Welcome To The Pleasuredome

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 64:27

eMusic Review

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Peter Shapiro

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
The ultimate '80s pop album?
1984 | Label: ZTT Records / ZTT

Although no one but the ludicrously gung-ho British music press wanted to admit it at the time, Welcome to the Pleasure Dome is in many ways the ultimate '80s pop album. First off, produced by Trevor Horn (the savant of plastic fantastic '80s studio wizardry), it sounds amazing. The detail and epic sweep of the best tracks were, and remain, stunning — like all the best bits of ABC, Duran Duran, Blancmange, Naked Eyes, the Art of Noise and Heaven 17 compressed into one utterly over-the-top package. While the album's delicious sonic qualities helped usher in baroque Hi-NRG as the new lingua franca of Euro-pop (think Dead or Alive, Rick Astley, Kylie, etc), Pleasure Dome also epitomized another definitively '80s conceit — music as marketing exercise, as pseudo-Situationist prank, as scam. The media/t-shirt campaign designed by journalist Paul Morley that accompanied the album's release threatened to outshine the music, not least because the album really has only three ideas: two politico-pornographic synth-pop perennials (“Relax” and “Two Tribes”), one tour de force of studiocraft (the title track) and one supremely gloopy ballad (“The Power of Love”). While Pleasure Dome exemplifies the Reagan/Thatcher era notion that music hardly exists outside of… read more »

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Reliving the 80s

peterfrederics

Frankie were one of the best groups of the 80s and this has their best songs. Highlights are "Two Tribes", "Welcome to the Pleasuredom" and "Relax".

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The Power of Love

feistyblackchick

One of the most beautiful and true love songs ... ever !!

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Relax (Do It !)

Vin.Maharaj

This is one of the overlooked gems of the 80's. Listening to this album will still grab and hold your attention. From the over-the-top opening tracks, to the campy covers, to the cheesy ballads - they are all still ultimately listenable. This album has stood the test of time. Put your pretensions aside & enjoy!

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Mogatu jokes aside

Irvingstark

This was not only a pop music achievement, but also a technical one. IT was only one of maybe two albums of its day to be direct digital mastering. Not a big deal these days, but way back when kids, when CD's were first out, you wanted to HEAR a DDD recording, where would you go? That's right, to Frankie and RELAX!!

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Better than it has any right to be!

conorbendle

Speaking as someone too young to remember 'Frankie-mania', I can only judge this album by one criteria: does it live up to that perennial fixture on 80s mix cds, namely: 'Relax'? Well, yes - for the most part. Okay, after track 9 or so, it starts to get a little samey and a bit wearying. It probably should have been a single album. But I thought 'Relax' was the ultimate over-produced, overtly gay, dynamite club-thumping guilty pleasure there could be. I was wrong. The title track is thirteen awesome minutes of non-stop bass grooves and lush synths, with a beautiful acoustic solo from (of all people!) Steve Howe. Even better: their cover of 'Born To Run'. I didn't think it was possible to rock harder than The Boss, but they almost manage it (replacing the sax with a bass solo is brilliant). To sum up: it's still hard to see what all the fuss was about. This album is dated, over-produced, underwritten and packed with filler. It also sounds totally awesome and FUN!

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Literally Brought the Roof Down

attorney-in-fact

I saw them in 85 to at Grady Gammage. The show was temporarily stopped because people we're jumping so hard in the cable suspended balcony - IT WAS ABOUT TO COLLAPSE! Only one other band EVER had this issue: The Who. Lost my virginity to this one too. How do I love this album? Cannot count the ways...about so much more than RELAX and Two Tribes.

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Already a legend, innovative and addictive

chrisyates

Would someone like to translate the 'review' written above by Peter Shapiro. Does it make any sense or is it just pseudo crap?

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probably...

45or33

not probably it actually is one of the best of all time - don't listen to me though listen to the album

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Still Fun!

TrelawneyDawn

I saw Frankie Goes to Hollywood in concert in 1985 (yes, I'm dating myself). They were absolutely fantastic! It was like a big party and no one stayed in their seats. Absolutely awesome!

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two tribes

latino9002003

has anyone got two tribes anialation mix

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They Say All Media 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 over-the-top, bizarre, but fun release. Less well known but worthwhile cuts include by-definition-camp “Krisco Kisses” and “The Only Star in Heaven,” while U.K. smash “The Power of Love” is a gloriously insincere but still great hyper-ballad 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 — arena-level synth rock of the early ’80s that holds up just fine today, as much 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 over-the-top 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 hyper-dramatic yelps. – Ned Raggett

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