Barnes & Noble
Retracted farewells aside, this seminal British group have proven the most enduring of Britain's Class of '76, tweaking their goth-punk image with alternate doses of drama and humor, and exerting an influence on several waves of descendants. And while their hits have been repackaged on both best-of and live discs, their trove of lesser-known material is just as intriguing -- as borne out by this four-disc box set. Join the Dots goes back as far as the band itself, kicking off with "10: 15 Saturday Night," the B-side to the Cure's first single, "Killing an Arab." The darkness of Robert Smith's earliest days as a writer is well documented in songs like "Splintered in Her Head" and "I'm Cold," and the band's pulsing insistency captured perfectly on the instrumental "Another Journey by Train." As the years progressed, the band changed tenor -- and members -- in dramatic fashion, leaping into surprisingly upbeat pop via songs like "Hey You!!!" and "How Beautiful You Are," the latter of which was tucked onto the back of "Hot Hot Hot." A smattering of covers -- including three versions of the Doors' "Hello I Love You" and a pair of takes on Jimi Hendrix's "Purple Haze" -- aren't as compelling as the goodly number of self-revisions. Of those, a radical, previously unreleased remix of the Wish album track "Doing the Unstuck" and an acoustic rendition of the more recent "Signal to Noise" stand out the most. The set is packaged with an 80-page book, featuring song-by-song notes by Smith and longtime compatriot Simon Gallup, as well as a slew of rare photos. It's a truly exhaustive chronicle of a band that has stood the test of time. David Sprague
All Music Guide
Normally speaking, a box set of nothing but B-sides and unreleased tracks would only be of interest to rabid fans, but the Cure have never really been a "normal" band. While their longevity alone -- nearly 25 years -- is certainly the most obvious clue to their uniqueness, Robert Smith's true charm lies in his ability to craft memorable songs that inspire nothing less than emotional fervor in his and the band's fans. Over the years, the band's singles have achieved high sales and chart placings in numerous countries while the albums have become icons in themselves, with thousands of once gloomy teenagers being able to remember things based on when, say, Disintegration or Wish hit stores. While this successful output would usually be enough to cement a band's place in the big picture, Smith is also blessed with the ability to compile his work in a fashion that is second to none. For example, one of the best moves that he and the band made was back in 1986, when they decided to pad the cassette release of their 1986 singles collection Staring at the Sea with most of the B-sides dating back from 1978 (the remaining B-sides from the era were collected on the Japanese Whispers LP). Now in most cases, this would have been a minor annoyance, pulling away from the strength of the singles (and those singles were not only strong, but incredibly diverse) and filling space with songs that are put on the backs of singles for a reason. But in this case, the Cure were just as good (and in some cases more outlandish) at making B-sides as they were hits. Unfortunately, when it came time for the Cure to do it again in 1997 with the Galore collection, the B-sides were nowhere to be found. While neophytes may not have even noticed, those in the know were disappointed, to say the least. Where was "A Japanese Dream" or "Harold & Joe" or "2 Late"? Subsequently, fans had to hunt down singles, soundtracks, and compilations for these gems, while others were left in the dark as to what the band wasn't making readily available.
So it's a blessing that the Cure's long and happy relationship with Fiction records came to an end. Wisely, the band decided to start fresh upon signing with their new label by cleaning house, remastering the old albums, and bringing their fans Join the Dots: B-Sides & Rarities, 1978-2001. Not only is it the ultimate companion to the official releases, but it is, in a way, the new-super-deluxe-updated version of that cassette release of Staring at the Sea. Every B-side is included, in order, with cleaned-up sound, liner notes, and explanations by the man who made it all happen. All tracks, from "10.15 Saturday Night" (the B-side to the debut single "Killing an Arab") to covers of "Hello I Love You," "Purple Haze," and "World in My Eyes," to entries from the Bloodflowers singles, are an indication that while the Cure made both strong albums and singles, they were not afraid to experiment along the way, and more importantly, they didn't let pride keep them from not making them available to those who were willing to look for them. Their growth as a band can be fully tracked in the songs here. The wild development on disc one (which includes the B-sides from the Staring at the Sea cassette, the B-sides from the Boys Don't Cry re-release from 1986, and the Japanese Whispers B-sides, as well as the extremely rare "Lament" [flexi-disc version]) is easily their strongest and most diverse era, with Smith growing artistically and musically in leaps and bounds from track to track. The rampant growth eventually gives way to the dark and heavy pop of the B-sides of Kiss me, Kiss me, Kiss me, Disintegration, and Mixed Up on disc two. While the songs are strong on this second disc, they manage to have less of the wild, experimental abandon that disc one has. The Cure began to find a real niche by this point, and by disc three, the dream pop of the late '80s had developed into the stadium-sized gloom and doom that characterized 1992's Wish, their critical and commercial peak. Eventually the band's output would become more sporadic, and the level of consistency would be more of a trademark of the band than the experimentalism of old. Disc four, which covers the time from Wild Mood Swings to Bloodflowers (and the admittedly odd Greatest Hits collection), is the "weakest" of the collection, but there are still great moments to be found, with many remixes that give the original tracks a new interpretation. There are those who would argue that the band grew, and other would argue that it fell apart, yet there is no denying that the majority of work on Join the Dots is extraordinarily strong. It admittedly may be a bit too much for someone who isn't quite a big devotee of the band, but it's a veritable godsend for those who've been waiting for this for years. No jumbled, out-of-order track listings, no glaring omissions (it's safe to say that the reissues of the albums will take care of any extra tracks, mixes, and miscellanea, lying around) -- it's exactly what a rarities/B-sides collection should be. Join the Dots: B-Sides & Rarities, 1978-2001 is proof that, while the band may falter from time to time -- as most do -- the Cure have, unlike most, really been paying attention to their fans' needs over the years. Thank Rob for that. Chris True
Tracks
An aptly decadent box of obscurities. Andy Greenwald