Pop Life (Bananarama album)
Pop Life | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 13 May 1991 | |||
Recorded | July 1989 - May 1990 | |||
Genre | Hi-NRG[1] | |||
Label | London | |||
Producer | Youth Stock Aitken Waterman Shep Pettibone Steve Jolley | |||
Bananarama chronology | ||||
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Singles from Pop Life | ||||
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Pop Life is the fifth studio album by British girl group Bananarama, released in 1991. It is the only album released which features Jacquie O'Sullivan, who replaced Siobhan Fahey in Bananarama upon her departure in 1988. This album marks the end of the group's association with the Stock Aitken Waterman production team (they produced only two songs) as most of Pop Life was produced by Youth (real name Martin Glover). UK singer Zoë provided backing vocals on "Long Train Running". This would be the last album by Bananarama as a trio.
After the group's first world tour in 1989, they started recording their fifth album with producers Stock, Aitken and Waterman, but they were dissatisfied with the results of those sessions, thinking the majority of those songs of sub-par quality, although "Ain't No Cure" and "Heartless" were eventually released on the album[citation needed]. They started looking for other producers, first working with David Z with whom they recorded "Some Boys", but they felt it was not the direction they wanted to follow and the song remained unreleased until 2013. They then worked with Steve Jolley who, along with Tony Swain, had produced the group's first three records. A song co-written by him, "Is Your Love Strong Enough" ended up on the album, while another remains unreleased. The group settled with Youth, who had been Sara Dallin's boyfriend years before and whom the group knew well, to produce the majority of the album.
Upon its release Pop Life earned positive reviews from critics but was a commercial failure, peaking at number 42 in the UK,[2] number 37 in Sweden,[3] and number 146 in Australia.[4] Four mid-charting singles were issued from the album, and following the release of "Tripping on Your Love", O'Sullivan left the group, leaving members Sara Dallin and Keren Woodward to continue as a duo.
The album was a departure from their previous albums as it incorporates a much more diverse range of musical genres, including flamenco guitar (a cover of the Doobie Brothers song "Long Train Running" featuring Alma de Noche, a pseudonym for the Gipsy Kings), retro-rock ("Only Your Love", "Outta Sight"), acid house ("Tripping on Your Love"), reggae ("What Colour R the Skies Where U Live?"), experimental club ("Megalomaniac"), and their hallmark Euro disco sound ("Preacher Man", "Ain't No Cure").
The track "Ain't No Cure" was covered by Stock Aitken Waterman produced girl group Delage in 1991, although it was not released until 1997.[5]
Legacy
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Track listing
CD version
- "Preacher Man" – 3:15 (S. Dallin, Youth, A. Caine)
- "Long Train Running" – 3:31 (Tom Johnston)
- "Only Your Love" – 3:58 (S. Dallin, Youth, A. Caine)
- "What Colour R the Skies Where U Live?" – 4:27 (S. Dallin, Youth, A. Caine, K.Woodward)
- "Is Your Love Strong Enough" – 5:07 (S. Dallin, S. Jolley)
- "Tripping on Your Love" – 3:20 (S. Dallin, Youth, A. Caine, D. Schogger)
- "Ain't No Cure" – 3:27 (M. Stock, M. Aitken, P. Waterman, S. Dallin)
- "Outta Sight" – 4:31 (S. Dallin, Youth, A. Caine)
- "Megalomaniac" – 6:16 (S. Dallin, B. Walker, Youth, A. Caine)
- "I Can't Let You Go" – 6:10 (S. Dallin, Youth, A. Caine)
- "Heartless" – 3:22 (M. Stock, M. Aitken, P. Waterman, S. Dallin, K.Woodward)
- "Preacher Man" (Ramabanana Alternative Mix) – 7:31 (S. Dallin, Youth, A. Caine)
Cassette version
- "Preacher Man" – 3:15
- "Long Train Running" – 3:31
- "Only Your Love" – 3:58
- "What Colour R the Skies Where U Live?" – 4:27
- "Is Your Love Strong Enough" – 5:07
- "Tripping on Your Love" – 3:20
- "Ain't No Cure" – 3:27
- "Outta Sight" – 4:31
