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June 17, 2025

#254 The Best Album of 1989, Round 1 Match #17: The Cure vs. Cher

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Hey folks!

First pic: We see the face of The Cure singer Robert Smith, with pale white skin, black hair, black eyeshadow, and red lips. (He's one of the most Gothiest men alive.) Around him are images of flowers. The photo has a sense of distortion, because I believe it's actually a projection onto a wall or another surface.  Second pic: A painting of Cher sitting next to a large heart-shaped stone. Cher is wearing a white dress that is cinched at the waist, creating a number of folds. The stone heart has a series of cracks running through it. With the way everything is arranged, it creates the image of a skull: the stone heart is the head part of the skull, Cher's face makes the eye, and the cinched folds of her dress make the teeth.
The Cure, DISINTEGRATION vs. Cher, HEART OF STONE.

Today’s Best Album of 1989 match is:

#4 The Cure, DISINTEGRATION

Listen on Spotify or YouTube

vs.

#125 Cher, HEART OF STONE

Listen on Spotify or YouTube

To vote, follow this link to the Google Form. You will need a Google login to vote. If you can’t or won’t have one, let me know ASAP (either through this newsletter, my email [kentmbeeson@hey.com] or on the Best Album Brackets Bluesky account) and I’ll see what I can do.

Today we have a Designated Cheerleader for DISINTEGRATION, and it’s from @kevinalexander.bsky.social. Take it away, Kevin!

I’ll save everyone some time: Disintegration is one of my Desert Island Discs. Some Cure fans will swear by a record like 17 Seconds. For others The Head on the Door is a hill they’re willing to die on. A chaos agent or two might even throw a vote in for Wild Mood Swings.

Me? It’s this record, and it’s not even close.

Last fall, as Sam Colt and I wrapped up or top 100 records of all time, I slotted Disintegration in at #4. Nothing has changed in the ensuing months. I’m resharing that blurb in full below:

Do kids these days still go through their “Cure phase?” Growing up, it just seemed like something you were supposed to do, even if you weren't feeling particularly miserable. There was always a bit of irony there.

Robert Smith was feeling down when recording this began. He felt pressure to follow up on the success Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me had brought, and he was disillusioned with the band’s newfound popularity. He escaped those closing walls by taking a lot of LSD. Disintegration was every bit a group effort, but the result feels like we’re on one of Smith’s trips.

This was Sam’s #38 pick, and he wrote that he “…threw on some headphones and was blown away by how big everything sounded…” I’m not sure when Sam first put this record on, but I can tell you my first impression was almost the same. Even when they wandered a bit, the band’s previous records felt (relatively) compact. This was much more sprawling. Languid in parts, haunting in others. It was—and is—a sonic kaleidoscope, “Plainsong” especially. “Fascination Street” feels like the most on-brand track on the album, and even that sounds like new ground. The title track’s riff is as good as any the band ever recorded. The shattering of a mind never sounded so catchy.

For my part, I described the record as “A masterpiece. Gorgeous, lush music from the elder statesmen of the alternative/goth/whatever world. Reach into the bag and pick whatever superlative you want; they all fit. It was a record so good that one of their best tracks from that era (“2 Late”) was relegated to being a B-side. Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me was one of the first CDs I ever bought. Growing up, I had a poster of Head on the Door in my bedroom. But if the house is on fire, this is the record I’m grabbing.”

In that same issue, I named Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On my #36 pick, which, according to Sam, was an act of war. It became the yardstick against which every one of my future picks would be compared. I feel the same way with Sam “only” rating this #38. Gaye was looking to heal a splintered world. Smith was looking to heal his splintered mind. Both wound up delivering the best work of their careers.

At any rate, I think it’s pretty clear that we both hold this record in high regard—and rightly so. It remains the band’s magnum opus. Start here if you're looking for a definitive record by The Cure.

Smith was uncomfortable with the band's newfound popularity and wound up making one of their most significant records. Disintegration also had a love letter to Smith’s wife (“Lovesong”) that became one of their biggest hits, peaking at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100. That’s some next-level irony.

As for me? I’m pushing 50 and am still in my “Cure phase.”

Click here to see the current results for the entire tournament, and click here to see the current results for the prediction bracket contest.

Yesterday, #41 Mekons, THE MEKONS ROCK N' ROLL defeated #88 Slint, TWEEZ 92-34-2.

Thanks for reading, voting, and subscribing!

Kent

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