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{{Infobox Album | <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Albums -->
{{EngvarB|date=May 2013}}
| Name = Pornography
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2022}}
| Type = [[Album]]
{{Infobox album
| Artist = [[The Cure]]
| Cover = The Cure - Pornography.jpg
| name = Pornography
| Released = [[May 4]] [[1982]]
| type = studio
| artist = [[the Cure]]
| Recorded = January to February 1982 at RAK Studio One, [[London]]
| Genre = [[Gothic rock]]
| cover = The Cure - Pornography.jpg
| Length = 43:29
| alt =
| released = 4 May 1982
| Label = [[Fiction Records|Fiction]]
| recorded = January–April 1982
| Producer = [[Phil Thornalley]], [[The Cure]]
| Reviews =
| venue =
| studio = [[RAK Studios|RAK]], London
* [[Allmusic]] {{Rating|3.5|5}} [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:cyex97l7krrt~T1 link]
| genre =
* [[Pitchfork Media]] (8.4/10) [http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/16405/The_Cure_Seventeen_Seconds_Faith_Pornography link]
{{flatlist|
* [[Robert Christgau]] (C) [http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=cure link]
* [[Gothic rock]]<ref name="AMG">{{cite web |url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/pornography-mw0000199022 |title=''Pornography'' – The Cure |language=en |last=Mason |first=Stewart |publisher=[[AllMusic]] |accessdate=2018-03-21 |archive-date=2018-07-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180724213310/https://www.allmusic.com/album/pornography-mw0000199022 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>Reynolds 2005, p. 429.</ref><ref>21 March 2013. [https://spectrumculture.com/2013/03/21/13-best-goth-albums-of-all-time/ 13 Best Goth Albums of All Time] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200823000302/https://spectrumculture.com/2013/03/21/13-best-goth-albums-of-all-time/}}. ''Spectrum Culture''.</ref>
* [[Rolling Stone]] {{Rating|1.5|5}} [http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thecure/albums/album/92147/review/5943227/pornography link]
* [[post-punk]]<ref name="AMG"/><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2016/07/the-50-best-post-punk-albums.html | title=The 50 Best Post-Punk Albums | publisher=[[Paste (magazine)|Paste]] | date=2016-07-13 | accessdate=2016-08-26 | author=Jackson, Josh | language=en | archive-date=2018-08-18 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180818150526/https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2016/07/the-50-best-post-punk-albums.html | url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/808s-heartbreak-mw0000802924 |title=''808s & Heartbreak'' – Kanye West |publisher=[[AllMusic]] |access-date=17 January 2020 |last=Kellman |first=Andy |quote=Several tracks have almost as much in common with irrefutably bleak post-punk albums, such as New Order's ''Movement'' and the Cure's ''Pornography''...}}</ref>
| Last album = ''[[Faith (Cure album)|Faith]]''<br/>(1981)
*[[neo-psychedelia]]<ref>{{cite web |last1=Marszalek |first1=Julian |title=A Vision Of Hell: The Cure's Pornography As Psychedelic Post Punk Masterpiece |url=https://thequietus.com/articles/22315-the-cure-pornography-anniversary-review |website=The Quietus |access-date=13 March 2024}}</ref>
| This album = '''''Pornography'''''<br/>(1982)
}}
| Next album = ''[[The Top (album)|The Top]]''<br/>(1984)
| Misc =
| length = 43:30
| label = [[Fiction Records|Fiction]]
{{Singles
| producer =
| Name = Pornography
* [[Phil Thornalley]]
| Type = studio
* The Cure
| single 1 = [[A Single|The Hanging Garden]]
| single 1 date = [[July 6]], [[1982]]
| prev_title = [[Faith (The Cure album)|Faith]]
| prev_year = 1981
}}
| next_title = [[Japanese Whispers]]
| next_year = 1983
| misc = {{Singles
| name = Pornography
| type = studio
| single1 = [[The Hanging Garden (song)|The Hanging Garden]]
| single1date = 12 July 1982
}}
}}
}}
'''''Pornography''''' is the fourth studio [[album]] by [[Great Britain|British]] [[alternative rock]] band [[The Cure]], originally released in [[1982 in music|1982]] and re-mastered and re-released in [[2005 in music|2005]]. Recorded with the group on the brink of collapse, it represents the conclusion of the musical phase which began with ''[[Seventeen Seconds]]'' and ''[[Faith (Cure album)|Faith]]''.


'''''Pornography''''' is the fourth studio album by English [[rock music|rock]] band [[the Cure]], released on 4 May 1982<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.thecure.com/release/pornography/ | title=The Cure Official Site }}</ref> by [[Fiction Records]]. Preceded by the non-album single "[[Charlotte Sometimes (song)|Charlotte Sometimes]]", it was the band's first album with new producer [[Phil Thornalley]], and was recorded at [[RAK Studios]] from January to April 1982. The sessions saw the band on the brink of collapse, with heavy drug use, band in-fighting, and frontman [[Robert Smith (musician)|Robert Smith]]'s depression fueling the album's musical and lyrical content. ''Pornography'' represents the conclusion of the Cure's early dark, gloomy musical phase, which began with their second album ''[[Seventeen Seconds]]'' (1980).<ref>{{cite book |chapter=Chapter 22 – Dark Things: Goth and the Return of Rock |title=Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978–1984 |title-link=Rip It Up and Start Again |last=Reynolds |first=Simon |author-link=Simon Reynolds |publisher=[[Faber and Faber]] |year=2005 |isbn=0-571-21569-6 |page=[https://archive.org/details/ripitupstartagai00reyn/page/429 429]}}</ref>
== Overview ==


Following its release, bassist [[Simon Gallup]] left the band, and the Cure switched to a much brighter and more radio-friendly [[New wave music|new wave]] sound.<ref name="Apter">{{cite book |title=Never Enough: The Story of The Cure |last=Apter |first=Jeff |publisher=[[Omnibus Press]] |year=2006 |isbn=1-84449-827-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/neverenoughstory00apte}}</ref> Although it was poorly received by critics at the time of release, ''Pornography'' was the Cure's most popular album to date, reaching number eight on the [[UK Albums Chart]]. It has since gone on to gain acclaim from critics, and is now considered an important milestone in the development of the style of music known as [[gothic rock]].
Often cited as the most disturbing product of The Cure, the album's opening lyrical line is "It doesn't matter if we all die". <ref>J.D. Considine. [http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thecure/albums/album/92147/review/5943227/pornography Rolling Stone Review]</ref>


