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Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me - Deluxe Edition [Box set]

The Cure Audio CD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)

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Music

Image of album by The Cure

Photos

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Biography

Biography by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Out of all the bands that emerged in the immediate aftermath of punk rock in the late '70s, few were as enduring and popular as the Cure. Led through numerous incarnations by guitarist/vocalist Robert Smith (born April 21, 1959), the band became notorious for its slow, gloomy dirges and Smith's ghoulish appearance, a public image that often ... Read more in Amazon's The Cure Store

Visit Amazon's The Cure Store
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Product details

  • Audio CD (14 Aug 2006)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Format: Box set
  • Label: Commercial Marketing
  • ASIN: B000FZDGTW
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 104,541 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. The Kiss
2. The Perfect Girl
3. Like Cockatoos
4. All I Want
5. Hot Hot Hot!!!
6. Shiver And Shake
7. If Only Tonight We Could Sleep
8. Just Like Heaven
9. Hey You!
10. A Thousand Hours
11. Icing Sugar
12. One More Time
13. How Beautiful You Are
14. The Snakepit
15. Catch
16. Torture
17. Fight
18. Why Can't I Be You?

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk

Universal UK pressing features the same content as the Rhino/US version, though packaged in the standard Universal 'Deluxe Edition' slipcase. Two CD set compiled by Robert Smith and digitally remastered from the original master tapes. This album was originally released in 1987.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By Adamski VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD
I'm so glad they've finally put 'Hey You' back on the tracklist. This was inexplicably missing on the original cd but present on the vinyl and cassette versions of the album. This for me was the last, great Cure work of art and for me it's right up there with Faith and Pornography as my 3 favourite Cure albums. The opening track is just phenomenal. A really long doom-laden guitar melody introduces Robert's most venomous vocals and lyrics to date. I absolutely love it, easily one of the best Cure tracks ever! This album is around 50% dark doomy Cure and the other half is more poppy but don't let that put you off because I think this album appeals more to the older 'true' Cure fans than those who like the newer poppier stuff post-Wish. Essential Cure!
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Just like audio heaven! 15 Aug 2006
By R. John
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
By 1987 The Cure were in their stride, combining mainstream success with critic success, thanks mainly to the 36 minute "Head on The Door" album.

"Kiss Me (x3)", an 18 song extravaganza (well over an hour in length) is an amazing collection of dark and dour, but with those killer Cure hooks.

The singles were firm and bubbly ("Just Like Heaven" may just be the greatest Cure single of all time), but digging futher tracks like "Torture" and "One More Time" are just so excellent it makes the hairs on your body stand up.

The second disc is full of the compulsory demos and "live bootleg" tracks cuz most of the other material has found it's way out on various boxsets over the years. It's still amazing to hear the germination of the final product though.

This album is highly recommended!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Gothic Masterpiece 22 Feb 2005
Format:Audio CD
It can be hard to tell what the main theme is to this album. Love or death. On a lighter note, Robert Smith provides us with some superb, pop rock songs like "Just Like Heaven" and provides us with catchy dance beats to songs like "Hot Hot Hot!!!" displaying muscial genius along the way. On a darker side, Smith portrays the darker side of love with epic and truelly gothic tracks like "the kiss" and "the snakepit". The album plays out like a balanced argument displaying the joy and happiness of love and the pain and torture of rejection when i can not be found. This album is fantastic to buy because it suits two main moods; happiness and depresion. The only downside to the album is perhaps the quality of Robert Smith's vocals on certain songs where he is clearly lacking the quality heard in 1985's "The Head On The Door". Nevertheless, this album is perfect for anyone into pop/alternative rock or someone who wants to see what The Cure have to offer.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Lost Classic! 8 Dec 2007
Format:Audio CD
From the pop of 'Why Can't I Be You' to the romantic 'Catch', through the dramatic 'Fight' this is the ultimate Cure album. There is not a bad track here, and shows the breadth of their talent. Great!
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Are you telling me you don't already own this ? 2 July 2002
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
This album caused quite a stir within the music media when it was released (1987). Just two years earlier The Cure had finally broken through as a major commercial act, following six years of trying their best not to, and the prospect of a double album (as was the form it's original vinyl release took) from these unexpected megastars got more than a few people quite excited.

All their expectations were fulfilled, the album containing 4 bona fide hit singles and 13 other classics, many of which could have been suitable choices for singles.

The album kicks off with The Kiss, a heavy wah-wah driven track - the full 6:17 of wild guitar (with few repeating phrases) being performed in one take by vocalist Robert Smith rather than guitarist Porl Thompson, which surprised many given Porl's reputation as the "solo" guitarist out of what was a 2-guitar line up (Smith and Thompson). After this, we move into Catch, a mediterranean style piece of pop which is acknowledged by most Cure fans as being one of their greatest singles.

The opening two tracks set the pace for the rest of the album really. The 17 songs pretty much go from rock/sort-of psychedelic to pop back to rock/sort-of psychedelic back to pop, and so on throughout the album.

This is a concept that the band employed years later for Wild Mood Swings (1996), however on that particular album it doesn't really work simply because most of the songs just aren't strong enough to carry it off.

On Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me it works brilliantly though.

Like I said, most of the songs could have been singles, and of the songs that couldn't (i.e. the rockier or sort-of psychedelic stuff) are all absolute classics as well, so there aren't any problems with mixing and matching styles....

A quick run through of the songs reveals rocky stuff such as The Kiss, Torture, All I Want, Shiver And Shake and Fight (heavily inspired by Led Zeppelin's Kashmir - blame Porl Thompson who went on to play with Page and Plant !!), the pure guitar pop of Catch, Why Can't I Be You, How Beautiful You Are, Just Like Heaven, Hot Hot Hot, The Perfect Girl, and psychedelic trancey stuff like One More Time, A Thousand Hours, The Snakepit, and the middle-eastern flavoured If Only Tonight We Could Sleep (very Kula Shaker - except about 10 years before they did it!!)

