Spandau Ballet - True [Chrysalis Records FV 41403] (4 March 1983)

Released: 4 March 1983
Country: US
Label: Chrysalis Records
Catalog: FV 41403
Pressing: Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Carrollton, GA
Genre: Electronic, Rock, Pop

Item# SR-CHFV41403
Ratings: C=VG+; LP=VG+


T R A C K L I S T:
01 Communication
02 Pleasure
03 Code Of Love
04 Gold
05 Lifeline
06 Heaven Is A Secret
07 Foundation
08 True


Matrix / Runout (Side A):
FV-41403A G1B F1 MKC G1

Matrix / Runout (Side B):
X- FV-B6V-41403-BS-2 P 1-P B6V-41414-B-2 MASTERDISK HW




True
Spandau Ballet


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Album Review

Dan LeRoy [allmusic.com]

By 1983, with the new romantic movement they'd sprung from a rapidly fading memory, the members of Spandau Ballet showed they had no intention of traveling the same path. Always ambitious, the British quintet really got down to business: Gone were the kilts, frilly shirts, and makeup -- as well as the sometimes chilly electronics of their first two albums. Instead, after recording at Compass Point Studios in the sun-soaked Bahamas, the group turned up in smartly tailored suits, with a sleek and mainstream sound to match. That came courtesy of producers Steve Jolley and Tony Swain, who gave Spandau the sort of pop-R&B sheen that had produced hits for clients like Imagination. And it also reflected the growing skill of guitarist Gary Kemp, the band's primary songwriter, who crafted a set of tunes aimed squarely at the charts. The one that succeeded most spectacularly, of course, was the title cut, a glossily-updated Motown-style ballad that became one of the decade's biggest hits -- aided by a video that cast singer Tony Hadley as a young Frank Sinatra, crooning about the sound of his soul. But Kemp had more arrows in his quiver, as well; the catchy soft disco of ''Communication'' and ''Lifeline'' coyly suggests, rather than demands, listeners' presence on the dancefloor, while the suave, spy flick-inspired ''Gold'' finally gives Hadley an appropriately rich setting for his dramatic warble. Some listeners at the time called the album an MOR sellout, but its slick surfaces remain tough to resist, and while none of the cuts generate the excitement of past singles like ''To Cut a Long Story Short'' or ''Chant No. 1,'' True remains Spandau Ballet's most consistent and best all-around album.