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List of The Cure albums

The Cure Album - Boys Don't Cry

The Cure Album - Boys Don't Cry (Front side)
Album Information :
Customers rating: (40 ratings)
Release Date:1990-10-25
Type:Audio CD
Genre:Alternative Pop/Rock, College Rock, Goth Rock, New Wave, Pop, Pop/Rock Music, Post-Punk, Rock, Rock/Pop
Label:Elektra / Wea
UPC:075596078627
Approx. Price:$18.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 . Boys Don't Cry
2 . Plastic Passion
3 . 10:15 Saturday Night
4 . Accuracy
5 . So What
6 . Jumping Someone Else's Train
7 . Subway Song
8 . Killing An Arab
9 . Fire In Cairo
10 . Another Day
11 . Grinding Halt
12 . Three Imaginary Boys
Review - Amazon.com :
When Robert Smith's long-running group made this debut (actually the resequenced American version of the British Three Imaginary Boys), they weren't the Goth-and-reverb, new wave heroes they later became; they were just a trio of disaffected kids who didn't like what was on the radio, because it wasn't smart enough or dark enough. Smith's lyrics are bleakly sarcastic (as when he spells out the title of "Fire in Cairo") and literate (the single "Killing an Arab," a nihilistic sketch based on a scene from Albert Camus's The Stranger). The band matches them with swift, tingling arrangements that dodge skillfully around rock's machismo and self-indulgence, even when Smith launches into the occasional gnarled little solo. --Douglas Wolk
Customer review - 2004-06-06
- What future legends are made of..
OK, so technically this isn't The Cure's first album. Well, it is, and it isn't. It culls the best tracks from their actual debut album, "Three Imaginary Boys", removing some of the filler ("Meathook", "It's Not You"), and replacing it with their early singles (most notably, "Killing an Arab" and the title track). Here's a rundown:

1. Boys Don't Cry (2:35)

Right from the opening chord sequence, you can tell this one is a winner. It's a perfect pop song - even though the lyrics are written from the point of view of a broken hearted man, the bouncy melody of the song overshadows them. You'll be too busy tapping your foot or bobbing your head to even notice Robert's sadness.

2. Plastic Passion (2:14)

This was originally a B-Side of the previous song. It may seem pretty flat the first time you hear it, but after a couple listens, the jerky bass lines it builds its foundation on will grow on you.

3. 10:15 Saturday Night (3:38)

An early masterpiece that seems to foreshadow where The Cure was headed musically. The lyrics paint a wonderful picture of sitting in isolation late at night, waiting for a phone call that you know won't come. The minimalistic musical backdrop further adds to the lonely and desolate feeling of the song. One of the best on the album.

4. Accuracy (2:16)

Another song that will most likely seem flat upon the first listen, but slowly seeps into your subconscious as you listen to it more. Lyrically, it seems to be about seduction of a lover.

5. So What (3:01)

This one is a little silly, but I still enjoy it for that reason alone. The lyrics seem to be taken from various advertisements ("Cake Icing and Decorating Set, Special Offer! Only 3.30!"), and are sung/shouted in a sarcastic manner. It's a little deeper than it may seem on the surface, actually.

6. Jumping Someone Else's Train (2:56)

A definite standout on the album. Musically, it's very new wave: energetic drum beat/bass lines and a jangly guitar riff. The lyrics are great too, relating to how people conform to society's trends, and losing their identity in the process.

7. Subway Song (1:59)

A very weird song, but cool. It's basically just a repeating bass line, with a haromica in the background, and spoken word lyrics from Robert. The harmonica gives it a blusey feel, but at the same time, it's sort of creepy. I always picture myself in a NYC city subway at 2 in the morning, surrounded by weirdos, when I listen to it. It ends with a deafening scream, that always scares me, no matter how many times I listen to it!

8. Killing An Arab (2:22)

Along with the title track, the most recognized song on the album. Due to the title, the song was controversial upon it's initial release. However, it's lyrical content is taken from "The Stranger" by Albert Camus. The harmonic minor melodies of the song give it a Middle Eastern feel amongst the punkish backdrop. A Cure classic.