== Background and recording ==
Despite the fact that very few critics in the British press gave the album a favorable review, ''Pornography'' charted well in the UK and has gained much more respect over the years, now considered one of the key [[Gothic rock]] albums of all time. <ref>Stewart Mason [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:cyex97l7krrt~T1 All Music Guide Review]</ref>
Following the band's previous album, 1981's ''[[Faith (The Cure album)|Faith]]'', the non-album single "[[Charlotte Sometimes (song)|Charlotte Sometimes]]" was released. The single, in particular its nightmarish and hallucinatory [[A-side and B-side|B-side]] "Splintered in Her Head", would hint at what was to come in ''Pornography''.<ref name="Apter"/>


In the words of [[Robert Smith (musician)|Robert Smith]], regarding the album's conception, "I had two choices at the time, which were either completely giving in [committing suicide] or making a record of it and getting it out of me". He also claims he "really thought that was it for the group. I had every intention of signing off. I wanted to make the ultimate 'fuck off' record, and then sign off [the band]".<ref name="Apter"/> Smith was mentally exhausted during that period of time: "I was in a really depressed frame of mind between 1981 and 1982".<ref name="Mojo"/> The band "had been touring for about 200 days a year and it all got a bit too much because there was never any time to do anything else".<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Kill or Cure |magazine=[[Sounds (magazine)|Sounds]] |date=16 July 1983 |last=Henderson |first=Dave}}</ref>
''Pornography'' is also the last Cure album to feature founding band member [[Lol Tolhurst]] as the band's drummer. He became the band's keyboardist and this also marks the first time he played keyboards on a release by The Cure.


The band, Smith in particular, wanted to make the album with a different producer than [[Mike Hedges]], who had produced ''[[Seventeen Seconds]]'' and ''Faith''. According to [[Lol Tolhurst]], Smith and Tolhurst briefly met with the producer [[Conny Plank]] at Fiction's offices in the hopes of having him produce the album since they were both fans of his work with [[Kraftwerk]],<ref>{{cite book |title=Cured: The Tale of Two Imaginary Boys |last=Tolhurst |first=Lol |author-link=Lol Tolhurst |publisher=[[Da Capo Press]] |year=2016 |isbn=9780306824289 |page=278 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ihPTDQAAQBAJ }}</ref> however, the group soon settled on [[Phil Thornalley]].<ref name="Apter"/> ''Pornography'' is the last Cure album to feature Tolhurst as the band's drummer (he then became the band's keyboardist), and also marked the first time he played keyboards on a Cure release.<ref name="Apter"/> The album was recorded at [[RAK Studios]] from January to April 1982.<ref name="Booklet">{{cite AV media notes |title=Pornography |others=[[The Cure]] |publisher=[[Universal Music Group]] |edition=deluxe |year=2005 |type=CD booklet |last=Black |first=Johnny}}</ref>
In [[2002 in music|2002]], The Cure performed ''Pornography'' live in its entirety, along with ''[[Disintegration]]'' and ''[[Bloodflowers]]'', as part of the ''[[The Cure: Trilogy|Trilogy]]'' concerts.


On the album's recording sessions, Smith noted "there was a lot of drugs involved".<ref name="Apter"/> The band took [[Lysergic acid diethylamide|LSD]] and drank a lot of alcohol, and to save money, they slept in the office of their record label.<ref name="Mojo">{{cite magazine |title=The Crack Up |magazine=[[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]] |issue=117 |date=August 2003 |last=Petridis |first=Alexis |author-link=Alexis Petridis |pages=44–51}}</ref> The musicians usually turned up at eight, and left at midday looking "fairly deranged". Smith related: "We had an arrangement with the [[off-licence]] up the road, every night they would bring in supplies. We decided we weren't going to throw anything out. We built this mountain of empties in the corner, a gigantic pile of debris in the corner. It just grew and grew".<ref name="Mojo"/> According to Tolhurst, "we wanted to make the ultimate, intense album. I can't remember exactly why, but we did".<ref name="Apter"/> The recording sessions commenced and concluded in three weeks. Smith noted, "At the time, I lost every friend I had, everyone, without exception, because I was incredibly obnoxious, appalling, self-centred". He also noted that with the album, he "channelled all the self-destructive elements of my personality into doing something".<ref name="Apter"/>
More recently on the 2008 '4 Tour' the band have performed "One Hundred Years", "The Hanging Garden", "The Figurehead", and "A Strange Day" at various shows.


[[Polydor Records]], the company in charge of Fiction, was initially displeased with the album's title, which it saw as being potentially offensive.<ref name="Apter"/>
==2005 re-release==
''Pornography'' was remastered by [[Chris Blair]] at [[Abbey Road Studios]] and reissued in the UK on [[25 April]] [[2005 in music|2005]] (26th in the US) as part of Universal's Deluxe Edition series. The new edition featured a remastered version of the album on CD One, while CD Two contained demo and live tracks. The bonus disc contains never-before-heard songs (in demo format, all instrumental) and an alternate version of each song on the album. (Demo or Live) It also contains the song "[[Forever (The Cure song)|All Mine]]" from the ''Curiosity'' album and the soundtrack from a movie that aired prior to the Cure concerts in 1982, "Airlock". Nothing is known about that movie.


== Music and influences ==
There also exists a one-CD reissue. It was released on [[September 5]], [[2005]] in the UK and [[April 4]], [[2006]] in the US. The CD features the original album, but does not contain the bonus disc. It is also released in the standard jewel case, and not a box. In some countries, the "Deluxe Edition" has become a collector's item and the production has phased out, being replaced by the more economic one-CD version.
Regarding the album's musical style, ''[[NME]]'' reviewer Dave Hill wrote, "The drums, guitars, voice and production style are pressed scrupulously together in a murderous unity of surging, textured mood". Hill further described it as "[[Phil Spector]] in Hell".<ref name="NME">{{cite magazine |title=Cold Turkeys |magazine=[[NME]] |date=8 May 1982 |last=Hill |first=Dave}}</ref> ''[[Trouser Press]]'' said about the track "A Short Term Effect": it "stresses ephemeralness with Smith's echo-laden voice decelerating at the end of each phrase".<ref name="Trouser Press"/> Ira Robbins observed that "the song closest to basic pop" is "A Strange Day": It "has overdubbed backing vocals plus a delineated verse and chorus wrapped in some strangely consonant guitar figures".<ref name="Trouser Press"/> The journalist also commented: the song "Cold" "gets the full [[gothic rock|gothic]] treatment", with "grandiose minor-mode organ swells".<ref name="Trouser Press"/> Describing the title track, writer Dave McCullough said that it "tries to copy [[Cabaret Voltaire (band)|Cabaret Voltaire]], all shuddering tape noise".<ref name="Sounds"/>


