Release Date: Mar 19, 2001
Format: MP3, ~256 Kbps VBR Contextual Help marker
Length: 74:31
Genre: Alternative
Record Label: 4AD

Life In The Gladhouse (1980-1984): The Best Of

Latest Price: $5.46 Contextual Help marker
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1 Play Button
16 Days
4:37 $0.31 Buy Song
2 Play Button
Gathering Dust
4:20 $0.33 Buy Song
3 Play Button
I Melt With You
3:48 $0.66 Buy Song 6
4 Play Button
Mesh And Lace
4:18 $0.31 Buy Song
5 Play Button
Black Houses
5:42 $0.31 Buy Song
6 Play Button
After The Snow
3:49 $0.34 Buy Song 1
7 Play Button
Rainbows End
3:06 $0.33 Buy Song
8 Play Button
Smiles And Laughter
3:10 $0.31 Buy Song
9 Play Button
Ricochet Days
5:13 $0.33 Buy Song
10 Play Button
Dawn Chorus
4:41 $0.31 Buy Song
11 Play Button
Carry Me Down
5:24 $0.31 Buy Song
12 Play Button
Machines
5:53 $0.31 Buy Song
13 Play Button
Heart
6:56 $0.31 Buy Song
14 Play Button
Swans On Glass Top Track Icon
4:34 $0.31 Buy Song
15 Play Button
Blue Waves Top Track Icon
3:57 $0.33 Buy Song
16 Play Button
Life In The Gladhouse Top Track Icon
5:03 $0.35 Buy Song

Life In The Gladhouse (1980-1984): The Best Of - Review

Few bands have been quite as misrepresented by their hit songs as Modern English was by its 1983 smash "I Melt With You." An exquisite pop confection celebrating the joy of youthful romance (and a huge American video hit in the early days of MTV), "I Melt With You" was something of an anomaly for this moody and experimental crew, whose songs generally tended to have titles like "Black Houses" and "Swans on Glass" and whose sound owed as much to Joy Division as it did to fellow new romantics like Duran Duran. Really, there's nothing much like "I Melt With You" anywhere else on this retrospective compilation. The program opens with the strange and desolate "16 Days," and stays roughly in that vein through songs that all seem to thud along at the same 120-bpm tempo and all seem to mine the same vein of post-punk socio-romantic angst. Imagine a slightly more melodic but enervated Gang of Four (especially on "Black Houses") or a really gloomy Flock of Seagulls ("Rainbows End"). It's not bad stuff, but the only really noteworthy song here is the hit single, and one of the most noteworthy things about it is its dissimilarity to the rest of the band's oeuvre. ~ Rick Anderson, All Music Guide

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