"The Love Cats" | ||||
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Single by the Cure | ||||
B-side |
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Released | 21 October 1983 [1] | |||
Recorded | August 1983 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:33 | |||
Label | Fiction | |||
Songwriter(s) | Robert Smith | |||
Producer(s) |
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The Cure singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"The Love Cats" on YouTube |
"The Love Cats" (sometimes rendered as "The Lovecats") is a song by English rock band the Cure, released as a stand-alone single in October 1983.
It was the band's first top 10 hit in the UK, peaking at number 7. [4] It also reached number 6 on the Australian chart in early 1984. [5] The single later appeared on the compilation album Japanese Whispers , released in December 1983.
At the time the song was written, Robert Smith was very interested in the work of Australian author Patrick White. [6] According to a number of his fans, Smith was inspired to write "The Love Cats" after reading White's novel The Vivisector (1970), although this claim is difficult to verify. [7] [8] In the novel, the protagonist, Hurtle, is appalled when his lover's husband drowns a sack of stray cats. White draws a parallel between the way in which the cats are discarded, and the treatment of certain characters in the book; by extension, the cats symbolise the most innocent and vulnerable members of society, and the casual cruelty with which they sometimes meet their fate. [9]
The recording session took place in Paris at Studio Des Dames after the band had played a one-off concert in the west of France, in Brittany, in the commune of Saint-Jacut-les-Pins in August 1983. The band recorded other songs there also in jazz rock style, "Speak My Language" and "Mr. Pink Eyes": both ended up on the b-side of the 12-inch vinyl. A fourth track ("A Hand Inside My Mouth (Des Dames Studio Demo 8/83)") also recorded in the same session, surfaced in 2006 on The Top deluxe CD reissue.
The music video features a number of cats and a large lampshade falling on the head of bassist Phil Thornalley. There are many shots of a mansion which the band told a vendor they were interested in buying. They returned the keys in the morning. [10] Real cats were supposed to be used but after proving to be troublesome, taxidermied ones were used instead. [11]
Smith said of the video: "'The Love Cats' is far from being my favourite song: composed drunk, video filmed drunk, promotion made drunk. It was a joke." [12] The video features an early rough mix of the song done in Paris which is different from the one released on vinyl (the latter was done in London).
7"
UK & US 12"
Weekly charts
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