Smith said that "the reference point" for ''Pornography'' was [[the Psychedelic Furs]]' [[The Psychedelic Furs (album)|self-titled debut album]], which he noted "had, like, a density of sound, really powerful".<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Top Cat |magazine=[[NME]] |date=26 May 1984 |last=Snow |first=Mat |author-link=Mat Snow |page=18}}</ref> Smith also cited [[Siouxsie and the Banshees]] as "a massive influence on me [...] They were the group who led me towards doing ''Pornography''. They drew something out of me".<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Siamese Twins – The Cure and the Banshees |magazine=[[Uncut (magazine)|Uncut]] |issue=87 |date=August 2004 |last=Oldham |first=James |page=60}}</ref> In 1982, Smith also said that the "records he'd take into the bunker after the big bang", were ''[[Desertshore]]'' by [[Nico]], ''[[Music for Films]]'' by [[Brian Eno]], ''[[Axis: Bold as Love]]'' / ''[[Are You Experienced]]'' by [[Jimi Hendrix]], ''Twenty Golden Greats'' by [[Frank Sinatra]] and ''the Early Piano Works'' by [[Erik Satie]].<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Fallout Favourites |magazine=[[Flexipop]] |date=April 1982}}</ref>
==Track listing==
All songs by Robert Smith, Simon Gallup and Laurence Tolhurst.


== Release and reception ==
===Original 1982 release===
''Pornography'' was released on 4 May 1982.<ref>{{cite press release |title=The Cure: ''Pornography'' |publisher=[[Fiction Records]] |url=http://www.on-fiction.com/images_cure/Pornography/porn_out.jpg |access-date=11 September 2013}} From [http://www.on-fiction.com/TheCure/pornoxx.htm on-fiction.com]</ref> The album debuted and peaked at No. 8 on the [[UK Albums Chart]], staying on the chart for nine weeks.<ref name="chart">{{cite web |url=https://www.officialcharts.com/artist/20492/cure/ |title=The Cure |publisher=[[Official Charts Company]] |access-date=20 March 2013}}</ref> Fiction owner [[Chris Parry (producer)|Chris Parry]] found "[[The Hanging Garden (song)|The Hanging Garden]]" to be the album's only potential single, and after being "polished" by Thornalley and Smith, it was released as a single on 12 July, reaching No. 32 on the [[UK Singles Chart]].<ref name="Apter"/>


{{Music ratings
# "One Hundred Years" – 6:40
| title = Contemporary professional ratings
# "A Short Term Effect" – 4:22
| rev1 = ''[[Rolling Stone]]''
# "[[The Hanging Garden (song)|The Hanging Garden]]" – 4:33
| rev1score = {{Rating|1.5|5}}<ref name="Rolling Stone">{{cite magazine |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/pornography-198684/ |title=''Pornography'' |magazine=[[Rolling Stone]] |date=2 September 1982 |access-date=13 October 2012 |last=Considine |first=J. D. |author-link=J.D. Considine}}</ref>
# "Siamese Twins" – 5:29
| rev2 = ''[[Sounds (magazine)|Sounds]]''
# "The Figurehead" – 6:15
| rev2score = {{Rating|3|5}}<ref name="Sounds">{{cite magazine |title=Filth hounds |magazine=[[Sounds (magazine)|Sounds]] |date=17 April 1982 |last=McCullough |first=Dave}}</ref>
# "A Strange Day" – 5:04
| rev3 = ''[[The Village Voice]]''
# "Cold" – 4:26
| rev3score = C<ref name="Christgau">{{cite news |url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cg/cgv10-82.php |title=Consumer Guide |newspaper=[[Village Voice]]|date=5 October 1982 |access-date=15 June 2013 |last=Christgau |first=Robert |author-link=Robert Christgau}}</ref>
# "[[Pornography (song)|Pornography]]" – 6:27
}}


Despite the commercial performance of the album, ''Pornography'' was not well received by most music critics upon its release. ''[[NME]]'' reviewer Dave Hill was ambivalent towards the album, writing that while he found the lyrics "tiresomely self-analytical," the album "portrays and parades its currency of exposed futility and utterly naked fear with so few distractions or adornments, and so little sense of shame. It really piles it on. The Cure have applied themselves to catching a related collection of the very purest feelings endemic to their age, and holding them right on the spot in their intangible, unspecified, unmanageable and most unpleasantly real form."<ref name="NME"/> [[Adam Sweeting]] of ''[[Melody Maker]]'' wrote: "It's downhill all the way, into ever-darkening shadows... passing through chilly marbled archways to the final rendezvous with the cold comfort of the slab".<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Blue movies |magazine=[[Melody Maker]] |date=1 May 1982 |last=Sweeting |first=Adam |author-link=Adam Sweeting}}</ref> Dave McCullough of ''[[Sounds (magazine)|Sounds]]'' felt that despite a "genuine talent still at work", ''Pornography'' "has too much music too cluttered a backing for Smith's well-intended observance [...] Robert Smith seems locked in himself, a spiralling nightmare that leaves The Cure making a pompous sounding music that is, when all's said and done, dryly meaningless".<ref name="Sounds"/> [[Robert Christgau]], writing in ''[[The Village Voice]]'', derided Smith's "glum" lyrics: "Cheer up; look on the bright side. You got your contract, right? And your synthesizers, bet you'll have fun with them. Believe me, kid, it will pass."<ref name="Christgau"/> ''[[Rolling Stone]]'' critic [[J. D. Considine]] commented that the lyrics seem "stuck in the terminal malaise of adolescent [[existentialism]]", concluding, "''Pornography'' comes off as the aural equivalent of a bad toothache. It isn't the pain that irks, it's the persistent dullness".<ref name="Rolling Stone"/> ''[[Trouser Press]]''{{'}} Charles McCardell, on the other hand, found that the Cure "imposes an order that at first seems contrary to the basic preconceptions of rock 'n' roll" – noting that "for them, lyrics are everything" and that instruments had been relegated to "merely creating atmosphere" – and hailed ''Pornography'' as an "uncompromising and challenging" work.<ref name="Trouser Press">{{cite magazine |title=The Cure: ''Pornography'' |magazine=[[Trouser Press]] |date=1 September 1982 |last=McCardell |first=Charles}}</ref>
===2005 "Deluxe Edition"===
====Disc one====
;Original album, as above


