Into the Gap

Into the Gap
Studio album by
Released17 February 1984 (1984-02-17)
RecordedAutumn 1983 ("Hold Me Now"); November 1983 – January 1984[1][2]
Studio
GenrePop
Length42:33
LabelArista
Producer
Thompson Twins chronology
Quick Step & Side Kick
(1983)
Into the Gap
(1984)
Here's to Future Days
(1985)
Singles from Into the Gap
  1. "Hold Me Now"
    Released: 11 November 1983
  2. "Doctor! Doctor!"
    Released: 27 January 1984
  3. "You Take Me Up"
    Released: 23 March 1984
  4. "Sister of Mercy"
    Released: June 1984
  5. "The Gap"
    Released: November 1984

Into the Gap is the fourth studio album by British pop group Thompson Twins, released on 17 February 1984 by Arista Records.[3] The album was recorded during 1983 at Compass Point Studios, in Nassau, Bahamas, and was produced by Alex Sadkin who had produced the band's previous studio album, Quick Step & Side Kick (1983).

Despite a mixed response from critics, Into the Gap became the band's most commercially successful studio album, peaking at number one on the UK Albums Chart (for three weeks), and number 10 on the US Billboard 200. "Hold Me Now", "Doctor! Doctor!", "You Take Me Up", and "Sister of Mercy" were all released as singles in the UK with corresponding music videos. Three of the four singles that were released in the UK made the Top 5 and the fourth just missed the Top 10. "The Gap" was also released as a single in some other countries, but no video was made for it. According to the RIAA, the record sold over one million copies in the US; in the UK the album sold over 600,000 copies and was certified 2× platinum. It became one of the year's biggest sellers, with five million copies sold worldwide. The band embarked on a world tour in support of the album.

In March 2008, Into the Gap was reissued as an expanded 2-disc set by Edsel Records. It included the bonus cassette remixes that originally appeared on the original cassette version of the album in 1984, and also features a second disc which includes most major 12" single versions and B-sides, some of which appear on CD for the first time.

  1. ^ Bacon, Tony (January 1984). "A3". One Two Testing. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  2. ^ ""Why we're more than musicians" by Thompson Twin Alannah". Look In. UK. 1984.
  3. ^ "Record News". NME. 21 January 1984. p. 29.