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Join The Dots - The B-Sides & Rarities
 
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Join The Dots - The B-Sides & Rarities

The CureMP3 Download
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
Price: £18.49
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Album Savings: £43.81 compared to buying all songs

 
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Disc 1:
  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. 10:15 Saturday Night 3:41 £0.89
Play   2. Plastic Passion 2:14 £0.89
Play   3. Pill Box Tales 2:55 £0.89
Play   4. Do The Hansa 2:38 £0.89
Play   5. I'm Cold 2:47 £0.89
Play   6. Another Journey By Train 3:05 £0.89
Play   7. Descent 3:08 £0.89
Play   8. Splintered In Her Head 5:15 £0.89
Play   9. Lament (Flexipop Magazine Cover Release) 4:34 £0.89
Play 10. Just One Kiss 4:08 £0.89
Play 11. The Dream 3:11 £0.89
Play 12. The Upstairs Room 3:29 £0.89
Play 13. La Ment 4:23 £0.89
Play 14. Speak My Language 2:42 £0.89
Play 15. Mr. Pink Eyes 2:43 £0.89
Play 16. Happy The Man 2:46 £0.89
Play 17. Throw Your Foot 3:32 £0.89
Play 18. New Day 4:09 £0.89
Play 19. The Exploding Boy 2:53 £0.89
Play 20. A Few Hours After This ... 2:27 £0.89
Play 21. A Man Inside My Mouth 3:05 £0.89
Play 22. Stop Dead 4:02 £0.89
Disc 2:
  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. Japanese Dream 3:29 £0.89
Play   2. Breathe 4:47 £0.89
Play   3. A Chain Of Flowers 4:53 £0.89
Play   4. Snow In Summer 3:25 £0.89
Play   5. Sugar Girl 3:14 £0.89
Play   6. Icing Sugar 3:21 £0.89
Play   7. Hey You!!! 4:06 £0.89
Play   8. How Beautiful You Are 4:24 £0.89
Play   9. To The Sky 5:10 £0.89
Play 10. Babble 4:14 £0.89
Play 11. Out Of Mind 3:50 £0.89
Play 12. 2 Late 2:39 £0.89
Play 13. Fear Of Ghosts 6:49 £0.89
Play 14. Hello, I Love You (Unreleased) 6:02 £0.89
Play 15. Hello, I Love You 3:30 £0.89
Play 16. Hello, I Love You (Slight Return Mix) 0:11 £0.89
Play 17. Harold And Joe 5:08 £0.89
Play 18. Just Like Heaven 3:43 £0.89
Disc 3:
  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. This Twilight Garden 4:44 £0.89
Play   2. Play 4:34 £0.89
Play   3. Halo 3:44 £0.89
Play   4. Scared As You 4:11 £0.89
Play   5. The Big Hand 4:51 £0.89
Play   6. A Foolish Arrangement 3:49 £0.89
Play   7. Doing The Unstuck 5:53 £0.89
Play   8. Purple Haze (Unreleased) 3:17 £0.89
Play   9. Purple Haze 5:20 £0.89
Play 10. Burn 6:36 £0.89
Play 11. Young Americans 6:21 £0.89
Play 12. Dredd Song 4:24 £0.89
Play 13. It Used To Be Me 6:49 £0.89
Play 14. Ocean 3:27 £0.89
Play 15. Adonais 4:11 £0.89
Disc 4:
  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. Home 3:23 £0.89
Play   2. Waiting 3:33 £0.89
Play   3. A Pink Dream 3:43 £0.89
Play   4. This Is A Lie 4:31 £0.89
Play   5. Wrong Number 8:12 £0.89
Play   6. More Than This 5:09 £0.89
Play   7. World In My Eyes 4:50 £0.89
Play   8. Possession (Unreleased 2000) 5:15 £0.89
Play   9. Out Of This World (Unreleased 2000) 7:00 £0.89
Play 10. Maybe Someday 4:58 £0.89
Play 11. Coming Up 6:25 £0.89
Play 12. Signal To Noise (Unreleased 2001) 3:35 £0.89
Play 13. Signal To Noise 4:06 £0.89
Play 14. Just Say Yes - (Unreleased 2001) 3:16 £0.89
Play 15. A Forest - (Featuring Earl Slick, unreleased 2001) 6:42 £0.89
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 37 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
There’s much misunderstanding over this box-set and a lot of bad comments being made for no reason.

"The B Sides And Rarities" sums up exactly what is contained here, I'm puzzled why so many people are getting confused over this.