== Legacy ==
====Disc two: Rarities 1981-1982====
{{Music ratings
# "Break" (group home demo) - 2:11
| title = Retrospective professional ratings
# "Demise" (studio demo) - 2:09
| rev1 = [[AllMusic]]
# "Temptation" (studio demo) - 4:00
| rev1score = {{Rating|3.5|5}}<ref name="allmusic review">{{cite web |url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/pornography-mw0000199022 |title=''Pornography'' – The Cure |publisher=[[AllMusic]] |access-date=27 October 2012 |last=Mason |first=Stewart}}</ref>
# "The Figurehead" (studio demo) - 6:12
| rev2 = ''[[Blender (magazine)|Blender]]''
# "The Hanging Garden" (studio demo) - 5:29
| rev2score = {{Rating|5|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=3472 |title=The Cure: ''Pornography'' |magazine=[[Blender (magazine)|Blender]] |issue=41 |date=October 2005 |access-date=2 November 2015 |last=Wolk |first=Douglas |author-link=Douglas Wolk |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051123005642/http://blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=3472 |archive-date=23 November 2005 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
# "One Hundred Years" (studio demo) - 7:00
| rev3 = ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]''
# "Airlock: The Soundtrack" - 13:07
| rev3score = B<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.ew.com/article/2005/04/11/ew-reviews-latest-album-reissues |title=EW reviews the latest album reissues |magazine=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |date=11 April 2005 |access-date=7 January 2016 |last=Sinclair |first=Tom}}</ref>
# "Cold" (live) - 3:54
| rev4 = ''[[The Guardian]]''
# "A Strange Day" (live) - 4:05
| rev4score = {{Rating|2|5}}<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2005/may/20/popandrock.shopping8 |title=The Cure, ''Pornography'' |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |date=20 May 2005 |access-date=13 November 2020 |last=Sweeting |first=Adam |author-link=Adam Sweeting}}</ref>
# "Pornography" (live) - 5:55
| rev5 = ''[[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]]''
# "All Mine" (live) - 2:54
| rev5score = {{Rating|5|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Death became them |magazine=[[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]] |issue=139 |date=June 2005 |last=Perry |first=Andrew |page=116}}</ref>
# "A Short Term Effect" (live) - 4:05
| rev6 = ''[[Pitchfork (website)|Pitchfork]]''
# "Siamese Twins" (live) - 6:03
| rev6score = 8.4/10<ref>{{cite web |url=http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/11706-seventeen-seconds-faith-pornography/ |title=The Cure: ''Seventeen Seconds'' / ''Faith'' / ''Pornography'' |website=[[Pitchfork (website)|Pitchfork]] |date=12 May 2005 |access-date=13 October 2012 |last=Abebe |first=Nitsuh}}</ref>
# "Temptation Two" - 3:57
| rev7 = ''[[Q (magazine)|Q]]''
| rev7score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Black Celebration |magazine=[[Q (magazine)|Q]] |issue=227 |date=June 2005 |last=Mulholland |first=Garry |page=124}}</ref>
| rev8 = ''[[Rolling Stone]]''
| rev8score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Dark Days |magazine=[[Rolling Stone]] |issue=973 |date=5 May 2005 |last=Walters |first=Barry |page=79}}</ref>
| rev9 = ''[[The Rolling Stone Album Guide]]''
| rev9score = {{Rating|3|5}}<ref>{{cite book |chapter=The Cure |last=Sheffield |first=Rob |author-link=Rob Sheffield |title=The New Rolling Stone Album Guide |title-link=The Rolling Stone Album Guide |editor1-last=Brackett |editor1-first=Nathan |editor1-link=Nathan Brackett |editor2-last=Hoard |editor2-first=Christian |editor2-link=Christian Hoard |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |edition=4th |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-7432-0169-8 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/newrollingstonea00brac/page/205 205–06]}}</ref>
| rev10 = ''[[Uncut (magazine)|Uncut]]''
| rev10score = {{Rating|5|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Power of three |magazine=[[Uncut (magazine)|Uncut]] |issue=97 |date=June 2005 |last=Martin |first=Piers |page=124}}</ref>
}}


Retrospective views of ''Pornography'' have been far more favourable.<ref name="Apter"/> In his biography of the Cure, ''Never Enough: The Story of the Cure'', Jeff Apter wrote that it "turned out to be the kind of album—just like [[Lou Reed]]'s ''[[Berlin (Lou Reed album)|Berlin]]'' or [[David Bowie|Bowie]]'s [[cocaine|coke]]-fueled ''[[Low (David Bowie album)|Low]]''—that required some distance and a good few years of music history to be really appreciated".<ref name="Apter"/> In 1995, Mark Coleman of ''Rolling Stone'' noted that ''Pornography'' had come to be "revered by Cureheads as a masterstroke", while noting that "normal listeners will probably find it impenetrable".<ref name="Apter"/> Stewart Mason of [[AllMusic]] found it to be "much better than most mainstream critics of the time thought", but at the same time "not the masterpiece some fans have claimed it to be" and "just a bit too uneven to be considered a classic".<ref name="allmusic review"/> In 2004, Jaime Gill of [[BBC Music]] singled out the album's "sonic depth and sheer relentless conviction" for praise, adding that without these qualities, its "extraordinary misanthropy would be laughable".<ref name="BBC">{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/jngb |title=The Cure ''Seventeen Seconds'', ''Faith'', ''Pornography'' (Deluxe Editions) Review |publisher=[[BBC Music]] |date=2 December 2004 |access-date=28 October 2012 |last=Gill |first=Jaime}}</ref> ''[[Uncut (magazine)|Uncut]]'' called ''Pornography'' "a masterpiece of claustrophobic self-loathing."<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Recommended listening: ''Pornography'' (1982) |magazine=[[Uncut (magazine)|Uncut]] |issue=87 |date=August 2004 |last=Oldham |first=James |page=56}}</ref>
==Personnel==
*[[Robert Smith (musician)|Robert Smith]] - [[guitar]], keyboard (One Hundred Years, The Hanging Garden, Cold, Pornography), [[Singing|vocals]]
*[[Simon Gallup]] - [[bass guitar|bass]], [[keyboard instrument|keyboard]] (A Strange Day, Cold, Pornography)
*[[Lol Tolhurst]] - [[Drum kit|drums]], keyboard (One Hundred Years)


