Welcome to the Pleasuredome: Difference between revisions

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| rev3score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Frankie Goes to Hollywood: Welcome to the Pleasuredome |magazine=[[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]] |issue=290 |date=January 2018 |last=Harrison |first=Ian |page=106}}</ref>
| rev3score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Frankie Goes to Hollywood: Welcome to the Pleasuredome |magazine=[[Mojo (magazine)|Mojo]] |issue=290 |date=January 2018 |last=Harrison |first=Ian |page=106}}</ref>
| rev4 = ''[[Pitchfork (website)|Pitchfork]]''
| rev4 = ''[[Pitchfork (website)|Pitchfork]]''
| rev4score = 8.7/10<ref name="Geffen">{{cite web |url=https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/frankie-goes-to-hollywood-welcome-to-the-pleasuredome/ |title=Frankie Goes To Hollywood: Welcome to the Pleasuredome Album Review |website=[[Pitchfork (website)|Pitchfork]] |date=23 June 2024 |access-date=23 June 2024 |last=Geffen |first=Sasha}}</ref>
| rev4score = 8.7/10<ref name="Geffen">{{cite web |url=https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/frankie-goes-to-hollywood-welcome-to-the-pleasuredome/ |title=Frankie Goes to Hollywood: Welcome to the Pleasuredome Album Review |website=[[Pitchfork (website)|Pitchfork]] |date=23 June 2024 |access-date=23 June 2024 |last=Geffen |first=Sasha}}</ref>
| rev5 = ''[[Record Collector]]''
| rev5 = ''[[Record Collector]]''
| rev5score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://recordcollectormag.com/reviews/album/welcome-to-thepleasuredome |title=Welcome To The Pleasuredome {{!}} Frankie Goes To Hollywood |magazine=[[Record Collector]] |issue=375 |date=May 2010 |access-date=1 April 2016 |last=Staunton |first=Terry}}</ref>
| rev5score = {{Rating|4|5}}<ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://recordcollectormag.com/reviews/album/welcome-to-thepleasuredome |title=Welcome To The Pleasuredome {{!}} Frankie Goes To Hollywood |magazine=[[Record Collector]] |issue=375 |date=May 2010 |access-date=1 April 2016 |last=Staunton |first=Terry}}</ref>

Latest revision as of 14:54, 29 June 2025

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Welcome to the Pleasuredome is the debut studio album by the English band Frankie Goes to Hollywood, first released on 29 October 1984 by ZTT Records.[1] Originally issued as a vinyl double album, it was assured of a UK chart entry at number one due to reported advance sales of over one million.[1] It actually sold around a quarter of a million copies in its first week.[2] The album was also a top-10 seller internationally in countries such as Switzerland, Sweden, Australia and New Zealand.

The album was commercially successful and contained new versions of the songs from the group's singles from the same year ("Relax" and "Two Tribes", plus B-side "War"), as well as several cover versions. Trevor Horn's production dominated the record so thoroughly that the band's own instrumental performances were often replaced by session musicians or Horn himself.[3] Frankie's second album, Liverpool, actively featured the full band.

The ballad "The Power of Love" subsequently provided the group with their third consecutive UK number-one single.

To celebrate the album's 30th anniversary, in October 2014, ZTT through Union Square Music released a limited edition (2,000 copies only) box set titled Inside the Pleasuredome, available exclusively from the website pledgemusic.com. The box set contains rarities on 10" vinyl, as well as a book, a DVD, a cassette (featuring 13 mixes of "Relax" and its B-side "One September Monday") as well as a new 2014 remastered version of Welcome to the Pleasuredome on 180g vinyl. Template:TOC limit

Sleeve art

The cover art was conceived by ZTT owner Paul Morley and illustrated by graphic artist Lo Cole. The front cover featured an illustration of the Frankie Goes to Hollywood band members; on the back of the album was an illustration of a large animal orgy; and the inner gatefold artwork was an image of a procession of animals entering the head of a very large phallus. The sleeve art proved controversial, and the printing company refused to print the album covers. Cole was forced to alter the orgy image by adding green fig leaves to cover the offending animal genitalia.[4]

The album's alternative CD cover, and some of the promotional material, used a different image to the vinyl release, instead utilising Peter Ashworth's photograph of the band in a jungle setting built by Ashworth in his studio.[5]

Critical reception

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Reviewing Welcome to the Pleasuredome for Sounds, Carole Linfield praised Frankie Goes to Hollywood for merging "the hip with the witless" on an album of "overkill, overjoy and overcompensation", summarising it as "pretentious rubbish for which we're rewarded with almost illicit ecstasyTemplate:Nbsp... Frankie makes gullibility fashionable."[6] "By next week I'll be tired of it," commented Richard Cook in NME, "but today this 'play' is funny, sharp, gorgeous."[7] Jim Reid of Record Mirror felt that while the album "would have made a brilliant single LP", it is still "superbly produced and head and shoulders above the rest", observing "intelligence, real sexual glamour and a sense of fun" distinguishing the band from other contemporary pop acts.[8]

In the United States, Rolling Stone critic David Fricke found that the album's songs are "too oftenTemplate:Nbsp... merely alluring fragments", while concluding that it "revels in its own subversiveness with such audacious glee that it is impossible not to be captivated, if not entirely convinced".[9] The Village VoiceTemplate:'s Robert Christgau was less impressed, calling the group "a truly great hype" but ultimately only "a marginally competent arena-rock band who don't know how to distinguish between effeminacy and pretension".[10]

Retrospectively, AllMusic reviewer Ned Raggett said that Welcome to the Pleasuredome, divorced from "the hype, controversy, and attendant craziness surrounding Frankie", "holds up as an outrageously over-the-top, bizarre, but fun release", as well as "more a testament to Trevor Horn's production skills than anything else."[11] For Pitchfork, Sasha Geffen wrote that the album's impact "rang out into the years that followed, emblematizing the '80s and loosening the way for bands like Erasure, who would carry a similar torch into the rave years."[12]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Peter Gill, Holly Johnson, Brian Nash and Mark O'Toole except where noted.Template:CN Template:Tracklist Template:Tracklist Template:Tracklist Template:Tracklist

Personnel

Frankie Goes to Hollywood

Additional personnel

Production

  • Produced by Trevor Horn
  • Engineers – Stuart Bruce, Steve Lipson
  • Mastering – Ian Cooper

Technical

Charts

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Certifications

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References

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Bibliography

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External links

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