Changing Faces (Bros album) explained

Changing Faces
Type:studio
Artist:Bros
Cover:Changing Faces (Bros album) cover.jpeg
Genre:Pop, dance-pop
Length:43:45
Label:CBS
Producer:Gary Stevenson
Prev Title:The Time
Prev Year:1989
Next Title:The Best Remixes
Next Year:1991

Changing Faces is the third and final studio album by British pop band Bros. It was released on 30 September 1991 and was the first album on which Matt Goss and Luke Goss co-wrote all the songs. It was also the first time that Nicky Graham was not involved in either writing or production duties. The album reached number 18 on the UK Albums Chart and spawned two singles, both of which made the top 40 on the UK Singles Chart.

Critical reception

Reviews of the album were largely negative. Jimmy Nichol of Q said that the album tried hard to copy the style of George Michael in an attempt to find success, although "there are some nice ballads". He concluded, however, that Changing Faces "suffers partly from Matt's incessantly misogynistic lyrics ... but mostly from Bros' inability to produce genuinely original material of their own".[1] In Melody Maker the Stud Brothers stated that "Bros have given up their arrogance and thus nothing of what made them a (marginally) diverting phenomenon remains". They said that the album's combination of "fake funk and heinously over-sentimental ballads is so grotesquely lush and sickeningly opulent – swooning saccharin orchestras and chunky session guitar – you wonder at whom it could possibly be aimed".[2]

Track listing

All songs written by Matt and Luke Goss unless indicated.

  1. "Try" – 4:20
  2. "Never Love Again" – 4:39
  3. "Just Another Tear" – 3:57
  4. "Leave Me Alone" (M. Goss, L. Goss, I. Green) – 3:33
  5. "Are You Mine?" (M. Goss, L. Goss, P. Powell) – 5:36
  6. "Changing Faces" – 3:59
  7. "You're My Life" (M. Goss, L. Goss, G. Cole) – 4:13
  8. "Don't Go Loving Me Now" – 3:44
  9. "Shot in the Back" – 4:16
  10. "Break My Silence" – 4:55

Charts

scope=col Chart (1991)scope=col Peak
position
scope=row Australian Albums (ARIA)[3] 176
scope=row European Albums[4] 85
scope=row Japanese Albums (Oricon)[5] 78

Notes and References

  1. Nichol . Jimmy . Bros – Changing Faces . . 60 . 78 . September 1991.
  2. The Stud Brothers . Bros – Changing Faces . . 34 . 12 October 1991.
  3. Web site: Bubbling Down Under Week Commencing 21 October 1991. Bubbling Down Under. 24 October 2022.
  4. Web site: European Top 100 Albums . . 32 . 26 October 1991 . World Radio History.
  5. Web site: Brosのアルバム売上ランキング.