In 2000, ''Pornography'' was voted No. 183 in [[Colin Larkin]]'s ''[[All Time Top 1000 Albums]]''.<ref name="Larkin">{{cite book |title=All Time Top 1000 Albums |title-link=All Time Top 1000 Albums |last=Larkin |first=Colin |author-link=Colin Larkin |publisher=[[Virgin Books]] |edition=3rd |year=2000 |isbn=0-7535-0493-6 |page=96}}</ref> In 2005, ''[[Spin (magazine)|Spin]]'' cited the album as a "high-water mark for [[gothic rock|goth]]'s musical evolution".<ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3ftHVmAonmoC&pg=PA72 |title=66.6 Greatest Moments in Goth |magazine=[[Spin (magazine)|Spin]] |volume=21 |issue=4 |date=April 2005 |access-date=27 October 2012 |last=Beaujon |first=Andrew |pages=70–73}}</ref> ''NME'' described ''Pornography'' as "arguably the album that invented goth".<ref name="dark">{{cite web |url=https://www.nme.com/list/darkest-albums-ever-50-of-the-best-1351 |title=Darkest albums ever: 50 of the best |website=[[NME]] |date=19 January 2011 |access-date=13 October 2012}}</ref> ''[[Slant Magazine]]'' listed the album at No. 79 on its list of the best albums of the 1980s.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/music/best-albums-of-the-1980s/ |title=The 100 Best Albums of the 1980s |website=[[Slant Magazine]] |date=5 March 2012 |access-date=13 October 2012}}</ref> In 2011, ''NME'' listed ''Pornography'' at No. 6 on its "50 Darkest Albums Ever" list.<ref name="dark"/> ''[[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]]'' placed it at No. 83 on its list of "100 Records That Changed the World".{{CN|date=December 2023}} In his review for AllMusic, Stewart Mason also described the record as "one of the key goth rock albums of the '80s".<ref name="allmusic review"/>
==Production==
*Producer: [[Phil Thornalley]], [[The Cure]]
*Engineer: Mike Nocito, [[Robert Smith (musician)|Robert Smith]]
*Assistant engineer: [[Phil Thornalley]]


According to Apter, ''Pornography'' would prove to be "enormously influential", and has been cited as an influence by bands such as [[Deftones]] and [[System of a Down]].<ref name="Apter"/>
==Artwork==
*Photography: Michael Kostiff
*Sleeve design: Ben Kelly


In 2017, [[Damnation A.D.]] released a cover version of the entire album. [[Xiu Xiu]] and [[Chelsea Wolfe]] covered "One Hundred Years" on Xiu Xiu's 2021 album [[Oh No (Xiu Xiu album)|''Oh No'']]. Another cover version of the entire album was released by [[Leaether Strip]] in 2024.
The album's artwork is the first in The Cure's output not to feature the logo for the group's name which was used on their previous releases.


== Live performances ==
==Charts==
In the period preceding and following the release of ''Pornography'', the group started to develop their trademark image of big hair, smudged makeup and black clothes.<ref name="Apter"/> Smith applied lipstick smeared around the eyes and the mouth.<ref name="Mojo"/> Under the lights, the lipstick melted, making it look, as Smith later put it "like we'd been smacked in the face". It was supposed to symbolise the violence of the new material but backstage, another kind of violence had begun to surface from the first dates of the tour.<ref name="Mojo"/>


The group performed in the UK in April 1982. ''NME'' considered that the show "was all very skillfully deployed: a bruisingly clear sound of scathing force, a clockwork, Pavlovian lightshow, a variegation of light and shade in the song order that builds to the unmitigating force of 'Pornography' itself as the climax". However, the mood on stage was not good: The journalist noted that Smith looked "dejected and tired" for his birthday.<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Savage Scream of Birth |magazine=[[NME]] |date=1 May 1982 |last=Cook |first=Richard |author-link=Richard Cook (journalist)}}</ref> Behind the scenes, Smith's relationship with Gallup was deteriorating. When the tour reached Europe, tensions were so high between the two musicians that they had a fight after a concert in [[Strasbourg]].<ref name="Mojo"/> Tolhurst found out the next day that his two partners "had both gone back to England".<ref name="Mojo"/> At home, Smith heard his father telling him: "Get right back out on that tour! People have bought tickets!" After two more weeks of touring, the group played their final show in [[Brussels]]. Tolhurst later related: "I remember sitting in the dressing room thinking, 'oh well, that's the end of the band, then' [...] I went off to France for a bit. I guess I ran away. Escaping from the reality of The Cure". Back in England, Smith took a rest with a month's camping holiday to the [[Lake District]] to "clean up".<ref name="Mojo"/>
{| class="wikitable"

== Track listing ==

{{Track listing
| all_writing = the Cure ([[Robert Smith (singer)|Robert Smith]], [[Simon Gallup]] and [[Lol Tolhurst]])

| headline = Side one
| title1 = One Hundred Years
| length1 = 6:40
| title2 = A Short Term Effect
| length2 = 4:22
| title3 = [[The Hanging Garden (song)|The Hanging Garden]]
| length3 = 4:33
| title4 = Siamese Twins
| length4 = 5:29
}}
{{track listing
| headline = Side two
| title1 = The Figurehead
| length1 = 6:15
| title2 = A Strange Day
| length2 = 5:04
| title3 = Cold
| length3 = 4:26
| title4 = Pornography
| length4 = 6:27
}}

{{track listing
| headline = 2005 Deluxe Edition bonus disc: ''Rarities 1981–1982''
| title1 = Break
| note1 = Group Home Instrumental Demo 11/81
| length1 = 2:11
| title2 = Demise
| note2 = Studio Instrumental Demo 12/81
| length2 = 2:09
| title3 = Temptation
| note3 = Studio Instrumental Demo 12/81
| length3 = 4:00
| title4 = The Figurehead
| note4 = Studio Demo 12/81
| length4 = 6:12
| title5 = The Hanging Garden
| note5 = Studio Demo 12/81
| length5 = 5:29
| title6 = One Hundred Years
| note6 = Studio Demo 12/81
| length6 = 7:00
| title7 = Airlock: The Soundtrack
| note7 = 3/82
| length7 = 13:07
| title8 = Cold
| note8 = Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82 - bootleg audience recording
| length8 = 3:54
| title9 = A Strange Day
| note9 = Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82 - bootleg audience recording
| length9 = 4:05
| title10 = Pornography
| note10 = Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82 - bootleg audience recording
| length10 = 5:55
| title11 = All Mine
| note11 = Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82
| length11 = 2:54
| title12 = A Short Term Effect
| note12 = Live in Brussels 6/82
| length12 = 4:05
| title13 = Siamese Twins
| note13 = Live in Brussels 6/82
| length13 = 6:03
| title14 = Temptation Two (AKA Let's Go to Bed)
| note14 = RS Studio Demo 7/82
| length14 = 3:57
}}

== Personnel ==
'''The Cure'''
* [[Robert Smith (musician)|Robert Smith]] – vocals, guitar, keyboards, cello ("Cold"), production, engineering
* [[Simon Gallup]] – bass guitar, keyboards, production
* [[Lol Tolhurst]] – drums, keyboards ("One Hundred Years"), production

'''Technical'''
* [[Phil Thornalley]] – production, engineering assistance
* Mike Nocito – engineering
* Michael Kostiff – sleeve photography
* Ben Kelly – sleeve design