The B-Sides part explains itself, every B-Side which was an original song is present here and also a few B-Sides which were remixes of other songs.

The Rarities part is where people seem to be losing the plot. It's important to emphasise that this collection is by The Cure and nobody else, so that is the exact reason why you will not find any recordings made by Cure side-projects such as Cult Hero, The Glove or Fool's Dance, or projects/bands by other people featuring Robert Smith such as Junkie XL, The Banshees, Bowie or Bowie's cohorts Earl Slick and Reeves Gabrels.

The rarities present are Cure recordings that HAVE been available elsewhere before but not in any great quantities. So, you'll find the much heard about but rarely heard version of Lament given away free with Flexipop magazine, three version of Hello I Love You (two are from the rare Elektra record label compilation "Rubyait"), there's the only three Cure songs recorded specifically for films (as used on The Crow, The X Files and Judge Dredd movies) and there's various other remixes and songs, some of which have been available as legal downloads, some have been shall we just say available as "downloads"....

To me a rarity is a song that has been released but not widely available. Anything else is simply a song that has never been released ANYWHERE and that's where a great deal of people are getting confused with this box-set.

If you want music that has never EVER been available before then fear not, because from Spring 2004 The Cure are re-releasing their entire studio-album back catalogue and each will have a bonus disc of previously unreleased songs from the time period in which the album was made.

So chill out people and stop slagging off The Cure for not putting unreleased songs on this box-set, when it doesn't even say it contains any such thing !!!!

As for the songs that are present….

Well, the b-sides are amongst some of the finest music you’ll ever hear by and band on the planet, A-Side, B-Side or album track. They really are that good, even Robert Smith has commented recently that perhaps a few of the songs would have been better off on one of their albums in place of songs that actually did make the cut for the album. Naturally, as with all bands, the earlier stuff (and this set is in strict chronological order) goes from amusing naivety and then on into experimentalism. The middle of Disc 1 is predominantly electronic 1980s sounding, but that was primarily because the band was reduced to a two-piece at the time, the songwriting is still genius though. Towards the end of the disc the songs start getting really really good while still retaining very much a sound of their times. Basically, from Disc 2 onwards the quality of songwriting goes up several notches and songs such as A Chain Of Flowers, This Twilight Garden, The Big Hand, It Used To Be Me and Adonais are some of the finest songs you’ll ever hear, all the while bearing in mind they were just B-Sides.

The rest of the original B-Sides are all head and shoulders above album-track quality of many many other bands out there.

The remixes present are just what you’d expect from remixes of any bands songs. You either like a remix or you don’t, sometimes this depends on whether the mix sounds a lot like the original or nothing like it. I’ve never been such a fan of remixes, but a lot of people are so I guess it’s nice to see some of the bands remixes accounted for here (hey, they can’t be any worse than some of the rubbish on “Mixed Up” !!!).

The remainder of the material is the rarities and tracks from films. It doesn’t matter whether you think the Flexipop version of Lament is better than the original (or not) it’s just the fact that finally it’s been resurrected which counts !! Some people have been waiting over 20 years to hear this version again.

Hello I Love You is an entertainer in both of it’s versions (the 10 second version is actually just a reprise at the end of the Rubyait album, because that album is opened by the full length version of Hello…). The psychedelic version is just that and is a good reworking of the song, as is the normal version which is a bit of a sped up semi-rocker. Two versions of Purple Haze are present. The Virgin Radio version is simply fantastic and actually does add a bit to the original Hendrix version, by again being sped-up slightly (and also sounding a bit like the normal version of Hello…!!!). The other version of Purple Haze is just….terrible. Skip that track please ! Young Americans is again appalling….but nice to see it being released again (say’s through gritted teeth!).

There’s a few other rarities, but what I really want to mention is the three film songs. Burn is from The Crow and is easily in my top 5 Cure songs of all time. Pure genius, dark, heavy, thunderous drums. And our local dance music radio station used to play it at 7.30 every night in 1994 for some reason !!! More Than This from The X Files isn’t a Roxy Music cover version, contrary to popular bad reporting, it is in fact a decent enough electronic mood piece. Dredd Song (Judge Dredd, natch) is bursting with power and very orchestral sounding, with a nice message in the lyrics (nowt to do with Judge Dredd really…).

All in all, an amazing collection beating most bands regular output hands-down, and this is just The Cure’s leftovers!

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By S. P. Moses VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
Even for the most devoted Cure fans there are unheard treats on offer with six previously unreleased tracks. For the casual fan there's even more to discover.

