Lullaby (Book of Love album)


Lullaby is the second studio album by American synth-pop band Book of Love, released on June 21, 1988, by Sire Records.

History

-based synthpop quartet Book of Love released their follow up record two years after their eponymous debut Book Of Love. Promotional duties and non-stop touring in support of Depeche Mode's Black Celebration Tour had kept Book of Love from entering the studio to lay down ideas for their second record. In a 2009 interview, Ted Ottaviano stated, "It's the classic story. We weren't quite sure where the first album would take us, and it ended up taking us on a ride. But then we had to turn right around and write and record songs for the follow-up. I'm not sure we had enough distance, enough time, to fully grasp what this meant or entailed." In the spring of 1987, the band was finally able to lay down some demos for the next record, writing the new songs between March through August.
In late September 1987, the band eventually convened at D+D Recording and Unique Recording Studios in New York to record with esteemed producer Mark Ellis, aka Flood, who had just produced Erasure's The Circus the previous year, along with engineering on U2's The Joshua Tree. Flood co-produced the record with Ted Ottaviano. Reflecting on the recording in 2009, Susan Ottaviano stated, "It was great to be part of some of Ted's Cecil B. DeMille-styled productions. We had a full orchestra and a bagpipe player wearing a kilt for the song "Lullaby". We also recorded the organ at Cathedral of St. John the Divine for "With A Little Love". It was such an amazing experience." The cathedral organ drenched, "With A Little Love", marked the first Book Of Love song to feature Ted Ottaviano on lead vocals. On recording with Flood, Ted Ottaviano stated, "We spent one night there, from about 10 pm to 6 am. Flood miked the entire cathedral. He was totally game for what we wanted to do." Recording in New York ended on December 18, 1987, with the band reuniting with Flood on January 1, 1988 to record vocals at the Great Hall at Hansa Tonstudios Berlin. Flood mixed "Melt My Heart" and "Champagne Wishes" and the recording of the album was finished. The remaining eight tracks were mixed by Alan Meyerson in L.A. in February, and the album mastered in March at Sterling Sound.
Preceding the album, the first single, "Pretty Boys And Pretty Girls" was released on May 24, 1988. "Pretty Boys And Pretty Girls" became one of the first songs ever to address the issue of the AIDS epidemic with its lyric of "Strangers in the night exchanging glances, but sex is dangerous, I don't take my chances...safe sex, safe sex." The song became the band's highest charting single at no. 90 in the Billboard Hot 100, and the only moment crossing over into mainstream pop. In the dance clubs, the song was a smash, and made it to no. 5 on the Hot Dance Club Play Chart, spending 11 weeks on the chart. A music video for "Pretty Boys And Pretty Girls" was shot by director Carlos Grosso and released to promote the new album.
Book of Love's second album Lullaby was released on June 21, 1988, and spent ten weeks on the Billboard 200, peaking at No. 156, the highest album placement of their career. The album cover artwork features a photograph from 1872, titled "Cupid Considering", by Julia Margaret Cameron, "a photograph study of Rachel Gurney with wings both arms folded over each other leaning on ledge", from the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House. The band continued the tradition of using Roman numerals to denote the release year, MCMLXXXVIII, this time appearing vertically on the album cover.
Opening the album is a cover of Mike Oldfield's "Tubular Bells", originally made famous as the theme from the horror movie The Exorcist. For the track, the band sampled Lauren Roselli channeling Linda Blair's role as Regan, crying "Mother, make it stop!" It flows seamlessly into the second track on the album, the first single, "Pretty Boys And Pretty Girls". The two tracks were also remixed into a 14:25 minute extended medley version for the single.
The second single was the album's title track, "Lullaby", featuring a galloping bassline, bagpipe drones and solo, lullaby vocal harmonies, and lush strings by a string section of 20 Juilliard students. The song peaked at no. 27 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play Chart and spent seven weeks on the chart. Over time, the track has become one of Book of Love's signature songs among their catalogue.
The band had intended to tour in the fall of 1988, but the illness of a band member delayed the tour until 1989. In late December 1988, the band played several warm up shows including N.Y.C., five dates in Texas, and Norman, Oklahoma on January 2, 1989.
To promote Lullaby, the band headlined their own Lullaby Tour of clubs in the spring of 1989 with various local acts opening in each city. The band's U.S. tour lasted for four months, with dates spanning February 23 through June 29, 1989. The band took two weeks out of their tour schedule in mid-April to remix the track "Witchcraft", and another week in May to edit the song for the next single.
The third and final single taken from the album was "Witchcraft" and released July 15, 1989. It was the only single from the album that failed to make the Billboard charts. The track samples the classic 60's TV series Bewitched, and also contains a chant of names of the witches/characters from the show..."Enchantra, Endora, Tabitha, Esmerelda, Clara, Hagatha". The song features quirky deadpan rap-style vocals from Susan Ottaviano, Jade Lee, and Lauren Roselli, incanting the ingredients for a love potion. When performing the song on the Lullaby Tour, the band donned witches' hats, making it a fan favorite of the band's live shows.
In 1990, the album track "With A Little Love" was re-recorded and remixed by Ben Grosse, and released on the "Alice Everyday" single as the '1990 Version'. The new version is more synthesized, and omits the cathedral organ altogether, as well as the female vocal part of "love, love, love" in the midsection.
Reflecting on the album in 2009, Ted Ottaviano stated, "Everyone deems our first album as 'our moment', but Lullaby was our only CHR record. We had the most amount of fanfare with our second album as well as our biggest tour. Our own tour, in fact."..."I remember the plane ride home from Berlin to New York, after having mixed the album at Hansa, after six months of being in this Lullaby-bubble, working on the album day and night. I was sitting there in my seat, listening to the finished album on my Walkman, thinking, 'I'm not sure if we got it.' There was something so unbelievably pure and instinctually simple about the first album. There were growing pains with Lullaby."
In 2009, Lullaby was remastered and reissued by Collector's Choice/Noble Rot Records. The reissue featured five bonus rare remixes : "Pretty Girls And Pretty Boys", "Tubular Bells"/"Pretty Boys And Pretty Girls", "Lullaby", "Witchcraft", and "Enchantra".

Release and reception

Lullaby was released on June 21, 1988, with ten tracks, featuring "a polished collection of well-crafted pop songs". Lullaby spent ten weeks on the Billboard 200, peaking at No. 156, the highest album placement of their career. Three singles were culled from the album: "Pretty Boys And Pretty Girls" in 1988, and "Lullaby" and "Witchcraft" in 1989.
AllMusic gave the album an editor rating of 2.5 stars out of 5, with William Ruhlmann's critique on the choice of producer, "Producer Flood brought his ominous, beat-heavy approach to the group's already street-smart disco persona, with the result that tracks like "Pretty Boys And Pretty Girls" had an urgency lacking on the more pop-oriented debut. This was not, however, the way to break Book of Love beyond the dance clubs, and Lullaby did little to advance their career."
PopMatters gave the reissue of Lullaby a 7/10, a tie score with their eponymous debut, Book of Love. Associate Music Editor Christel Loar noted, "By the release of 1988’s Lullaby, Book of Love’s signature sound had been distilled into pure sonic silver, and nowhere was this more apparent than on the opening track, a remake of “Tubular Bells”, the theme from The Exorcist."

Track listing

Personnel

Additional personnel:
Reissue credits:

Album

Singles

"—" denotes a release that did not chart.