Burning The Ground Exclusive 1985
Pride month would not be complete without including Frankie Goes To Hollywood known for their leather-clad homoerotic videos and suggestive lyrics. Frankie Goes To Hollywood’s ambitious work sought to challenge the status quo of pop, and politics. they were true trailblazers.
“Welcome to the Pleasuredome” is the title track to the 1984 debut album by British band Frankie Goes to Hollywood. The lyrics of the song were inspired by the poem Kubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
In March 1985, the album track was abridged and remixed for release as the group’s fourth UK single.
While criticized at the time of release and afterward for being a song that glorifies debauchery, the lyrics (and video), just as Coleridge’s poem, were about the dangers of mindless indulgence. This song, along with “Relax”, made Frankie Goes to Hollywood even more controversial than they already were.
Billboard compared it to “Relax,” saying that “Welcome to the Pleasuredome” had “less hook, less controversy, more drama.”
Despite the group’s record label (ZTT) pre-emptively promoting the single as “their fourth number one”, an achievement that would have set a new UK record for consecutive number one singles by a debuting artist, “Welcome to the Pleasuredome” peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart, being kept off the top spot by the Phil Collins/Philip Bailey duet “Easy Lover”. The single spent a total of eleven weeks on the UK chart.
It was the first release by the group not to reach number one and, despite representing a creditable success in its own right, it symbolically confirmed the end of the chart invincibility that the group had enjoyed during 1984. Frankie Goes to Hollywood would not release another record for seventeen months, and they would fail to emulate their past chart success upon their return.
The spoken-word introductions to both 12-inch mixes are adapted from Walter Kaufmann’s 1967 translation of Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy. The recitation on the first 12-inch (“Real Altered”) is by Gary Taylor, whilst that on the second 12-inch (“Fruitness”) and the cassette is by actor Geoffrey Palmer. It is unknown whether Palmer’s conclusion “Welcome To The Pleasuredome” was a genuine mistake or a deliberately scripted one.
All releases featured an edited version of “Get It On”, originally recorded for a BBC Radio 1 session in 1983 (a full-length version was included on the cassette release), plus a faded or full-length version of “Happy Hi!”, a non-album track.
The video, by Bernard Rose, features the group stealing a car, going to a carnival, and encountering all manner of deceptively “pleasurable” activities. The audio soundtrack of the video was included as part of the cassette single.
ABOUT THE TRANSFER
On the cassette “Welcome To The Pleasure Dome (The Soundtrack From Bernard Rose’s Video)”, and “Get It On” are sequenced into one track to preserve the integrity of the original cassette release I chose not to split the tracks. DOLBY NR was used for this transfer.
All In The Body
Happy Hi! 1:22
Welcome To The Pleasure Dome (The Soundtrack From Bernard Rose’s Video)/Get It On 9:48
All In The Mind
Welcome To The Pleasure Dome (How To Remake The World) 9:32
Happy Hi 1:12
CASSETTE GRADE:
Cassette: Near Mint
Sleeve: Near Mint
U.S. CHART HISTORY:
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | Welcome To The Pleasuredome | U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | #48 |
1985 | Welcome To The Pleasuredome | U.S. Billboard Dance Club Songs | #31 |
RELEASE INFORMATION:
Label: ZTT – CTIS 107
Series: Action Series – 7, Incidental Series – 95
Format: Cassette, Single
Country: UK
Released: Mar 18, 1985
Genre: Electronic, Rock, Pop
Style: Synth-pop
CREDITS:
- Compiled By – Sunday Morning Broken Spirits*
- Composed By – Nash* (tracks: A1, A2, A4, A5, B1, B2, B4, B5), Johnson* (tracks: A1, A2, A4, A5, B1, B2, B4, B5), Bolan* (tracks: A3, B3), O’Toole* (tracks: A1, A2, A4, A5, B1, B2, B4, B5), Gill* (tracks: A1, A2, A4, A5, B1, B2, B4, B5)
- Design [Cassette Packaged By] – XLZTT
- Performer – Frankie Goes To Hollywood
- Photography By – Anton Corbijn
- Producer – Dale Griffin (tracks: A3, B3), T. C. Horn* (tracks: A1, A2, A4, A5, B1, B2, B4, B5)
- Producer [Assisted By] – S. J. Lipson* (tracks: A1, A2, A4, A5, B1, B2, B4, B5)
- Voice Actor [Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche Played By…] – Geoffrey Palmer
NOTES:
Plays the same tracks on both sides. Issued as a grey cassette with white text on black paper labels. On some copies, it is apparent that there is red/pink print directly on the cassette under the paper labels.
