The Cure “Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me”

The Cure “Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me” 1987. Fiction Records. Today, April 21st, is Robert Smith’s birthday (b. 1959) so I’m taking The Cure’s 7th studio LP out for a spin. This copy is a relatively new reissue (remastered by Robert Smith); I got my original copy of Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me on cd, one of the first cd’s I ever bought actually, back in ‘87. It went to #35 in the US (their highest chart position to that point) and to #6 in the UK. There’s a lot of great tracks on it, but I think they veered too far into pop for a chunk of it and it is one of my least-played Cure albums in my collection – though in ‘87 I was moving toward harder punk so that probably has a lot to do with it. I like the gothy, swirly, psychedelically exotic tracks the best, like “The Kiss,” “Torture,” “If Only Tonight We Could Sleep,” the epic “Snakepit” and “All I Want,” that are reminiscent of their earlier material. But with Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me, The Cure broke through to the American mainstream with highly pop-orientated and somewhat jazzy singles like “Why Can’t I Be You?” (#54 US, #21 UK), “Just Like Heaven” (#40 US, #29 UK) and “Hot! Hot! Hot!” (#68 US, #45 UK) which are tracks that I’m not that crazy about (in reference to other Cure songs: compared to a lot of other stuff they’re pretty great). The single “Catch” (#27 UK) was not released in the US and listening to, it’s pretty obvious why – it’s not very pop at all: super-emo with an alt-violin up front and center (that same violin pops up again in “How Beautiful You Are…”).