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1988 studio album by Boy George From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tense Nervous Headache is the second solo studio album by English singer Boy George, released in October 1988 by Virgin Records. While the album was withdrawn from sale in the United Kingdom, it was still released in Europe but was not released by Virgin in the United States. The title was a reference to a UK television commercial for Anadin.[2]
Tense Nervous Headache | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 24 October 1988 | |||
Recorded | 1988 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 66:49 (CD/MC), 49:33 (LP) | |||
Label | Virgin | |||
Producer |
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Boy George chronology | ||||
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Singles from Tense Nervous Headache | ||||
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When the recordings for the album began, Boy George, in his own words, did not know if he wanted to be Prince, Bowie, or Roy Orbison. He started working with Prince-collaborator Bobby Z. but was at the same time inspired by the growing acid house scene and garage music which he had already explored on his protest single "No Clause 28" (UK No. 57)[3] earlier in the year. At one point, Pete Waterman had also been suggested as a producer although no recordings were initiated. Teddy Riley was then flown in from the US to record four new jack swing titles which Boy George was ultimately not happy with and asked to be left off the album. Vlad Naslas wrote and produced a number of dance tracks which Boy George found difficult to write lyrics to, and as a consequence only "I Go Where I Go" made it to the final tracklist. Mike Pela was brought in to contribute three tracks to finish off the album, including a cover version of Jimmy Ruffin's "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted". "Finally, and too late, I was feeling the inspiration", Boy George would later tell in his biography Take It Like a Man,[4] eventually calling the album "self-indulgent, scatterbrained, and painfully out of touch." He still went ahead with a concert tour, "Boy's Own Tour", performing eight of the new tracks, with one show being filmed for a Japanese TV-special.[5]
The album had been scheduled for an October 1, 1988 release in the UK but was postponed for three weeks to see if sales from the first single "Don't Cry" (released in September) would pick up. When the single stalled at No. 60 in the UK Singles Chart, Virgin eventually decided to pull the album from sale in the UK. It was still released in Europe where it would reach No. 46 in the Swedish charts [6] and No. 38 in Italy.[7] Following its disappointing sales, Virgin quickly released a new album, Boyfriend, in March 1989 with the four previously unreleased Teddy Riley tracks, three other left-over tracks, and the single-only track "No Clause 28" from the previous year.
"Don't Cry" was the only single released from album. Featuring a more crooner-style vocal, emulating Roy Orbison, it peaked at No. 60 in the UK charts but became a Top 20 hit in Italy where it reached No. 13.[7] "No Clause 28", released in June 1988, would not be included on the final album, except on the Japanese release. "A Boy Called Alice" and "Leave In Love" (a duet with Carroll Thompson) were released as B-sides only.
The LP included 9 titles, while the CD & MC editions included 12 titles. The song "Something Strange Called Love" was edited on the LP.
MC: Side 1 (Trk. 1 to 4 + trk. 10 & 11), Side 2 (Trk. 5 to 9 + trk. 12).
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Don't Cry" | 7:01 | |
2. | "You Are My Heroin" |
| 6:20 |
3. | "I Go Where I Go" |
| 4:42 |
4. | "Girl with Combination Skin" |
| 6:02 |
5. | "Whisper" |
| 5:41 |
6. | "Something Strange Called Love" (LP Edit 4:00) |
| 6:02 |
7. | "I Love You" |
| 4:47 |
8. | "Kipsy" |
| 6:06 |
9. | "Mama Never Knew" |
| 4:57 |
10. | "What Becomes of the Broken Hearted" (CD & MC only) | 3:42 | |
11. | "American Boyz" (CD & MC only) |
| 6:20 |
12. | "Happy Family" (CD & MC only) |
| 5:07 |
Chart (1987) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australian Albums (ARIA)[9] | 145 |
Italian Albums Chart[10] | 38 |
Swedish Albums Chart[11] | 46 |
Country | Year | Label | Format | Catalogue |
Europe | 1988 | Virgin Records | CD | 259 253, CDV2546 |
Europe | 1988 | Virgin Records | MC | 409 253, TCV2546 |
Europe | 1988 | Virgin Records | LP | 209 253, V2546 |
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