Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret

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Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 59:00

eMusic Features

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Covers That Are Better (known) Than The Originals

By Rich Caccappolo, CTO

Sure, most fans probably believe that being considered a great artist usually means they can write a great song. However, many of our most beloved, most popular, and most successful acts over the last 40 years are best known for songs they covered. In some cases, we all know the truth, e.g., Van Halen didn't write and first record "(Oh) Pretty Woman"; a guy with much more conservative hair and glasses penned and originally performed… more »

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'80s One (Or Two) Hit Wonders

By Ryan Fissell, eMusic Contributor

Every decade, a new batch of songs rockets up the pop charts, bringing quick fame and wild glory to the artists who sing them. And, just as inevitably, those split-second chart toppers usually slink quietly back into obscurity in the years that follow their One Big Hit. Perhaps no decade produced more momentary Mozarts than the 1980s. Cynics will say the songs from this era are drivel -- that artistic integrity was low on a list… more »

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New Wave and Friends

By Mandy Littlefield, eMusic Contributor

Do you fondly remember basement clubs with girls in combat boots and dresses, boys with long floppy hair wearing too much eyeliner and smoking clove cigarettes? Then this station is for you! Whether you want to bounce around happily to Depeche Mode and the Thompson Twins, sit in a corner moping to The Smiths and Joy Division, or blast your speakers out to KMFDM and the Sisters of Mercy. Even if you aren't a child… more »

They Say All Music Guide

In the U.S., Soft Cell, the British duo of singer Marc Almond and instrumentalist David Ball, was a classic one-hit wonder, that hit being the remake of Gloria Jones’ “Tainted Love,” which dominated dance clubs and eventually peaked in the pop Top Ten with its synth-pop sound and Almond’s plaintive vocal in 1981-1982. In the U.K., the group not only had a longer career, but also influenced a raft of similar performers. Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret, originally released in Britain in the fall of 1981, contained both the band’s first hit and its follow-up, “Bedsitter,” its title referring to what in America would be called a studio apartment. (A third U.K. Top Five hit, “Say Hello Wave Goodbye,” emerged from the LP.) At full album length, lyricist Almond’s primary preoccupation, only suggested in “Tainted Love,” was spelled out; this was a theme album about aberrant sexuality, a tour of a red-light district. The point was well made on “Sex Dwarf,” with its oft-repeated chorus “Isn’t it nice/Sugar and spice/Luring disco dollies to a life of vice?” Songs like “Seedy Films,” “Entertain Me,” and “Secret Life” expanded upon the subject. The insistent beats taken at steady dance tempos and the chilling electronic sounds conjured by Ball emphasized Almond’s fascination with deviance; it almost seemed as though the album had been designed to be played in topless bars. British listeners saw through Almond’s pretense or were amused by him, or both; more puritanical Americans tended to disapprove, which probably limited the group’s long-term success stateside. But the music was undeniably influential. The 2002 CD reissue added two lengthy 12″ single mixes of “Tainted Love,” one of them a medley with the old Supremes hit “Where Did Our Love Go,” the other a dub version. [The CD was also released with bonus tracks.] – William Ruhlmann

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