulting record caused Smith to
take a defensive posture in interviews, arguing that the reinvention
was necessary to preserve the future of the band. Of particular note
was the
song "Us or Them," where Smith lashed out at the
American government for its xenophobia post-9/11. He acknowledged
that the song did not sit well with other members of the band, who
argued that he was "politicizing the Cure." That
summer, Smith created the Curiosa
festival, a touring package
headlined by the Cure and featuring support sets by groups
that cited the Cure as an influence — among them Interpol,
the Rapture and Muse. Because the Cure were playing to mostly
casual fans on these tours, their sets were shortened and focused
mainly on the hits — further alienating the more devoted members of
their fanbase.
Also that year, MTV honored the band with its Icon award. All was not well within the group, however, and following the tumultuous self-titled release the band, for all intents and purposes, broke up. The hiatus was short-lived — one year later a reconstituted Cure
returned.
Roger O'Donnell and Pery Bamonte were out, former member Porl
Thompson was back in, and Simon Gallup and Jason Cooper remained
intact. In 2005, the Cure recorded a version of John Lennon's
"Love" for an Amnesty International charity album.
In October 2008, the Cure released their thirteenth studio album, 4:13 Dream. What began as a double album was gradually whittled down to 13 songs, and the group embarked on a world tour shortly thereafter, reinventing classic songs to suit the leaner lineup.
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