- "Megalomaniac" – 6:16
- "I Can't Let You Go" – 6:10
2007 CD re-issue plus bonus tracks
- "Preacher Man" – 3:15
- "Long Train Running" – 3:31
- "Only Your Love" – 3:58
- "What Colour R the Skies Where U Live?" – 4:27
- "Is Your Love Strong Enough" – 5:07
- "Tripping on Your Love" – 3:20
- "Ain't No Cure" – 3:27
- "Outta Sight" – 4:31
- "Megalomaniac" – 6:16
- "I Can't Let You Go" – 6:10
- "Heartless" – 3:22
- "Only Your Love" (7-inch mix) - 4:02
- "Preacher Man" (alternative 7-inch mix) - 3:39
- "Megalomaniac" (edit) - 4:35
- "Tripping on Your Love" (single mix) - 3:15
- "What Colour R the Skies Where U Live?" (J-Jagged Mix) - 6:24
- "Ain't No Cure" (alternative version) - 4:03
2013 Deluxe Edition 2CD/DVD re-issue
Disc 1
- "Preacher Man" - 3.14
- "Long Train Running" - 3.30
- "Only Your Love" - 3.58
- "What Colour R The Skies Where U Live?" - 4.27
- "Is Your Love Strong Enough?" - 5.06
- "Tripping on Your Love" - 3.19
- "Ain't No Cure" - 3.27
- "Outta Sight" - 4.32
- "Megalomaniac" - 6.22
- "I Can't Let You Go" - 6.07
- "Heartless" - 3.20
- "I Don't Care" - 6.16
- "Some Boys" - 5.33
- "Only Your Love" [Milky Bar Mix] - 8.11
- "Tripping on Your Love" [Dance Floor Justice Mix] - 6.10
- "Preacher Man" [Original 12" Mix] - 6.08
Disc 2
- "Only Your Love" [Monkey Drum Mooch] - 7.33
- "Preacher Man" [Ramabanana Alternative Mix] - 7.31
- "Long Train Running" [Alma De Noche Version] - 6.39
- "Tripping on Your Love"[Euro Trance Mix] - 7.20
- "Ain't No Cure" [Alternative Version] - 4.06
- "What Colour R The Skies Where U Live?" [Paco's Revenge Mix] - 6.55
- "Tripping on Your Love" [Smoove Mix] - 7.07
- "I Don't Care" [Tony King Remix] - 6.10
- "Ain't No Cure" [Original 12" Mix] - 7.02
- "Tripping on Your Love" [Silky 70s Mix] - 6.26
- "Long Train Running" [Sparky’s Magic Button Mix] - 4.34
- "Tripping on Your Love" [Sweet Exorcist Remix] - 8.12
DVD
- "Only Your Love"
- "Preacher Man"
- "Long Train Running"
- "Tripping on Your Love"
- "Only Your Love" [On Wogan]
- "Preacher Man" [On Top of the Pops]
Unreleased songs and demos[citation needed]
- "Nothing Lasts Forever"
- "Don't Throw It All Away"
- "One in a Million"
- "Love Generation"
- "Wake Up and Love Me"
- "Got to Be Good"
- "Sweet Destiny"
- "You Give Love a Bad Name"
Charts
Chart (1991) | Peak position |
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Australian Albums (ARIA)[4] | 146 |
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[6] | 8 |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[7] | 53 |
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[3] | 37 |
UK Albums (OCC)[2] | 42 |
Personnel
Bananarama
- Sara Dallin – Vocals and bass
- Jacquie O'Sullivan – Vocals and bass
- Keren Woodward – Vocals and bass
Musicians
- Gipsy Kings – Flamenco guitar on "Long Train Running"
- Zoë – Backing vocals on "Long Train Running"
- Carol Kenyon – Backing vocals on "Long Train Running"
- Shep Pettibone – Additional production and remix on "Preacher Man"
Additional Personnel
- Hillary Shaw – Manager
- Ellen Von Unwerth – Photography
References
- ^ Mason, Stewart. "Bananarama – Pop Life". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
- ^ a b "Official Charts > Bananarama". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
- ^ a b "swedishcharts.com > Bananarama - Pop Life (album)". Hung Medien. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
- ^ a b "Response from ARIA re: chart inquiry, received 15 July 2015". Imgur. Archived from the original on 16 July 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
- ^ "Delage – Ain't No Cure – PWL Overdose Mix – Mixed By DJ JAY | Video Youtube – NMETV Latest Music Videos and Clips". Nme.Com. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
- ^ Pennanen, Timo (2006). Sisältää hitin - levyt ja esittäjät Suomen musiikkilistoilla vuodesta 1972 (in Finnish) (1st ed.). Helsinki: Kustannusosakeyhtiö Otava. p. 263. ISBN 978-951-1-21053-5.
- ^ Oricon Album Chart Book: Complete Edition 1970-2005. Roppongi, Tokyo: Oricon Entertainment. 2006. ISBN 4-87131-077-9.