9. Fire in Cairo (3:21)

The cartoonish representation of the album's cover sort of paints a picture of this song, which is an Egyptian fantasy of sorts. Musically, it kind of reminds me of Murmur-era R.E.M, which is a compliment. The chorus, in which Robert spells out the title in a melodic way, will be in your head for the rest of the day.

10. Another Day (3:43)

My favorite song on the album, and one of my favorite Cure songs altogether. Unlike most of the songs on this album, there's really no New Wave or Punk overtones to it. It's very moody and depressing with lyrics such as "I stare at the window waiting for the day to go..winter in water colours, shades of gray".

11. Grinding Halt (2:49)

This is probably the weakest song on the album. It's not bad by any means, but it sort of interrupts the flow between tracks 10 and 12. It should've been placed in the first half, which is a little more playful.

12. Three Imaginary Boys (3:14)

My second favorite on the album. Along with the aforementioned "Another Day", this one has a much darker feel to it (both lyrically and musically). Robert's closing words, "Can You Help Me?" leave the listener hanging in isolation, which sets the tone for their follow-up, 1980's masterpiece, "Seventeen Seconds".

And that pretty much sums it up. Most people consider this an anamoly in The Cure's catlogue, but I think it's absolutely essential. Songs like "Killing an Arab", "So What", "Accuracy", "Grinding Halt", and "Jumping Someone Else's Train" show off their punk/new wave beginnings, whereas "10:15..", "Another Day", "Subway Song", and "Three Imaginary Boys" show them experimenting with the dreamier (but gloomy) soundscapes that they'd become famous for.

Best Tracks: Another Day, Three Imaginary Boys, 10:15 Saturday Night, Killing an Arab.

Customer review - 1999-06-24
- A good solid debut from Britain's greatest import.
Back in 1979, three muscians who detested what was on the radio got together and formed a band that called themselves Easy Cure. Soon, the "Easy" was dropped and the rest is history. " Boys Don't Cry " was the first release from the legendary Cure. It's a good solid debut from Britain's greatest import. While I personally liked the three albums that followed better ( "17 Seconds" , " Faith ", and " Pornography ", respectively), this was a great album. Songwritting master- -mind Robert Smith cafted the beginning of a legacy with cuts like " Killing an Arab ", " 10:15 on a Saturday Night ", and " Jumping on Someone Else's Train " . The album has a dry, errie feeling on it rarely captured by a three piece band. Completlely disregarding all of the trends, Smith, Micheal Dempsey, and Lawerence " Lol " Tolhurst set the stage for gloom driven music to gain a degree of success. Smith sticks to simple, chorus laden rhythm guitar and tuneful basic leads, creating a melodic, and really original sound; and Dempsey has an inventive and busy bass groove going on underneath ( he was, however, replaced by the incomperable Simon Gallup an album later, and his style fits the Cure more comfortablely ). A masterstroke for sure, laying ground for even more compelling work in the years to follow.

-- James Kaenan-Barbour

Customer review - 2002-09-16
- Buy the tape if you can
My sister got this CD yesterday. I hadn't listened to this album in at least six or seven years and was very upset when I popped it in the player and noticed (as an earlier reviewer noted) that "Object" has been replaced by "So What" and "World War" is just absent. Why did they remove these two songs? It can't be for lack of space on the CD because it's only about 35 minutes long. And it can't be because they were offensive songs because "Killing an Arab," while NOT offensive is misinterpreted as such to an extent that a warning sticker was on the CD (shudder). I got this tape in 1985 a day after I heard "Boys Don't Cry" on the radio. I must have listened to it a thousand times. My two-star rating would be an admittedly biased five if the two songs weren't missing. Maybe this is the original album and the tape had bonus tracks, who knows. I suggest trying to find the album on tape, or buy Three Imaginary Boys but you still won't get "World War." WARNING: I stopped listening the the Cure after I bought Disintegration ... I am one of those old fogey Cure fans.
Customer review - 2003-06-04
- Starting out somewhere very different from where are now
Album number one (or at least the US edition of it) by The Cure is a far cry from all later albums, even their second, Seventeen Seconds, let alone something like Disintegration. However, its important to remember that Robert Smith is the only member of this original trio that has survived the distance to where they are now. However, although Boys Don't Cry is far from the Cure's best as some would tell you - Robert Smith's songwriting is still in its infancy and the production is weedy - it is nevertheless an essential component in the fascinating metamorphosising collective that is The Cure.

