Loveboat | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 23 October 2000 | |||
Recorded | 1999–2000 | |||
Studio | 37B – Chertsey, Surrey; Son Ripoll – Mallorca[1] | |||
Genre | Synth-pop | |||
Length | 44:54 | |||
Label | Mute | |||
Producer |
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Erasure chronology | ||||
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Singles from Loveboat | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [2] |
Release Music Magazine | [3] |
Entertainment.ie | [4] |
PopMatters | mixed[5] |
Splendid Magazine | mixed[6] |
Loveboat is the ninth full-length studio album by English synth-pop duo Erasure. Released in the UK by Mute Records in 2000, it was produced by Erasure and Flood. It proved to be their least successful in terms of sales and charts since their debut Wonderland in 1986.
Erasure's US record label at the time, Maverick Records, shelved the album because of "lack of hit singles". Largely panned by Erasure fans[7][8] upon its release (and even by Andy Bell years after[citation needed]) because of its greater use of acoustic guitars, its lo-fi feel and heavy-handed bass sounds (many blame Flood's production work), the album did manage to get some positive reviews from music critics.[citation needed]
Loveboat failed to hit the Top 40 in the UK and two singles were released, although only one was eligible to chart. Maverick Records requested the re-recording and remixing of several tracks from the album before they would agree to release it. Although "Moon & the Sky" was reworked, Maverick never released it and dropped Erasure from its artist roster. Three years after the album's UK release, Mute Records secured rights to finally release it in its original form in the US in 2003, after the release of Erasure's follow-up album Other People's Songs. Loveboat failed to chart on the Billboard 200.
The album's third single (along with "Freedom" and "Moon & the Sky") was supposed to be the fifth track, "Alien". It was talked about in several interviews at the time, and according to an interview there was even a music video made for the song where Andy and Vince are dressed in their clothes from the video for their 1986 single, "Sometimes".
The CG model and cover artwork rendering was produced by Martin Gardiner.