Love Is the Law (Suburbs album) explained

Love Is The Law (Suburbs album)
Type:studio
Artist:The Suburbs
Cover:Suburbsloveisthelaw.jpg
Released:March 1984
Recorded:June – July 1983
Genre:New wave
Length:39:29
Label:PolyGram
Producer:Steven Greenberg, Paul Stark
Prev Title:Dream Hog EP
Prev Year:1982
Next Title:Suburbs
Next Year:1986

Love Is the Law is an album by the American New wave band The Suburbs, released in 1984.

Reception

Writing for Allmusic, music critic Vince Ripol wrote that the album "concentrates [the Suburbs'] alternative dance-rock into a single-length showcase of their strengths... In general, Love Is the Law is harder and tighter than previous releases, and even the most intense tracks produce lingering melodies in the wake of relentless rock & roll. The Suburbs may not have equaled the success or longevity of other Minneapolis musicians from the 1980s, but Love Is the Law holds its own against the more celebrated albums of its time."

The album cover includes a reproduction of Édouard Manet's "The Dead Toreador", which the band had seen on display at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. In an interview with Cashbox magazine, Chan Poling said that the band liked the ironic juxtaposition of the album's themes of warmth and love with the coldness of an image of a man lying dead.[1]

Track listing

All songs composed by The Suburbs.

  1. "Love Is the Law" – 4:44
  2. "Monster Man" – 3:18
  3. "Rattle My Bones" – 3:28
  4. "Skin" – 4:24
  5. "Accept Me Baby" – 3:47
  6. "Hell A" – 4:32
  7. "Perfect Communist" – 5:07
  8. "Rainy Day" – 5:02
  9. "Crazy Job" – 5:07

Personnel

Production notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. . New Faces To Watch: The Suburbs. Cashbox. 1983-11-26. 2022-12-29.