This is the album where Smith's lyrics really started to become extremely sharp and polished, and his lyrics have been some of the best in the world from this point onwards (although he sings way too much about relationships for my tastes - his subject matter is ocassionally a bit limited). His voice really started to take on a maturity in that his singing here is the best it had ever been up to this point, although he still manages to put on the weirdest interpretation of a soul singer on Hot Hot Hot (don't worry, it actually works - it's not as bad as it sounds, in fact it's quite good !)

This is an absolute classic album and at 17 songs in length (72 minutes running time) is a great value purchase that any self-respecting guitar music fan (of the indie/alternative variety of course) must have in his or her collection.

I cannot recommend this album any higher. Read more ›

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars From gloom to bliss to gloom again 9 Nov 2000
Format:Audio CD
This cure album is probably the best, at showing that the cure can write songs that range from the warmth and happiness of "just like heaven, to the darkness and despair of "All I Want". This proves that the Cure, unlike what most square headed "goths" think of them, offer a large pallete of sounds and feelings.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Cure's double-album from 1987. 7 Feb 2003
By Jason Parkes #1 HALL OF FAME
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
I have a thing about double-albums, perhaps it's the fact they're good value (not necessarily good) or the band gets to cut loose in an experimental fashion. 1987 was a bumper year for double-albums- Kiss Me... sat well next to Prince's Sign'O'The Times & Husker Du's Warehouse (Songs & Stories). Recorded in France, this was the most 'band'-created Cure album- various members co-writing the music. It takes in most sounds of The Cure- most notably the deranged pop they had been making since 1982's Let's Go to Bed & the bleak-guitar heavy work of Pornography.

The Kiss is a brilliant opening track, a guitar overload that advances on earlier tracks like Shake Dog Shake & The Figurhead- other tracks are similar to this: the claustrophobic Snakepit (a more abstract Pornography) & the anti-Tolhurst diatribe of Shiver & Shake- a more tuneful take on 1984's Give Me It.

There are wild experiments, with a hint of world music on such songs as If Only Tonight We Could Sleep & Like Cockatoos; though much is the classic alternative sound- songs like Torture, All I Want (A Night Like This II?)& Fight cut from the same cloth as Psychedlic Furs' Midnight to Midnight album. But it's the pop songs that really stand out- Catch is one of Smith's most gorgeous moments, as songs like How Beautiful You Are, Just Like Heaven (In Between Days II, covered by Dinosaur Jr), The Perfect Girl & A 1000 Hours are wonderful.

There are a few duds- Hey You is dropped from this edition (fine- it's a screaming b-side & not as good as other b's of this era- such as A Japanese Dream (played on The Kissing Tour) & Snow in Summer). Why Can't I Be You? is a rewrite of The Lovecats which sounds really cheesy away from the hilarious 5 Star pastiche video, Icing Sugar is another dud- just a bit of a non-event....

Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me is a great example of the invention of Robert Smith & Co- perhaps it's a schizophrenic affair, then again that's probably what I like about it. This single disc collection is great value- though I think the album isn't quite in the same territory as albums such as Pornography, Disintegration & Wish- the latter being a refined relative of this. Compare also to 96's career-low Wild Mood Swings, that attempts to recapture the varied sound here- & fails.

A classic 80s album... Read more ›

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars Too much filler. Not a patch on other cure albums
Having become a bit of a cure fan around a year ago, I started buying their albums (in no specific order).
I started with disintegration,wish then head at the door. Read more
Published 2 months ago by C. Macleod
4.0 out of 5 stars hit and kiss
I've been a fan of The Cure for two years now and have been desperate to get hold of this album for ages after first hearing the fantastic Why Can't I Be You and it didn't... Read more
Published 2 months ago by batforthecure
4.0 out of 5 stars Better as a single album
First things first. I love this album and have done for 25 years. It has some of the Cure's best tracks. Read more
Published 4 months ago by clock
4.0 out of 5 stars happy with my purchase
The vinyl is in good condition
The cover good front & back looks great on side is a scuff where bare cardboard is revealed but its acceptable As is over 25 years old & I am... Read more
Published 7 months ago by JojoCurehead
5.0 out of 5 stars I was so in love with this album ... sigh!
One of the greatest Cure albums - but then that can be a tough call to make given the quality of their output over the years.
Published 17 months ago by ephemeral
5.0 out of 5 stars the product description is a wee bit negative.
the review above, by some random-bill, is largly negative, and stereotypical 'glum stares' full of 'b-sides', who gives a donkeys about glum stares or any objectifying descriptions... Read more
Published 20 months ago by Miss Davies
3.0 out of 5 stars Too long at 74 minutes with too much filler
Certainly wipes the floor with the early Cure albums such as Seventeen Seconds, Faith and Pornography. Read more
Published on 11 May 2009 by BS on parade
2.0 out of 5 stars Ghastly orgy of over-indulgence
This would have made an excellent EP. When Bob knocks out a good song it's really worth listening to. Read more
Published on 5 Jun 2008 by Vitamino
4.0 out of 5 stars A Catch
Worth buying just for "Catch", which reminds me of my Uni days and a certain girl.

Brings a tear to my eye even now, nearly 20 years on. Lovely.
Published on 26 Oct 2007 by SecretSam
5.0 out of 5 stars the cure kiss me kiss me kiss me
The most addictive romantic album,all credit to Mr smith if you enjoy the arts and romantic poetry this album is for you. The more you listen to it the deeper it drags you in .
Published on 30 May 2007 by Mrs. El Davies
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