== Charts ==
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ 1982 chart performance for ''Pornography''
! scope="col"| Chart (1982)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
|-
! scope="row"| Australian Albums ([[Kent Music Report]])<ref>{{cite book |last=Kent |first=David |author-link=David Kent (historian) |title=Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 |edition=illustrated |location=St Ives, N.S.W. |publisher=Australian Chart Book |year=1993 |pages=79–80 |isbn=0-646-11917-6}}</ref>
! bgcolor="#ebf5ff" align="center"|Country
| 39
! bgcolor="#ebf5ff" |Date
! bgcolor="#ebf5ff" |Peak position
|-
|-
{{album chart|Netherlands|17|artist=The Cure|album=Pornography|rowheader=true|access-date=20 March 2013}}
|align="left"|UK Top 40
|align="left"|[[1982#May|May 1982]]
|align="left"|8<ref>[[UNCUT (magazine)|UNCUT magazine]], [[2004#August|August 2004]]</ref>
|-
|-
{{album chart|New Zealand|9|artist=The Cure|album=Pornography|rowheader=true|access-date=20 March 2013}}
|-
{{album chart|Sweden|47|artist=The Cure|album=Pornography|rowheader=true|access-date=20 March 2013}}
|-
{{album chart|UK2|8|date=19820509|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|}

{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ Chart performance for ''Pornography''<br/>(2005 deluxe edition)
! scope="col"| Chart (2005)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
{{album chart|Wallonia|70|artist=The Cure|album=Pornography|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|-
{{album chart|France|81|artist=The Cure|album=Pornography|rowheader=true|access-date=20 March 2013}}
|-
{{album chart|Italy|89|artist=The Cure|album=Pornography|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|}

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ 2021 weekly chart performance for ''Pornography''
! scope="col"| Chart (2021)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
! scope="row"| Greek Albums ([[IFPI Greece|IFPI]])<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.ifpi.gr/charts_en.html |title=Official IFPI Charts – Top-75 Albums Sales Chart (Combined) – Week: 39/2021 |publisher=[[IFPI Greece]] |access-date=29 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211011102015/http://www.ifpi.gr/charts_en.html |archive-date=11 October 2021}}</ref>
| 3
|}

{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ Chart performance for ''Pornography''<br/>(40th anniversary edition)
! scope="col"| Chart (2022)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
{{album chart|Scotland|23|date=20220429|rowheader=true|access-date=3 May 2022}}
|-
! scope="row"| UK Albums Sales ([[Official Charts Company|OCC]])<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/albums-sales-chart/20220429/7511/ |title=Official Albums Sales Chart |publisher=[[Official Charts Company]] |access-date=29 December 2023}}</ref>
| 14
|-
! scope="row"| UK Physical Albums ([[Official Charts Company|OCC]])<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/physical-albums-chart/20220429/2/ |title=Official Physical Albums Chart |publisher=[[Official Charts Company]] |access-date=29 December 2023}}</ref>
| 13
|-
! scope="row"| [[Official Vinyl Albums Chart|UK Vinyl Albums]] ([[Official Charts Company|OCC]])<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.officialcharts.com/charts/vinyl-albums-chart/20220429/9/ |title=Official Vinyl Albums Chart |publisher=[[Official Charts Company]] |access-date=29 December 2023}}</ref>
| 9
|-
{{album chart|Billboard200|133|artist=The Cure|rowheader=true|access-date=3 May 2022}}
|-
{{album chart|BillboardAlternative|17|artist=The Cure|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|-
{{album chart|BillboardCatalog|50|artist=The Cure|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|-
{{album chart|BillboardRock|24|artist=The Cure|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|-
{{album chart|BillboardTastemaker|4|artist=The Cure|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|}

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ 2023 chart performance for ''Pornography''
! scope="col"| Chart (2023)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
{{album chart|Flanders|89|artist=The Cure|album=Pornography|rowheader=true|access-date=29 December 2023}}
|}
|}


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}


== External links ==
<references />
* [https://archive.today/20130416104818/http://www.radio3net.ro/dbartists/supersearch/UG9ybm9ncmFwaHkgKEZpY3Rpb24p/Pornography%20(Fiction) ''Pornography''] ([[Adobe Flash]]) at [[Radio3Net]] (streamed copy where licensed)<!-- This is a licensed stream for the album, which is allowed under Wikipedia polices -->
* {{Discogs master|20238|Pornography|type=album}}


{{TheCure}}
{{The Cure}}

{{Authority control}}


[[Category:The Cure albums]]
[[Category:The Cure albums]]
[[Category:1982 albums]]
[[Category:1982 albums]]
[[Category:Universal Deluxe Editions]]
[[Category:Fiction Records albums]]
[[Category:Darkwave albums]]
[[Category:A&M Records albums]]
[[Category:Post-punk albums]]
[[Category:Elektra Records albums]]
[[Category:Gothic rock albums]]
[[Category:Rhino Entertainment albums]]
[[Category:Albums recorded at the Hammersmith Apollo]]

[[Category:Albums recorded at RAK Studios]]
[[da:Pornography]]
[[es:Pornography (álbum)]]
[[fr:Pornography]]
[[it:Pornography]]
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[[pt:Pornography]]
[[ru:Pornography (альбом)]]
[[fi:Pornography]]
[[sv:Pornography]]

Latest revision as of 04:31, 30 September 2024

Pornography
Studio album by
Released4 May 1982
RecordedJanuary–April 1982
StudioRAK, London
Genre
Length43:30
LabelFiction
Producer
The Cure chronology
Faith
(1981)
Pornography
(1982)
Japanese Whispers
(1983)
Singles from Pornography
  1. "The Hanging Garden"
    Released: 12 July 1982

Pornography is the fourth studio album by English rock band the Cure, released on 4 May 1982[7] by Fiction Records. Preceded by the non-album single "Charlotte Sometimes", it was the band's first album with new producer Phil Thornalley, and was recorded at RAK Studios from January to April 1982. The sessions saw the band on the brink of collapse, with heavy drug use, band in-fighting, and frontman Robert Smith's depression fueling the album's musical and lyrical content. Pornography represents the conclusion of the Cure's early dark, gloomy musical phase, which began with their second album Seventeen Seconds (1980).[8]

Following its release, bassist Simon Gallup left the band, and the Cure switched to a much brighter and more radio-friendly new wave sound.[9] Although it was poorly received by critics at the time of release, Pornography was the Cure's most popular album to date, reaching number eight on the UK Albums Chart. It has since gone on to gain acclaim from critics, and is now considered an important milestone in the development of the style of music known as gothic rock.