Frankie Goes To Hollywood in the Pleasure Dome, a two-part cassette celebration of their fourth number one. There is, unquestionably, a stringent honesty in all this – but can it be carried too far? Ask your friends.
This singlette is number ninety-five in the imperfect Incidental Series. It is also part of number seven in Zang Tuum Tum’s professional Action Series. Fans of Frankie Goes To Hollywood must also know it is all part of Number One in Frankie Goes To Hollywood’s 1985 Escape Act… ‘from the wasteland to the artificial paradise.’
Friedrich Nietzsche appears as “Friedich Wilhelm Nietzsche” on release
Dolby System
Buy the Cassette at DISCOGS
CASSETTE TRANSFER & AUDIO RESTORATION:
-DjPaulT
burningtheground.net
THE GEAR:
Cassette Deck: Nakamichi BX-300 Discrete 3-Head Cassette Deck
DAC/Phono Pre-amp Line In Alpha Design Labs GT40a USB DAC
Artwork Scans: Epson Workforce WF-7610 Professional Printer/Scanner
SOFTWARE USED:
Recording/Editing: Adobe Audition 3.0 (Recording)
Down Sampling/Dither: iZotope RX Advanced 2
Artwork Editor: Adobe Photoshop CS5
Click Removal: Manual
FLAC/MP3 Conversion: dBpoweramp
M3U Playlist: Playlist Creator
RESTORATION NOTES:
Cassette transfer was recorded @ 32bit/float
FLAC (Level Eight)
Artwork scanned at
**24bit FLAC Only Available For Seven Days!
Password: burningtheground
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I know I’m late to the party, but this is fantastic!! Thank you Paul, love the fidelity from the cassette single (or cassingle as we used to call them). What a gem!
Good grief! I thought I had all of the Frankie singles from the first album, but noooooo. Thanks immensely for posting this rarity for everyone, and happy pride DJ PaulT!
I just have to say, that the Cathy Dennis sounded pretty amazing using the Dolby NR, but for this one, it just sounds a bit muffled, I’ve found that these older cassettes pre CR02 or pre-cd in general just have hiss baked into the sound and it is etither due to the age of the tape or the technology used to make the cassettes back then that applying noise reduction may decrease the hiss but also takes out something and just seems to give the cassette an underwater/veiled/ less detailed sound. I also find that early 80’s tapes can sometimes… Read more »
But if you transfer without Dolby on it will sound too bright.But you are on to something with the filter suggestion. You can get plug ins for Foobar and similar to deal with the pre-emphasis on early CDs. I have never come across similar for Dobly B but it must be possible to similarly emulate the Dolby process with a digital plug in…surely?
Thank you, Paul. It is so amazing to hear this. Loving the cassette rips and the warmth and clarity them. Cassette Maxi-singles were my happy place for 12″ mixes for a while before CD-Maxis completely wiped them out, and it felt like you were more likely to get a B-side or extra mix in some cases, if only to fill both sides. Zang Tumb Tumb was such a unique label and I’ve spent years trying to uncover all the bits and bobs from their artists, always spread across multiple formats (IE: the Arthur Baker 7″ & 12″ mixes of Art… Read more »
So many wonderful reflections concerning FGTH and Trevor Horn’s tremendous production!! Horn made electronic symphonies one could dance to!! I miss the passion and ingenuity of the 1980’s!! Thank you,Paul, for your phenomenal tastes and talents!!