It's not all successful, no-one needs three versions of Hello, I Love You and one Purple Haze is more than enough, but the moments of breathtaking beauty outweigh the unnecessary dirges. Though past their peak by 1992 the b-sides to Wish give a tantalising glimpse at what should have been. Other highlights include The Crow-inspired Burn.

The packaging is luxurious, the sleeve notes illuminating, especially the inspiration for the title of classic b-side Harold and Joe, Bishop and Mangel respectively from Neighbours. Peculiarly some of the songs aren't where the sleeve says they are. Overall the 70 songs here are too much to digest in one listen but with a band as important as The Cure it's easy to forgive a little over indulgence.

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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Finally! 12 Jun 2004
By Burjiz
Format:Audio CD
If you were a diehard fan of the Cure and wanted to listen to their b-sides and rare tracks, you had mainly two options: listen to the original vinyl/CD single or grab the "Standing on a Beach" cassette, which had a bonus selection of early b-side cuts. "Join the Dots" now makes things easier for the fan who's got to own every hard-to-find release by the Cure. On 4 CDs, the band covers their 23-year discography of rarities, and all the tracks are digitally remastered under the supervision of Robert Smith. The first disc is a virtual trip down memory lane and it's easily the best, featuring songs that trace back to the Cure's punk roots. Notable gems are "I'm Cold," "Another Journey by Train," the orchestral "A Few Hours After This," and "Throw Your Foot." The second disc covers 1987-92, and by this point, the band found a mainstream audience in America. Its twin peaks are the poppy "2 Late" and the dark and atmospheric "Fear of Ghosts," which stands as good a track as anything off their 1989 album "Disintegration." Another highlight is a respectable cover of the Doors' "Hello, I Love You," and three versions of this song are found. Disc 3 covers 1992-1996, with some good tracks ("Play" and "This Twilight Garden") and some notable misfires, such as a cover of Hendrix's "Purple Haze" and a not-bad-but-pointless cover of Bowie's "Young Americans." The fourth disc, which covers 1996-01 finds the group experimenting with electronica with varying degrees of success. It's not a bad disc, and much of the stuff on here is good, but it's my least favorite among the four. Tracks that make it worth the trip are the Palmer remix of "This is a Lie," the Oakenford remix of the "Bloodflowers" cut "Out of this World," an acoustic version of "Signal to Noise," and the beautiful "More Than This" (which, by the way, is NOT a cover of the Roxy Music classic). All in all, "Join the Dots" is a no-questions-asked must buy for Cure diehards like myself, but first-timers who are green to the band should start with their studio albums first. For those who have been longing to get these tracks on CD, this is more than a box set. It's also an answered prayer.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
The cures b sides
One the most influential rock bands in the world.

Fantastic B sides, if you like deep lyrics and mind bending guitar work, look no furher. Read more
Published 8 months ago by StyloMilo
This album is amazing
This collection of B-sides and Rarities from one of Britain's most timeless and genreless bands is an absolute must with any music lover. Read more
Published on 3 Aug 2004 by "sarahalicewilson"
Disks 2 and 3 worth the money alone
Disks 2 and 3 are made up of B-sides from (in my opinion) The Cure's best period.

"This Twilight Garden" is one of their best ever songs and the fact it only made a B-Side is... Read more

Published on 10 Feb 2004 by Andrew Baxter
Just say yes
An excellent overview of the Cure's career(so far), and proof, if it were needed, that the Cure are one of the best bands this country has ever produced. Read more
Published on 2 Feb 2004 by M. A. Mackenzie
A Must For Any Cure Fan
Join The Dots is definately one of the best Cure releases to date, it includes a 70-page booklet which gives information on the bands history and includes a comprehensive... Read more
Published on 1 Feb 2004 by Andi
A must buy but not rare
At last the B-sides on an album. The Cure have always produced excellent value-for-money singles with the B-sides being interesting if not better than the A-side. Read more
Published on 19 Jan 2004
Complete Respect For Robert
It's rare that fans get treated with such respect and consideration by their idols, but Robert Smith is really going to some lengths to provide us with a complete and definitive... Read more
Published on 13 Dec 2003 by Al
Just Fabulous!
Everything any cure fan has ever dreamed. Some b-sides are just as good as the a-sides. Some are even better. To the Sky, Snow in Summer, It used to be me. Just great! Read more
Published on 26 Nov 2003 by Claudio R. D. Carneiro
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