Background and recording

[edit]

Following the band's previous album, 1981's Faith, the non-album single "Charlotte Sometimes" was released. The single, in particular its nightmarish and hallucinatory B-side "Splintered in Her Head", would hint at what was to come in Pornography.[9]

In the words of Robert Smith, regarding the album's conception, "I had two choices at the time, which were either completely giving in [committing suicide] or making a record of it and getting it out of me". He also claims he "really thought that was it for the group. I had every intention of signing off. I wanted to make the ultimate 'fuck off' record, and then sign off [the band]".[9] Smith was mentally exhausted during that period of time: "I was in a really depressed frame of mind between 1981 and 1982".[10] The band "had been touring for about 200 days a year and it all got a bit too much because there was never any time to do anything else".[11]

The band, Smith in particular, wanted to make the album with a different producer than Mike Hedges, who had produced Seventeen Seconds and Faith. According to Lol Tolhurst, Smith and Tolhurst briefly met with the producer Conny Plank at Fiction's offices in the hopes of having him produce the album since they were both fans of his work with Kraftwerk,[12] however, the group soon settled on Phil Thornalley.[9] Pornography is the last Cure album to feature Tolhurst as the band's drummer (he then became the band's keyboardist), and also marked the first time he played keyboards on a Cure release.[9] The album was recorded at RAK Studios from January to April 1982.[13]

On the album's recording sessions, Smith noted "there was a lot of drugs involved".[9] The band took LSD and drank a lot of alcohol, and to save money, they slept in the office of their record label.[10] The musicians usually turned up at eight, and left at midday looking "fairly deranged". Smith related: "We had an arrangement with the off-licence up the road, every night they would bring in supplies. We decided we weren't going to throw anything out. We built this mountain of empties in the corner, a gigantic pile of debris in the corner. It just grew and grew".[10] According to Tolhurst, "we wanted to make the ultimate, intense album. I can't remember exactly why, but we did".[9] The recording sessions commenced and concluded in three weeks. Smith noted, "At the time, I lost every friend I had, everyone, without exception, because I was incredibly obnoxious, appalling, self-centred". He also noted that with the album, he "channelled all the self-destructive elements of my personality into doing something".[9]

Polydor Records, the company in charge of Fiction, was initially displeased with the album's title, which it saw as being potentially offensive.[9]

Music and influences

[edit]

Regarding the album's musical style, NME reviewer Dave Hill wrote, "The drums, guitars, voice and production style are pressed scrupulously together in a murderous unity of surging, textured mood". Hill further described it as "Phil Spector in Hell".[14] Trouser Press said about the track "A Short Term Effect": it "stresses ephemeralness with Smith's echo-laden voice decelerating at the end of each phrase".[15] Ira Robbins observed that "the song closest to basic pop" is "A Strange Day": It "has overdubbed backing vocals plus a delineated verse and chorus wrapped in some strangely consonant guitar figures".[15] The journalist also commented: the song "Cold" "gets the full gothic treatment", with "grandiose minor-mode organ swells".[15] Describing the title track, writer Dave McCullough said that it "tries to copy Cabaret Voltaire, all shuddering tape noise".[16]

Smith said that "the reference point" for Pornography was the Psychedelic Furs' self-titled debut album, which he noted "had, like, a density of sound, really powerful".[17] Smith also cited Siouxsie and the Banshees as "a massive influence on me [...] They were the group who led me towards doing Pornography. They drew something out of me".[18] In 1982, Smith also said that the "records he'd take into the bunker after the big bang", were Desertshore by Nico, Music for Films by Brian Eno, Axis: Bold as Love / Are You Experienced by Jimi Hendrix, Twenty Golden Greats by Frank Sinatra and the Early Piano Works by Erik Satie.[19]

Release and reception

[edit]

Pornography was released on 4 May 1982.[20] The album debuted and peaked at No. 8 on the UK Albums Chart, staying on the chart for nine weeks.[21] Fiction owner Chris Parry found "The Hanging Garden" to be the album's only potential single, and after being "polished" by Thornalley and Smith, it was released as a single on 12 July, reaching No. 32 on the UK Singles Chart.[9]

Contemporary professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Rolling Stone[22]
Sounds[16]
The Village VoiceC[23]

Despite the commercial performance of the album, Pornography was not well received by most music critics upon its release. NME reviewer Dave Hill was ambivalent towards the album, writing that while he found the lyrics "tiresomely self-analytical," the album "portrays and parades its currency of exposed futility and utterly naked fear with so few distractions or adornments, and so little sense of shame. It really piles it on. The Cure have applied themselves to catching a related collection of the very purest feelings endemic to their age, and holding them right on the spot in their intangible, unspecified, unmanageable and most unpleasantly real form."[14] Adam Sweeting of Melody Maker wrote: "It's downhill all the way, into ever-darkening shadows... passing through chilly marbled archways to the final rendezvous with the cold comfort of the slab".[24] Dave McCullough of Sounds felt that despite a "genuine talent still at work", Pornography "has too much music too cluttered a backing for Smith's well-intended observance [...] Robert Smith seems locked in himself, a spiralling nightmare that leaves The Cure making a pompous sounding music that is, when all's said and done, dryly meaningless".[16] Robert Christgau, writing in The Village Voice, derided Smith's "glum" lyrics: "Cheer up; look on the bright side. You got your contract, right? And your synthesizers, bet you'll have fun with them. Believe me, kid, it will pass."[23] Rolling Stone critic J. D. Considine commented that the lyrics seem "stuck in the terminal malaise of adolescent existentialism", concluding, "Pornography comes off as the aural equivalent of a bad toothache. It isn't the pain that irks, it's the persistent dullness".[22] Trouser Press' Charles McCardell, on the other hand, found that the Cure "imposes an order that at first seems contrary to the basic preconceptions of rock 'n' roll" – noting that "for them, lyrics are everything" and that instruments had been relegated to "merely creating atmosphere" – and hailed Pornography as an "uncompromising and challenging" work.[15]

Legacy

[edit]
Retrospective professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[25]
Blender[26]
Entertainment WeeklyB[27]
The Guardian[28]
Mojo[29]
Pitchfork8.4/10[30]
Q[31]
Rolling Stone[32]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[33]
Uncut[34]

Retrospective views of Pornography have been far more favourable.[9] In his biography of the Cure, Never Enough: The Story of the Cure, Jeff Apter wrote that it "turned out to be the kind of album—just like Lou Reed's Berlin or Bowie's coke-fueled Low—that required some distance and a good few years of music history to be really appreciated".[9] In 1995, Mark Coleman of Rolling Stone noted that Pornography had come to be "revered by Cureheads as a masterstroke", while noting that "normal listeners will probably find it impenetrable".[9] Stewart Mason of AllMusic found it to be "much better than most mainstream critics of the time thought", but at the same time "not the masterpiece some fans have claimed it to be" and "just a bit too uneven to be considered a classic".[25] In 2004, Jaime Gill of BBC Music singled out the album's "sonic depth and sheer relentless conviction" for praise, adding that without these qualities, its "extraordinary misanthropy would be laughable".[35] Uncut called Pornography "a masterpiece of claustrophobic self-loathing."[36]

In 2000, Pornography was voted No. 183 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.[37] In 2005, Spin cited the album as a "high-water mark for goth's musical evolution".[38] NME described Pornography as "arguably the album that invented goth".[39] Slant Magazine listed the album at No. 79 on its list of the best albums of the 1980s.[40] In 2011, NME listed Pornography at No. 6 on its "50 Darkest Albums Ever" list.[39] Mojo placed it at No. 83 on its list of "100 Records That Changed the World".[citation needed] In his review for AllMusic, Stewart Mason also described the record as "one of the key goth rock albums of the '80s".[25]

According to Apter, Pornography would prove to be "enormously influential", and has been cited as an influence by bands such as Deftones and System of a Down.[9]

In 2017, Damnation A.D. released a cover version of the entire album. Xiu Xiu and Chelsea Wolfe covered "One Hundred Years" on Xiu Xiu's 2021 album Oh No. Another cover version of the entire album was released by Leaether Strip in 2024.

