Labour of Lust | |
Type: | Studio album |
Artist: | Nick Lowe |
Cover: | labouroflust.jpg |
Border: | yes |
Released: | [1] |
Recorded: | 1978–1979 |
Studio: | Eden, London; Love, Helsinki, Finland (except: "American Squirm": 1978) |
Genre: | Power pop[2] |
Length: | 32:40 |
Label: | Radar (UK), Columbia (US) |
Producer: | Nick Lowe |
Prev Title: | Jesus of Cool |
Prev Year: | 1978 |
Next Title: | Nick the Knife |
Next Year: | 1982 |
Labour of Lust is an album by British singer-songwriter Nick Lowe. Produced by Lowe, it was released in 1979 by Radar Records in the UK and Columbia Records in the US. It was recorded and released at the same time as Dave Edmunds' Repeat When Necessary and features the same Rockpile personnel. It led off with "Cruel to Be Kind," Lowe's only major US hit.
The American version of this record had a slightly different track listing, with "Endless Grey Ribbon" being deleted and replaced with the UK single A-side, "American Squirm." The latter song includes members of Elvis Costello & The Attractions, namely Elvis Costello on backing vocals, Bruce Thomas on bass and Pete Thomas on drums. Credited to "Nick Lowe and His Sound," the B-side of this single was Elvis & The Attractions' version of the Lowe-penned "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love & Understanding?" "Endless Grey Ribbon" was later issued in America as the B-side of the "Cruel to Be Kind" single.
Labour of Lust was released on CD in 1990 by Demon/Fiend in Europe and Columbia in North America, but quickly fell out of print. Yep Roc Records reissued the album on CD on 15 March 2011, containing all tracks from the US and UK versions, as well as "Basing Street," the B-side of both the UK single "Cracking Up" and the North American single "Switchboard Susan."
The album cover and corresponding ad campaign were designed by Barney Bubbles, who designed the artwork for virtually all of the early albums and 45's by Lowe, Elvis Costello, Ian Dury, the Damned, and many other Stiff Records and Radar Records artists. It featured a distinctive "Hamer & sickle" logo, fashioning the body and snapped neck of Lowe's Hamer bass guitar into a pop-art Hammer and sickle, the symbol of proletarian solidarity from the Russian Revolution. This logo was also used on the sleeve of the 45 release of "Cracking Up." Bubbles's original mockup of the logo, which recently sold at auction,[3] is featured in the gatefold sleeve of the 2011 Yep Roc reissue of the album.
The Globe and Mail wrote that "Lowe's ear for background is, in its own contemporary way, as inventive and dramatic as Phil Spector's was 15 years ago."[4] The New York Times deemed Labour of Lust one of 1979's "most exuberant and finely crafted rock-and-roll albums."[5]
All songs written by Nick Lowe except where noted.