"Fascination Street" | ||||
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Single by the Cure | ||||
from the album Disintegration | ||||
B-side |
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Released | 18 April 1989 | |||
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Length |
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Label | Elektra | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
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The Cure singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Fascination Street" on YouTube |
No videos available
"Fascination Street" is a song by English rock band the Cure from their eighth studio album, Disintegration (1989). It was issued as a single only in North America, as the band`s American record company refused to release the band`s original choice, "Lullaby", as the first single (it was the lead single in the UK and was released in the US later). The song became the band`s first number-one single on the US Billboard then-newly created Modern Rock Tracks chart, staying on top for seven weeks.
An extended mix, notable for its lengthy 4:00 instrumental introduction, was produced by Robert Smith, Chris Parry and Mark Saunders and released as the lead track on the 12-inch vinyl and maxi-CD singles. A shorter radio edit of the remix was used for the 7-inch vinyl and cassette single releases. The extended mix was later included on the Cure`s 1990 remix album Mixed Up, and the short remix has since been released worldwide on 1997`s Galore (The Singles 1987-1997).
Leer más
"Fascination Street" is a song by English rock band the Cure from their eighth studio album, Disintegration (1989). It was issued as a single only in North America, as the band`s American record company refused to release the band`s original choice, "Lullaby", as the first single (it was the lead single in the UK and was released in the US later). The song became the band`s first number-one single on the US Billboard then-newly created Modern Rock Tracks chart, staying on top for seven weeks.
An extended mix, notable for its lengthy 4:00 instrumental introduction, was produced by Robert Smith, Chris Parry and Mark Saunders and released as the lead track on the 12-inch vinyl and maxi-CD singles. A shorter radio edit of the remix was used for the 7-inch vinyl and cassette single releases. The extended mix was later included on the Cure`s 1990 remix album Mixed Up, and the short remix has since been released worldwide on 1997`s Galore (The Singles 1987-1997).
Leer más"Fascination Street" was inspired by an alcoholic night in New Orleans.[4]
In the liner notes for the compilation Galore, Robert Smith describes “Fascination Street” as:
A ‘generic’ song about the (often cynical) delights of exploring a new city nightlife; based loosely on one particular ‘band adventure’ in New Orleans 1985 – Bourbon Street, the cliche perhaps.
7-inch and cassette: Elektra / 7 69300; 9 469300
12-inch: Elektra / 96 67040 (CDN)
12-inch: Elektra / 0-66704
CD: Elektra / 66702-2
Band
Production
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
"Fascination Street" is a song by English rock band the Cure from their eighth studio album, Disintegration (1989). It was issued as a single only in North America, as the band`s American record company refused to release the band`s original choice, "Lullaby", as the first single (it was the lead single in the UK and was released in the US later). The song became the band`s first number-one single on the US Billboard then-newly created Modern Rock Tracks chart, staying on top for seven weeks.
An extended mix, notable for its lengthy 4:00 instrumental introduction, was produced by Robert Smith, Chris Parry and Mark Saunders and released as the lead track on the 12-inch vinyl and maxi-CD singles. A shorter radio edit of the remix was used for the 7-inch vinyl and cassette single releases. The extended mix was later included on the Cure`s 1990 remix album Mixed Up, and the short remix has since been released worldwide on 1997`s Galore (The Singles 1987-1997).
"Fascination Street" was inspired by an alcoholic night in New Orleans.[4]
In the liner notes for the compilation Galore, Robert Smith describes “Fascination Street” as:
A ‘generic’ song about the (often cynical) delights of exploring a new city nightlife; based loosely on one particular ‘band adventure’ in New Orleans 1985 – Bourbon Street, the cliche perhaps.
7-inch and cassette: Elektra / 7 69300; 9 469300
12-inch: Elektra / 96 67040 (CDN)
12-inch: Elektra / 0-66704
CD: Elektra / 66702-2
Band
Production
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|