The obvious highlights are the better known singles - the vicious, punky 'Killing An Arab' which mixes flat punk nihilism with a Middle-Eastern guitar motif, the more dense and warm 'Fire In Cairo' and the poppier classic title track. Throughout the album, there is a punky influence, occasionally, as on 'So What' (not on the original LP, but on the original UK version 3 Imaginary Boys) it is actually the singular and abiding genre. However guitars are not usually of constant prescence, the album often being driven only by bass and drums with guitars as very much a lead instrument which interplays with vocals and drops in and out. There's none of the dense layers of sounds that trademark their later albums - its always the basic rock instruments and often the sound is basic or even slightly empty sounding.

However, this suits the tone of the songs, which occasionally becomes a 'dont-[care]' attitude, a strange idea to think of with Smith who wrote such emotionally revealing songs later in his career (largely absent here, though closer '3 Imaginary Boys' is a hint at a more personal, emotional direction). He also sometimes adopts a faux-Cockney 'punk' accent, which is of slight amusement, on tracks like the aforementioned 'So What' and 'Jumping Someone Else's Train', but the voice is nevertheless unmistakably his, with that timbre that unites all Cure recordings when there is little else to tie them together.

In summary, this is a very good album, if not their best as some would tell you. If you want to own a good range of 3 or 4 Cure albums that show off their different sides, this might be one to own, though its not the one to start with unless short, melodic poppy/punky songs are much more your thing than more complex tracks.

Customer review - 2005-08-15
- THIS IS ACTUALLY 1000 STARS!
THE GUY WHO WROTE THE REVIEW ENTITLED "WHAT FUTURE LEGENDS ARE MADE OF..." IS SO RIGHT! THE CURE HAS RELEASED LIKE 13 ALBUMS BUT, BELIEVE ME, THIS IS THEIR BEST ONE! THE MUSIC IS QUITE PLAYFUL AND THEN IT COMES TO MORE SERIOUS MUSIC ("ANOTHER DAY," "THREE IMAGINERY BOYS") BUT I THINK THE PLAYFUL MUSIC IS THE BEST. I LOVE "FIRE IN CAIRO," "BOYS DON'T CRY," AND "SUBWAY SONG" (THAT ONE IS REALLY FUN IS A HALLOWEEN SORTA WAY), ALTHOUGH I WISH THAT THEY KEPT SELLING THE COPY WITH "WORLD WAR" ON IT. "WORLD WAR" IS EXCELLENT (I HEARD IT ON "THREE IMAGINERY BOYS (DELUXE EDITION).") THIS IS NOT ACTUALLY THEIR DEBUT, IT ACTUALLY COLLECTS THE LAST THREE SINGLES THAT THEY DID THAT WEREN'T INCLUDED ON 1979'S "THREE IMAGINERY BOYS," WHICH WERE "BOYS DON'T CRY," "JUMPING SOMEONE ELSE'S TRAIN," AND THE EXCELLENT SONG WITH AN UNPLEASANT TITLE BUT ITS ACTUALLY BASED ON THE NOVEL "THE STRANGER," "KILLING AN ARAB." THERE IS ALSO THE BEST SONGS FROM "THREE IMAGINERY BOYS," PLUS A REALLY COOL B-SIDE CALLED "PLASTIC PASSION" FROM THE "BOYS DON'T CRY" SINGLE. GET THIS NOW IF YOU'RE A FAN!!! I AM A 12-YEAR-OLD AND HAVE BEEN A FAN SINCE SEEING THEIR "END OF THE WORLD" MUSIC VIDEO. ANYWAYS, ENJOY THIS ALBUM.
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