Behind Closed Doors | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Secret Affair |
Cover: | File:Secret Affair Behind Closed Doors.jpg |
Released: | 12 September 1980[1] |
Recorded: | 1980 |
Genre: | Mod revival |
Length: | 37:31 |
Label: | I-Spy |
Producer: | |
Prev Title: | Glory Boys |
Prev Year: | 1979 |
Next Title: | Business as Usual |
Next Year: | 1982 |
Behind Closed Doors is the second album by mod revival band Secret Affair, released in September 1980 by their label I-Spy. The album peaked at number 48 on the UK Albums Chart.[2]
The album saw a change in direction by the band, with Page saying "the first priority was to make it different from the first, to show the wide range of styles and influences there are within the band".[3]
Apart from two songs, the songs on this album were written by either Ian Page or David Cairns, unlike their previous album, Glory Boys. Cairns admitted that this was because "Ian was in the States remixing the first album for the American market and I was over here. We were told out of the blue that we had to get a second album together right now as owing to touring commitments we wouldn’t have any other time. So in the end we worked independently; he presented his songs and I came up with mine."
The first single released from the album was "My World". It became the band's second highest charting single, peaking at number 16 on the UK Singles Chart. The second single, "Sound of Confusion" was released a month before the album was released, and only peaked at number 45 on the chart.
The album was released on CD in 2001 by Captain Mod Records, which included the two B-sides to the singles as bonus tracks. In December 2020, for the 40th anniversary of the album, Behind Closed Doors was reissued on vinyl as a limited 300 copies.[4]
Reviewing for Record Mirror, Simon Ludgate gave the album five out of five, writing "Page and Cairns have opted for more mature arrangements than before, adopting a touch of the Bruce Springsteen in the emotional overkill department. But at least dis got soul, man." "Secret Affair have stopped worrying about getting stains on their tonics and applied themselves successfully to producing some first rate music."
However, reviewing for NME, Chris Bohn wrote that "unlike Glory Boys, Behind Closed Doors lacks any real focus or overall coherence. It's a collection of patchy movie scenarios composed, mostly separately, by Page and Cairns. But the bittiness of the more sophisticated sound makes it apparent that the two need each other. Page's melodies aren't really strong enough to support the expansive widescreen arrangements he attempts, while Cairns' dogged lyrical pursuit of a youth movement no longer there could do with an injection of the singer's pragmatism."[5]
Jim Green for Trouser Press wrote "Dave Cairns's guitar is muted by keyboards and even sweetened by strings; Page avoids outright soppiness, but the raw edge that might have made this an exciting LP has been compromised, presumably in the name of self-expression and individuality. (There! I didn't say commercialism!) The bottom line, however, is the material. There are no dire tracks, and most are at least pleasant. 'Live for Today', which deserves far more urgent music, points out that some bland, pretty-ish tunes aren't suited to the lyrics. When it all comes together, as on the ambitious 'When the Show Is Over' or the straightforward 'I'm a Bullet', the results are impressive."[6]
Secret Affair
Technical