Songs From The Big Chair (Deluxe Version) Tears For Fears

Album info

Album-Release:
1985

HRA-Release:
25.02.2022

Label: Universal/ Mercury

Genre: Pop

Subgenre: Pop Rock

Artist: Tears For Fears

Composer: Roland Orzabal, Curt Smith

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Shout06:33
  • 2The Working Hour06:32
  • 3Everybody Wants To Rule The World04:11
  • 4Mothers Talk05:07
  • 5I Believe04:56
  • 6Broken02:39
  • 7Head Over Heels / Broken05:01
  • 8Listen06:55
  • 9Shout (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)06:35
  • 10The Working Hour (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)06:34
  • 11Everybody Wants To Rule The World (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)04:13
  • 12Mothers Talk (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)05:08
  • 13I Believe (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)04:55
  • 14Broken (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)02:38
  • 15Head Over Heels (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)04:55
  • 16Listen (2014 Steven Wilson Mix)06:57
  • Total Runtime01:23:49

Info for Songs From The Big Chair (Deluxe Version)

Tears for Fears' biggest-selling album, Songs from the Big Chair is now available in HighResAudio. This HighRes-edition of the album includes newly remastered versions of classics songs like 'Everybody Wants To Rule the World,' 'Mother's Talk,' 'Shout' and 'Head over Heels,' plus much more. Tears for Fears' phenomenal 10-million-selling second album marked a transition in the band's sound and catapulted them into international prominence and this set is a must for fans of the band and music in general.

„Songs From the Big Chair“ showed uncanny progress. The hits, 'Shout' and 'Everybody Wants to Rule the World', were intriguingly textured and memorable. The playing, especially by guest saxophonist Mel Collins, was at times spine-tingling - and the boys' self-pity had expanded to include the larger, outraged hurt of 'The Working Hour'. (Rolling Stone)

Their best album is a good mix of synthesizers and traditional instruments. It includes the hits 'Shout', 'Head over Heels' and 'Everybody Wants to Rule the World'. (AllMusicGuide)

Roland Orzabal, guitar, keyboards, vocals, piano bass synth, LinnDrum
Curt Smith, bass, vocals (lead vocals on tracks 3, 8)
Ian Stanley, keyboards, synths, LinnDrum
Manny Elias, drums
Additional musicians:
Jerry Marotta, percussion
Will Gregory, saxophone solos
Mel Collins, saxophone
Will Gregory, saxophone (on 'I Believe“)
Andy Davis, grand piano
Neil Taylor, guitar solo (on 'Broken“)
Sandy McLelland, backing vocals (on 'Shout“, 'Head over Heels')
Stevie Lange, backing vocals (on 'Mothers Talk“)
Annie McCaig, backing vocals (on 'Head over Heels')
Marilyn Davis, backing vocals (on 'Head over Heels')
Marilyn Davis, operatic vocal (on 'Listen“)

Recorded in 1984 at Wool Hall Studios, Beckington, Somerset, UK
Engineered by Dave Bascombe
Produced by Chris Hughes

Digitally remastered


Tears for Fears
were always more ambitious than the average synth pop group. From the beginning, the duo of Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith were tackling big subjects — their very name derived from Arthur Janov's primal scream therapy, and his theories were evident throughout their debut, The Hurting. Driven by catchy, infectious synth pop, The Hurting became a big hit in their native England, setting the stage for international stardom with their second album, 1985's Songs from the Big Chair. On the strength of the singles "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" and "Shout," the record became a major hit, establishing the duo as one of the leading acts of the second generation of MTV stars. Instead of quickly recording a follow-up, Tears for Fears labored over their third album, the psychedelic and jazz-rock-tinged The Seeds of Love. While the album was a big hit, it was the end of an era instead of a new beginning. Smith left the group early in the '90s, and Orzabal continued with Tears for Fears, pursuing more sophisticated and pretentious directions to a smaller audience.

Orzabal and Smith met as children in Bath, England. Both boys came from broken homes, and Smith was leaning toward juvenile delinquency. Orzabal, however, turned toward books, eventually discovering Arthur Janov's primal scream therapy, a way of confronting childhood fears that John Lennon embraced after the Beatles disbanded. Orzabal turned Smith on to Janov, but before the duo explored this theory further, they formed the ska revival band Graduate in the late '70s. After releasing a handful of singles, including "Elvis Should Play Ska," Graduate dissolved in the early '80s, and the duo went on to form Tears for Fears, a synth pop outfit directly inspired by Janov's writings.

Riding in on the tail end of new wave and new romantic, Tears for Fears — which featured musical contributions from former Graduate keyboardist Ian Stanley on early albums — landed a record contract with Polygram in 1982. The following year, the band released its debut, The Hurting, which became a major hit in Britain, generating no less than three Top Five hit singles. Two years later, the group released Songs from the Big Chair, which demonstrated a more streamlined and soul-influenced sound. Songs from the Big Chair became a huge hit in America, rocketing to the top of the charts on the strength of the singles "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" and "Shout," which both hit number one, and the number three "Head Over Heels," which were all supported by clever, stylish videos that received heavy MTV airplay.

Instead of quickly following Songs from the Big Chair with a new record, Tears for Fears labored over their new record, eventually delivering the layered, Beatlesque The Seeds of Love in 1989. Featuring soulful vocals from Oleta Adams, who dominated the hit "Woman in Chains," the album became a hit, reaching number eight, while the single "Sowing the Seeds of Love" reached number two in the U.S. Again, Tears for Fears spent several years working on the follow-up to Seeds of Love, during which time they released the collection Tears Roll Down: Greatest Hits 82-92. Smith and Orzabal began to quarrel heavily, and Smith left the group in 1992, making Tears for Fears' 1993 comeback Elemental essentially a solo record from Orzabal. On the strength of the adult contemporary hit "Break It Down Again," Elemental became a modest hit, reaching gold status in the U.S., yet was hardly up to the group's previous levels. Smith, meanwhile, released a solo album in 1993, Soul on Board, which went ignored. Orzabal returned with another Tears for Fears album, Raoul and the Kings of Spain, in 1995, which failed to make much of an impact. In late 1996, the group released a rarities collection. In 2004, Orzabal reunited with Smith for the colorful and Beatlesque Everybody Loves a Happy Ending, their first collaboration in over a decade.

This album contains no booklet.

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