Thursday, 5 January 2017

Study Task 3 -Wish

The Cure- Wish


surge of happiness

One of the most commercially successful Cure records

present a vision of the day breaking after the gloomy depths of midnight have passed.

colors on the cover present a happier Cure, with optimistic blue skies and white fluffy clouds surrounded by bright reds and oranges.

iconic artwork by Parched Art draws us into an exploration of the meaning and imagery of the album cover and promises an optimistic view of love and life.

the cover of Wish seems to have inspired more Cure tattoos than any other album artwork.


Label:
Fiction Records ‎– fixcd 20, Fiction Records ‎– 513 261-2
Format:
CD, Album
Country:
Released:
Genre:
Style:

Made in Germany

Recorded at The Manor (Oxfordshire, UK). Mixed at Olympic (London, UK).
℗ © 1992 Fiction Records Limited

Red & blue picture cd, black print.
Released in jewel case with 12 page booklet and back tray.
/notes

Artwork by Parched Art (Porl Thompson & Andy Vella)


burst out laughing because we realized that we didn't have a band anymore.

after the Wish tour the band would fall apart.

During the three years since Disintegration's release, "alternative" music had become mainstream, and the Cure returned to an ever-expanding new audience.


The band remains one of the most influential and successful to arise from the post-punk movement of the late ’70s

decadent sound to the sometimes-sterile ’80s, morphing from morbid goth to quirky pop to epic psychedelia.

he group spent many years struggling to find its sound.

Late bloomer- superstardom that came with Disintegration and Wish


Wish" was also the band's overall highest charting album, and most commercially successful in the band's career, given its debut at number one in the UK and number two in the United States, where it sold more than 1.2 million copies. "Wish" was also nominated for the Grammy Award for best Alternative Music Album in 1993.


however they are without the surrounding heart full of clouds. Many people consider Wish to be one of the Cure's most immediately accessible albums, and the preponderance of tattoos from this album artwork may bear that theory out.

Another factor likely contributing to the high incidence of Wish-era symbolism in tattoos is the high availability of recognizable iconography from that album. Some album artwork is more difficult to distill into tattoo form, most notably, the photo of the smeared lips from front cover of Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me - however some fans use the font style from that cover to embellish their bodies with words, instead of trying to reproduce the picture. Other album covers which are relatively rare in tattoo form include the soft, out of focus photographs from the covers of Faith and Seventeen Seconds (although there are tattoos inspired by both of these albums).






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