Paris (The Cure album) explained

Paris
Type:live
Artist:The Cure
Cover:Paris cov.jpg
Released:25 October 1993[1]
Recorded:19–21 October 1992
Venue:Le Zénith de Paris, France
Length:57:37
Prev Title:Show
Prev Year:1993
Next Title:Wild Mood Swings
Next Year:1996

Paris is a live album recorded by The Cure at Le Zénith de Paris, in October 1992 during their Wish tour, but released in October 1993. The band announced the album in July 1993.[2]

Paris was released at the same time as Show, which was recorded in the United States. The album features more cult classics like "The Figurehead" and "One Hundred Years" than Show, which is generally more single-friendly.

50% of the royalties earned by the album were given to the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement charities in support of their international relief work.

In mid-1996, Billboard reported that Paris had sold 95,000 copies in the United States by that point, much less than the 213,000 copies of Show sold there by the same point.[3] The magazine described the release of the album "within a few weeks" of Show as exemplifying the "unorthodox career path" that the band had taken.

Michele Kirsch of Vox praised the album's "top shelf sound engineers" and "good editing".[4] Rating the album eight out of ten, he noted "there's nothing here that doesn't work."

Track listing

  1. "Shake Dog Shake" (The Top) – 30th anniversary edition only
  2. "The Figurehead" (Pornography) – 7:26
  3. "One Hundred Years" (Pornography) – 7:15
  4. "At Night" (Seventeen Seconds) – 6:39
  5. "Play for Today" (Seventeen Seconds) – 3:50
  6. "Apart" (Wish) – 6:37
  7. "In Your House" (Seventeen Seconds) – 3:59
  8. "Lovesong" (Disintegration) – 3:31
  9. "Catch" (Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me) – 2:41
  10. "A Letter to Elise" (Wish) – 4:50
  11. "Dressing Up" (The Top) – 2:49
  12. "Charlotte Sometimes" (stand-alone single) – 3:58
  13. "Close to Me" (The Head on the Door) – 3:57
  14. "Hot Hot Hot!!!" (Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me) – 30th anniversary edition only

Personnel

Production

Charts

Chart (1993)! scope="col"
Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[5] 72
Chart (2024)! scope="col"
Peak
position
Croatian International Albums (HDU)[6] 14
Hungarian Physical Albums (MAHASZ)[7] 20

Notes and References

  1. 30 October 1993. none. NME. 52.
  2. Web site: Take the Cure Twice. Thecure.nz. 28 February 2017. JPG. 10 July 1993.
  3. Web site: Billboard . 77 . 30 March 1996 . 8 September 2016.
  4. Web site: Mon Martyr . JPG . thecure.nz . 28 February 2017.
  5. 71.
  6. Web site: Lista prodaje 14. tjedan 2024.. 25 March 2024. . hr. 10 April 2024. 10 April 2024. https://archive.today/20240410184927/https://www.top-lista.hr/www/lista-prodaje-strano-14-tjedan-2024/. dead.
  7. Web site: Album Top 40 slágerlista (fizikai hanghordozók) – 2024. 13. hét . . 4 April 2024.