Break of Hearts | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Katrina and the Waves |
Cover: | Break of Hearts.jpg |
Released: | July 26, 1989 |
Recorded: | 1988–89 |
Studio: | Utopia Studios, London The Lodge, Clare, Suffolk Brook House, Suffolk |
Length: | 40:22 |
Label: | SBK Attic (Canada) |
Prev Title: | Waves |
Prev Year: | 1986 |
Next Title: | Pet the Tiger |
Next Year: | 1991 |
Break of Hearts is the fifth studio album by rock band Katrina and the Waves, released in 1989 (see 1989 in music). It is their last album to reach the Billboard 200, reaching No. 122, and contains their last top 40 hit in the United States, "That's the Way", which reached No. 16. It was their last studio album released in the United States and the first and only release for the SBK label (the band would briefly move to Virgin Records just before it was sold to Capitol's then-owner EMI).[1]
After being dropped by Capitol Records following 1986's Waves album, Katrina and the Waves secured a new deal with SBK Records, which released the more rock-oriented Break of Hearts. Despite a US Top 20 hit with "That's the Way", it was their only album for the label. Singer Katrina Leskanich said on the band's website, "SBK told us that they could see us as a stadium band, Bryan Adams style, and [guitarist [[Kimberley Rew]]] was coming up with this stuff that was perfect for rock radio."[1] Retrospective reviews were less than positive. Trouser Press described the album as a "horrendously wrongheaded comeback bid that shows the Waves to be utterly oblivious to their own strengths," calling it "bland, overprocessed commercial slop."[2] The Rolling Stone Album Guide felt that the writing was "empty and mannered." Rew was quoted on the website saying, "We've never been successful enough to be immune from the influences of producers and marketing men ... the more we fell for those 80s trademarks, the more we diluted the band."[1]
Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | "That's the Way" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 16 |
1989 | "That's the Way" | UK Singles Chart | 84 |
1989 | "Rock n' Roll Girl" | UK Singles Chart | 93 |