Too Fast for Love explained

Too Fast for Love
Type:studio
Artist:Mötley Crüe
Cover:Too Fast.jpg
Recorded:October 1981
Studio:Hit City West, Los Angeles, California[1]
Length:
  • 39:37 (original)
  • 34:04 (Elektra version)
Producer:Mötley Crüe
Next Title:Shout at the Devil
Next Year:1983

Too Fast for Love is the debut studio album by American heavy metal band Mötley Crüe. The first edition of 900 copies was released on November 10, 1981, on the band's original label Leathür Records. Elektra Records signed the band the following year, at which point the album was remixed and partially re-recorded. This re-release, with a different track listing and slightly different artwork (e.g., red lettering on the cover and a different interior photograph of the band), has become the standard version from which all later reissues derive. The re-recorded album also removed the song "Stick to Your Guns", though it is featured on a bonus track version of the album. The original mix of the album remained unreleased on CD until 2002, when it was included in the box set compilation.

While the album only reached number 77 on the Billboard 200 album chart in the United States, it would ultimately reach platinum status.

The songs "Stick to Your Guns" and "Live Wire" were released as singles for the album. The cover is an homage to The Rolling Stones' 1971 album Sticky Fingers.

Release history

The first recording session was in October 1981, a half year after the band first played the Starwood nightclub. They recorded for a few days with engineer Avi Kipper at Hit City West, a small studio in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles.[1] [2]

There are three known vinyl pressings of the Leathür Records version, along with one known cassette. The first vinyl pressing had white lettering on the cover and the record label was white with black lettering. The back cover photo of Vince Neil shows him with a large airbrushed hairdo. The second pressing has red lettering on the cover and the record label is again white with black lettering. The second pressing has a slightly different photo insert of the band. The third pressing has red lettering on the cover and the record label is black with white lettering.

The album was remixed under the supervision of Roy Thomas Baker and rereleased on August 20, 1982, by Elektra Records, with whom the band signed its first recording contract. The Elektra version had a different track order and omitted "Stick to Your Guns", as well as the first verse from the title track. In addition, a re-recorded (and shorter) version of "Come On and Dance" appears on the re-release. However, the initial release of the album on Elektra in Canada (on both vinyl and cassette) was not the remixed version, but instead the original Leathür version with an Elektra label on it, and it included "Stick to Your Guns". This was released two months before the remixed version was released by Elektra worldwide, because Mötley Crüe was about to embark on a Canadian tour and Elektra wanted to ensure a product was available while the band was in the country. When the remixed version was completed, later Canadian pressings were the same as the Elektra version everywhere else. "It was amazing because everyone had passed on us first time around..." Neil observed in 2000. "We were just happy that someone was prepared to mass-produce our records and that we could go out on real tours."[3]

In 1996, Mötley Crüe and Elektra split. The band once again formed their own record company, Mötley Records, and rereleased all the albums before New Tattoo. The 2002 version of Too Fast for Love adds the Leathür version of "Too Fast for Love", "Stick to Your Guns" (omitted from the Elektra release), "Toast of the Town" (previously released as a B-side to Leathür's "Stick to Your Guns" single), the Raspberries cover song "Tonight" and a live version of "Merry-Go-Round".

Reception

Too Fast for Love has received mostly positive reviews. AllMusic reviewer Steve Huey gave the album a rating of four stars and claims that "Mötley Crüe essentially comes across as a bash-'em-out bar band, making up in enthusiasm what they lack in technical skill".

Too Fast for Love was also the earliest of seven consecutive Mötley Crüe studio albums to be certified gold or platinum by the RIAA―every album up to and including Generation Swine (1997) is at least certified gold.[4]

Track listings

1982 Elektra version

Personnel

Mötley Crüe

Production

Accolades

PublicationCountryAccoladeRank
RevolverUS6 Glam-Metal Albums You Need to Own[5] 1
PopMattersUS10 Essential Glam Metal Albums[6] 1
Consequence of SoundUS10 Hair Metal Albums That Don't Suck[7] 1
Rolling StoneUS50 Greatest Hair Metal Albums of All Time[8] 9
Rolling StoneUS100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time[9] 22
L.A. WeeklyUSChuck Klosterman's Favorite Hair Metal Albums[10] 8
Guitar WorldUSTop 20 Hair Metal Albums of the Eighties[11] 1
Ulltimate Classic RockUSTop 30 Glam Metal Albums[12] 1

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Moskowitz, David V. . 421 . The 100 Greatest Bands of All Time: A Guide to the Legends Who Rocked the World . ABC-CLIO . 2015 . 9781440803406 . 2.
  2. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/avi-kipper-mn0000064546 Avi Kipper | Credits | AllMusic
  3. Dave. Ling. We are lüdicröus!. Classic Rock #12. March 2000. 48.
  4. Web site: RIAA Gold & Platinum database-Too Fast for Love. . March 4, 2008.
  5. Web site: 2017-07-28. 6 Glam-Metal Albums You Need to Own Revolvermag. 2021-04-11. https://web.archive.org/web/20170728120345/http://www.revolvermag.com/news/6-glam-metal-albums-you-need-to-own.html. July 28, 2017.
  6. News: Zupko. Sarah. 10 Essential Glam Metal Albums, PopMatters. 2021-04-11. PopMatters. en-US.
  7. Web site: 2018-02-05. 10 Hair Metal Albums That Don't Suck. 2021-02-25. Consequence of Sound. en-US.
  8. August 31, 2019. Rolling Stone - 50 Greatest Hair Metal Albums of All Time. July 1, 2021. Rolling Stone. en-US.
  9. Greene. Andy. 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time. Rolling Stone. Wenner Media LLC. 22 June 2017. 21 June 2017.
  10. News: Ben . Westhoff . Chuck Klosterman's Favorite Hair Metal Albums . . 6 December 2011 . 4 March 2021 .
  11. Web site: December 12, 2008. Guitar World - Top 20 Hair Metal Albums of the Eighties. July 1, 2021. Guitar World. https://web.archive.org/web/20121004060642/http://www.guitarworld.com/top_20_hair_metal_albums_of_the_eighties?page=0,0. October 4, 2012.
  12. Web site: Rolli. Bryan. July 1, 2021. Top 30 Glam Metal Albums. 2021-07-01. Ultimate Classic Rock. en.