Live performances

[edit]

In the period preceding and following the release of Pornography, the group started to develop their trademark image of big hair, smudged makeup and black clothes.[9] Smith applied lipstick smeared around the eyes and the mouth.[10] Under the lights, the lipstick melted, making it look, as Smith later put it "like we'd been smacked in the face". It was supposed to symbolise the violence of the new material but backstage, another kind of violence had begun to surface from the first dates of the tour.[10]

The group performed in the UK in April 1982. NME considered that the show "was all very skillfully deployed: a bruisingly clear sound of scathing force, a clockwork, Pavlovian lightshow, a variegation of light and shade in the song order that builds to the unmitigating force of 'Pornography' itself as the climax". However, the mood on stage was not good: The journalist noted that Smith looked "dejected and tired" for his birthday.[41] Behind the scenes, Smith's relationship with Gallup was deteriorating. When the tour reached Europe, tensions were so high between the two musicians that they had a fight after a concert in Strasbourg.[10] Tolhurst found out the next day that his two partners "had both gone back to England".[10] At home, Smith heard his father telling him: "Get right back out on that tour! People have bought tickets!" After two more weeks of touring, the group played their final show in Brussels. Tolhurst later related: "I remember sitting in the dressing room thinking, 'oh well, that's the end of the band, then' [...] I went off to France for a bit. I guess I ran away. Escaping from the reality of The Cure". Back in England, Smith took a rest with a month's camping holiday to the Lake District to "clean up".[10]

Track listing

[edit]

All tracks are written by the Cure (Robert Smith, Simon Gallup and Lol Tolhurst)

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."One Hundred Years"6:40
2."A Short Term Effect"4:22
3."The Hanging Garden"4:33
4."Siamese Twins"5:29
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."The Figurehead"6:15
2."A Strange Day"5:04
3."Cold"4:26
4."Pornography"6:27
2005 Deluxe Edition bonus disc: Rarities 1981–1982
No.TitleLength
1."Break" (Group Home Instrumental Demo 11/81)2:11
2."Demise" (Studio Instrumental Demo 12/81)2:09
3."Temptation" (Studio Instrumental Demo 12/81)4:00
4."The Figurehead" (Studio Demo 12/81)6:12
5."The Hanging Garden" (Studio Demo 12/81)5:29
6."One Hundred Years" (Studio Demo 12/81)7:00
7."Airlock: The Soundtrack" (3/82)13:07
8."Cold" (Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82 - bootleg audience recording)3:54
9."A Strange Day" (Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82 - bootleg audience recording)4:05
10."Pornography" (Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82 - bootleg audience recording)5:55
11."All Mine" (Live at Hammersmith Odeon 5/82)2:54
12."A Short Term Effect" (Live in Brussels 6/82)4:05
13."Siamese Twins" (Live in Brussels 6/82)6:03
14."Temptation Two (AKA Let's Go to Bed)" (RS Studio Demo 7/82)3:57

Personnel

[edit]

The Cure

  • Robert Smith – vocals, guitar, keyboards, cello ("Cold"), production, engineering
  • Simon Gallup – bass guitar, keyboards, production
  • Lol Tolhurst – drums, keyboards ("One Hundred Years"), production

Technical

  • Phil Thornalley – production, engineering assistance
  • Mike Nocito – engineering
  • Michael Kostiff – sleeve photography
  • Ben Kelly – sleeve design

Charts

[edit]
1982 chart performance for Pornography
Chart (1982) Peak
position
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[42] 39
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[43] 17
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[44] 9
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[45] 47
UK Albums (OCC)[46] 8
Chart performance for Pornography
(2005 deluxe edition)
Chart (2005) Peak
position
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[47] 70
French Albums (SNEP)[48] 81
Italian Albums (FIMI)[49] 89
2021 weekly chart performance for Pornography
Chart (2021) Peak
position
Greek Albums (IFPI)[50] 3
Chart performance for Pornography
(40th anniversary edition)
Chart (2022) Peak
position
Scottish Albums (OCC)[51] 23
UK Albums Sales (OCC)[52] 14
UK Physical Albums (OCC)[53] 13
UK Vinyl Albums (OCC)[54] 9
US Billboard 200[55] 133
US Top Alternative Albums (Billboard)[56] 17
US Top Catalog Albums (Billboard)[57] 50
US Top Rock Albums (Billboard)[58] 24
US Top Tastemaker Albums (Billboard)[59] 4
2023 chart performance for Pornography
Chart (2023) Peak
position
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[60] 89

References

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  2. ^ Reynolds 2005, p. 429.
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  35. ^ Gill, Jaime (2 December 2004). "The Cure Seventeen Seconds, Faith, Pornography (Deluxe Editions) Review". BBC Music. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  36. ^ Oldham, James (August 2004). "Recommended listening: Pornography (1982)". Uncut. No. 87. p. 56.
  37. ^ Larkin, Colin (2000). All Time Top 1000 Albums (3rd ed.). Virgin Books. p. 96. ISBN 0-7535-0493-6.
  38. ^ Beaujon, Andrew (April 2005). "66.6 Greatest Moments in Goth". Spin. Vol. 21, no. 4. pp. 70–73. Retrieved 27 October 2012.
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  42. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. pp. 79–80. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
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  50. ^ "Official IFPI Charts – Top-75 Albums Sales Chart (Combined) – Week: 39/2021". IFPI Greece. Archived from the original on 11 October 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  51. ^ "Official Scottish Albums Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  52. ^ "Official Albums Sales Chart". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  53. ^ "Official Physical Albums Chart". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  54. ^ "Official Vinyl Albums Chart". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  55. ^ "The Cure Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  56. ^ "The Cure Chart History (Top Alternative Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
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  58. ^ "The Cure Chart History (Top Rock Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  59. ^ "The Cure Chart History (Top Tastemaker Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  60. ^ "Ultratop.be – The Cure – Pornography" (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
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