Massive Luxury Overdose | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Army of Lovers |
Cover: | AOLMLO.jpg |
Released: | August 26, 1991 March 13, 1992 |
Label: | Ton Son Ton Stockholm Records (1992) |
Producer: | Alexander Bard, Anders Wollbeck, Per Adebratt, Emil Hellman, Ola Håkansson (also exec.), Anders Hansson, Tim Norell |
Prev Title: | Disco Extravaganza |
Prev Year: | 1990 |
Next Title: | The Gods of Earth and Heaven |
Next Year: | 1993 |
Massive Luxury Overdose is the second studio album by the Swedish pop group Army of Lovers. The album was released in 1991, and a reissue of the album (called U.S. Edition) was released in 1992. The album contains the band's biggest hits, including "Obsession", and "Crucified", which was a #1 hit in 29 countries.[1] The original version of this album also includes three songs from their first album Disco Extravaganza (1990), which aren't included in the U.S. edition.
When La Camilla left the band in 1991, she was replaced by Michaela Dornonville de la Cour. For the second release in 1992, the band recorded four new songs and reissued the album with a new cover, introducing Michaela.
Army of Lovers made their first tour in March 1992 and at that time the album had already sold over 500,000 copies. The tour began in Sweden, at High Chaparral in Kulltorp, and after several Swedish cities the tour continued throughout Europe.[2]
AllMusic editor Neil Raggett wrote, "Some album titles do nail it, and this is one of the prime candidates." "Crucified" was named the "most memorable number", "a totally over-the-top disco anthem on all fronts". He also mentioned the "half-twinky, half-ominous" "Candyman Messiah" and "Say Goodbye to Babylon", which are "taking religious imagery and tweaking it for all it's worth". David A. Keeps from Austin American Statesman felt the album is "audacious in its appropriations". He added; "We Stand United" is "a rote re-creation of Chic's classic disco", "Say Goodbye to Babylon" "blends Theme from Midnight Express into massive hallelujah choruses suitable for Andrew Lloyd Webber", "I Cross the Rubicon" has "a piano bass line [that] thunders beneath cymbals, horn crescendos, whispered male vocals and soul diva whoops", "Walking With a Zombie" "fuses boulevardier accordion with an insistent Latin beat", and "Crucified" is "steeped in romantic and biblical imagery that suggests, in a typically broad camp stroke, that obsessive love is the most religious experience of all."[3]
American magazine Billboard constated that the "campy Swedish trio continues to reverently pilfer through '70s-era disco and '80s-style hi-NRG on this glittery sophomore outing." They highlighted the "bombastic" "Dynasty of Planet Chromada" and the "swin-vibed" "Say Goodbye to Babylon", and concluded, "Melodramatic dance/pop that should make acts like Pet Shop Boys green with envy."[4] NME said, "A great record, proper disco style dance music and packed full of cultural surprises." Joe Brown from The Washington Post wrote that here, "the Army presents its unapologetic, exuberant Eurodisco as if house never happened." He felt that on tracks like "Crucified" and "Dynasty of Planet Chromada", "the Army reveals a lyrical obsession with a millenarian-apocalyptic- sacrilege thang, and La Camilla's kitschy cooing includes imitations of Grace Jones and Debbie Harry."[5]
In Sweden, Massive Luxury Overdose sold about 70,000 copies, and worldwide the album sold at least 2 million copies.[6]
Peak position | |
Australian Albums (ARIA)[7] | 126 |
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Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[8] | 28 |