Jeff
Joey say thanks! This is actually pretty amazing because, I just recently transferred my Power of Love and Two Tribes cassette singles and I don’t have this one!!! Thank you Paul, once again, you are really on fire this week. And I just have to say, this single is an event, I really miss the event that could surround the release of a song; from a real golden time for pop music, it has electronic elements but it still has it’s humanity. I’m not adverse to new music or anything, but honestly, this kind of music just does not get… Read more »
You’re very welcome, Joey. I agree today’s music is really lacking in excitement. 🙂
Fantastic Paul! Thank you. x
Did you see the 5 of them finally reform in Liverpool last month to perform this one track?
https://youtu.be/_EtiFB1E534?t=31
I wept.
Yes, I did see that performance it was pretty emotional.
FRANKIE SAYS… THANK YOU!!! FGTH is simply the best! For a band that only ever released 2 albums, they somehow take up more than 50GB on my hard drive … lol … this will be a welcome addition! TREVOR HORN was a true Remix MASTER and made every FGTH single exciting! And the sound was so far ahead of its time! I would kill to hear what RELAX sounded like before he got his hands on it. Allegedly, he discarded EVERYTHING except for a bassline and some of the vocals!! Judging by the fact that they previously played in punk… Read more »
We can always start with THIS version 😉
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPRsmeUbE-U
I guess you’re right. According to Wikipedia: ZTT Records signed Frankie Goes to Hollywood after producer-turned-ZTT cofounder Trevor Horn saw the band play on the television show The Tube, on which the group played an early version of “Relax”. THANK YOU for finding that!
Wow. Never saw this amazing version before! If I didn’t know better I’d swear they might possibly be gay.
What we really need for this 40th anniversary year is a release of the BBC live sessions. These include all of the original versions before TrevorH took over and these sessions also include the amazing Junk Funk.
Seriously! Hundreds of compilations and none of them include the BBC sessions! According to Discogs, there is a CDr bootleg copy of it!
Yes, those sessions are out there. I even recorded them from the radio.
Yet, we need proper quality rather than the quality from medium wave radio.
Thank you, Martika 🙂
I love Frankie.
Hopefully something BIG is coming for this 40th anniversary year.
hi paul, nice to see the cassette single version of this. these were not common at all. and i didn’t even know about them until much later on. thankfully they are preserved on some compilations now. but its always good when you can do it. you have really nice cassette equipment too. this song is very epic, and i like all the remixes of it too. they just didn’t make singles like this anymore, and the next album, which i consider better than the first, didn’t have the appeal or commercial success. times had changed too much for the band,… Read more »
You’re welcome 🙂
Well, how could >>I<< not react to this? 😉 Trevor Horn is nothing less than a magician. All those productions, all those remixes, versions, edits, cuts. You just HAVE to love them, don´t you. I have all the singlettes, of course, and mind you: “This is NOT! a “cassingle”. Anyone calling it such will be shot” 🙂 This was printed on the Two Tribes singlette, if I remember correctly. I love those details.
Thank you,. Paul. Have a great weekend. You too, dear Jeff. 🙂
You’re welcome 🙂
“…Pleasure Dome, Erect!”
Paul, heaps of praise and thanks for ripping this “singlette” by Frankie Goes To Hollywood. This is an epic song and makes me think of decadence, debauchery and depravity. All those “shooting stars” never stopping, even when they reach the top. It puts me in a “Roman” mood of lascivious Emperors and taboo acts. Swoon!!
Have a “purple” weekend y’all!! Special shout-outs to, DjPaulT, Song And Dance, Retro Hound, Fred,Daniel and Martika!!!
Jeff
Have a nice weekend, Jeff 🙂
Thank you Jeff, I know I’m a bit late 🙂
Nice share. Thanks DJPaul!
You’re welcome 🙂