Track Listing 1. 10:15 Saturday Night 2. Plastic Passion 3. Pillbox Tales 4. Do The Hansa 5. I'm Cold 6. Another Journey By Train 7. Descent 8. Splintered In Her Head 9. Lament (flexipop version) 10. Just One Kiss 11. Dream 12. Upstairs Room 13. Lament 14. Speak My Language 15. Mr Pink Eyes 16. Happy The Man 17. Throw Your Foot 18. New Day 19. Exploding Boy 20. Few Hours After This 21. Man Inside My Mouth 22. Stop Dead
1. Japanese Dream 2. Breathe 3. Chain Of Flowers 4. Snow In Summer 5. Sugar Girl 6. Icing Sugar 7. Hey You (12" extended remix) 8. How Beautiful You Are 9. To The Sky 10. Babble 11. Out Of Mind 12. 2 Late 13. Fear Of Ghosts 14. Hello I Love You (unreleased psychedelic mix) 15. Hello I Love You 16. Hello I Love You (slight return mix) 17. Harold And Joe 18. Just Like Heaven (dizzy mix)
1. This Twilight Garden 2. Play 3. Halo 4. Scared As You 5. Big Hand 6. Foolish Arrangement 7. Doing The Unstuck (unreleased 12" version) 8. Purple Haze (Virgin radio version) 9. Purple Haze 10. Burn 11. Young Americans 12. Dredd Song 13. It Used To Be Me 14. Ocean 15. Adonais
1. Home 2. Waiting 3. Pink Dream 4. This Is A Lie (ambient mix) 5. Wrong Number (P2P remix) 6. More Than This 7. World In My Eyes 8. Possession 9. Out Of This World (Oakenfold remix) 10. Maybe Someday (acoustic mix) 11. Coming Up 12. Signal To Noise (acoustic version) 13. Signal To Noise 14. Just Say Yes (Curve remix) 15. Forest (Mark Plati mix) - Cure & Earl Slick
| Details | | Number of CDs: | 4 | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Distributor: | Universal Music | | Recording Mode: | Stereo |
Album Notes Full title: Join The Dots: B-Sides & Rarities 1978-2001 (The Fiction Years).Includes 76-page book.The Cure includes: Robert Smith (vocals, guitar); Porl Thompson (guitar); Simon Gallup, Michael Dempsey (bass); Lol Tolhurst (drums).Producers include: Chris Parry, Robert Smith, Mike Hedges, Dave Allen, The Cure.Compilation producer: Robert Smith.Recorded between 1978 & 2001. Includes liner notes by Robert Smith, Simon Gallup, and Johnny Black.A remarkable four-disc set of B-sides and rarities, JOIN THE DOTS serves as a sort of alternate history for the Cure, one of the world's most beloved post-punk/alt-rock bands. Painstakingly compiled by Cure frontman (and the group's only constant member) Robert Smith, DOTS provides dozens of glimpses into the literal flip-side of their singles by collecting many long-lost tracks, including the classic songs previously featured only on the cassette version of STARING AT THE SEA: THE SINGLES.Disc one begins in the late 1970s and consists of early tracks that show the Cure in a wildly adventurous mode--tearing into the punky "Pillbox Tales," drifting through the gloomy "Descent," and bouncing along to the oddly danceable "Throw Your Foot." By disc two, Smith and the lads have become college-rock heroes, and despite their goth looks, they move steadily into poppier territory on songs such as the synth-laden "Breathe" and the upbeat "Hey You...," eventually settling into their dreamy post-DISINTEGRATION era on "This Twilight Garden," "Halo," and "Home" on the third and fourth discs. Also included are cover tunes and remixes, topping off an impressive collection that features many could've-been A-sides (particularly "The Exploding Boy," "Harold and Joe," and "Signal to Noise") and reveals why a younger generation has become entranced by the Cure's dynamic sound.
Editorial Reviews 3 stars out of 5 - Many of the songs on JOIN THE DOTS would have fit perfectly on various Cure records...Spin (2/04, p.100) - [I]t's a fine survey of their ambient pop sorrow, simultaneously pained and giddy.Entertainment Weekly (3/5/04, p.68) - [D]isc 1 is essential [and] even the lesser material leaves lipstick traces. - Rating: B+Mojo (2/04, pp.106-7) - 4 stars out of 5 - [A] band whose influence is, against all the odds, still active, still oozing through the teenage consciousness into full-grown bands.Uncut (2/04, p.86) - 3 stars out of 5 - This 70-song curiosity box mopes about the dank bus terminals and spooked back alleys of Curetown....In its own darkling way, this collection might even give you the best feel for the place. Rolling Stone (02/19/2004)
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