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Floodland, often seen as the band's magnum opus[citation needed], is the second album by The Sisters of Mercy, released in 1987. Composed and produced by Andrew Eldritch, it marked a change of direction from guitar-oriented rock towards synthesizer-based productions, and may be seen as more closely linked to "Gift", the 1986 album by Eldritch's side-project The Sisterhood than to "First and Last and Always". The record peaked at number 9 in UK album charts.
Overview
Andrew Eldritch himself described Floodland as "a fine album". Despite Eldritch's rather insistent objections to the designation "goth", Floodland has been lauded by some press as a classic goth album; Alternative Press ranked it at number forty-three of the "Top 99 of '85 - '89" and included it in their list of "10 Essential Goth Albums". The driving dance-floor hit "Lucretia My Reflection", with its repeating bassline, has become something of a nightclub staple, as has This Corrosion, whose apparently nonsensical lyrics are alleged to be an attack on Wayne Hussey. The song was originally intended to appear on The Sisterhood album, in its entirety a stab against Hussey's troupe, but the exclusion left Eldritch with more time to refine it into the behemoth we get to hear. Eldritch said that "Lucretia .." was written for Morrison, who "always strikes me as a Lucretia-type person" [1]. It is said[citation needed] that Floodland sent the gothic music genre spiralling away from the guitar-driven sound of the early-to-mid 1980s and inspired the next wave of synthesized goth bands such as London After Midnight and Switchblade Symphony.
Controversies
The Sisters of Mercy did not follow the album with live performances. The last two tracks on the CD are the B-side songs of the 12-inch single of "This Corrosion" which were included by the record company as a CD-version bonus, against the wishes of Eldritch who felt the songs don't belong. It was his understanding that the tracks were only on a limited edition, to be removed after the first CD pressing, but weren't. Track listingWritten by Andrew Eldritch. Produced by Eldritch with Larry Alexander except "This Corrosion" produced by Jim Steinman; "Dominion/Mother Russia" produced by Steinman/Alexander/Eldritch; "Torch" produced by Eldritch. Choir vocals on "Dominion/Mother Russia" and "This Corrosion" by The New York Choral Society. Backing vocals on "This Corrosion" by Holly Sherwood; Curtis King; Brenda King; Tawatha Agee; Gina Taylor; Vaneese Thomas.[1]
Bonus tracks:
Singles
Notes
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