| Tears for Fears |

|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Bath,
England |
| Genre(s) |
New Wave, Synthpop, Psychedelic
Rock |
| Years active |
1981 – present |
| Label(s) |
New Door, Gut, Phonogram,
Mercury, Universal |
| Website |
Tears
for Fears.net |
| Members |
Roland
Orzabal
Curt
Smith |
| Former members |
Ian
Stanley
Manny
Elias
Peripheral members:
Oleta
Adams
Chris Hughes
Neil Taylor
Mel
Collins
Nicky Holland
Alan Griffiths
Charlton Pettus |
Tears for Fears (abbreviated TFF)
are a popular English
pop
band formed in the early 1980s by Roland Orzabal and Curt
Smith, which emerged after the dissolution of their first
band, the mod-influenced Graduate.
They were initially associated with New
Wave and the burgeoning wave of synthesiser bands of the early 1980s,
but quickly branched out into mainstream chart success.
Tears for Fears have sold more than 21 million albums worldwide
(including over 8 million in the USA alone).
|
Contents
- 1 Career
- 1.1 Formation
- 1.2 Derivation
of band name
- 2 Eras
and albums
- 2.1 The
Hurting and first international successes
- 2.2 Songs
from the Big Chair and worldwide fame
- 2.3 Live
Aid controversy
- 2.4 The
Seeds of Love and the end of an era
- 2.5 Breakup
and solo careers
- 2.6 Second
line-up and Elemental / Raoul & The Kings Of Spain
- 2.7 Remastering
- 2.8 Reunion:
Everybody Loves a Happy Ending
- 3 Impact
and influence
- 4 Discography
- 5 See
also
- 6 External
links
|
Career
Formation
Orzabal and Smith met as teenagers in their home town of Bath,
England. Their first professional stint came with the band Graduate,
a Mod
Revival/New Wave act drawing on the major influences of the time,
including The
Jam and Elvis Costello. In 1980,
Graduate released an album, Acting My Age,
which just missed the Top 100 in the UK though it performed well in Spain and in the Netherlands.
By 1981, Orzabal and Smith were becoming more influenced by
artists such as the Talking Heads, Peter
Gabriel and Brian Eno. They departed from
Graduate and formed a band called History of Headaches, a moniker which
was then changed to Tears for Fears. The plan was for Orzabal and Smith
to form the nucleus of the group and bring in surrounding musicians to
help them complete the picture.
Tears for Fears were signed to Phonogram
Records, UK in 1981 by A&R manager Dave Bates. Their first
single as Tears for Fears, "Suffer the Children" (produced by David
Lord), was released on that label in November 1981, followed by the
first edition of "Pale Shelter" (produced by Mike
Howlett) in March 1982.
Derivation of band name
The band's name is derived from the Primal
therapy treatment of the same name developed by Arthur
Janov, which was made famous after John
Lennon became Janov's patient. While undergoing primal
therapy, a patient is encouraged to "re-experience" his early, dramatic
emotional states (even perinatal ones), including screaming like
an infant, hence the expression "tears for fears". Orzabal tried primal
therapy in the early 1980s, although Smith never did, and neither
returned to the treatment after that time.
In a 2004 interview with VH1 UK, Orzabal and Smith said that when they
finally met Janov in the mid-80s, they were disillusioned to find that
he had become quite "Hollywood" and wanted the band to write a musical
about primal therapy.
Eras and albums
The Hurting
and first international successes
Album cover of The Hurting
(1983).
The band's single "Mad World" hit the top 3 in the UK in November 1982. Their
first album, The Hurting, was
released in March 1983. For this LP (and the next), keyboard
player and composer Ian Stanley and drummer Manny
Elias were considered full members of the band, though Smith
and Orzabal were still essentially the frontmen and public face of the
band.
The album, produced by Chris Hughes and Ross Cullum, showcased
synthesizer-based
songs with lyrics reflecting Orzabal's bitter childhood and upbringing.
The
Hurting can be considered Tears for Fears' only
true concept
album, as references to emotional distress and primal
therapy are found in nearly every song. The album itself was a big
success and had a lengthy chart run (65 weeks) in the UK, where it
reached no.1 - also reaching the Top 20 in several
countries and yielded the international hit singles "Mad World", "Change", and a
re-recorded version of "Pale Shelter" (all of which were top 5
in the UK).
Towards the end of 1983 the record company released a new,
slightly more abstract single, "The Way You Are", to keep the band in
the public eye while they worked on their second album. The single was
a top 30 hit in the UK, but did not come close to matching the success
of their three previous hits, despite a national concert tour in
December of that year (captured on the "In My Mind's Eye" live video
release). The single, which heavily featured sampling and programmed
rhythms, led to a departure in Tears for Fears' musical approach. In
the liner notes to their B-sides album "Saturnine, Martial
and Lunatic" they wrote that "this was the point we realised we had to
change direction", although the somewhat experimental style of the
single continued to be reflected to some extent in their forthcoming
B-sides.
Songs from the Big Chair
and worldwide fame
Album cover of
Songs from the Big Chair
(1985); with
Roland Orzabal (left) and Curt
Smith.
A change of direction was initially instigated as they began
working with a new producer, Jeremy Green, on their new single
"Mothers Talk" in early 1984, but the band were ultimately unhappy with
the results and so producer Chris Hughes was brought back into the fold
and the "Mothers Talk" single reproduced for release in August 1984. A
distinct departure from their earlier works, the single became a top 20
hit in the UK, but it was the follow-up single "Shout" (released in the
UK in November 1984) that was the real beginning of the band's golden
age.
This top 5 hit paved the way for the long-awaited second album
Songs from the Big Chair
(released in February 1985), which entered the UK album chart at no.2
and remained in the upper reaches of the chart for the next 12 months.
With this album, Orzabal and Smith lessened their preoccupation with pop
psychology and turned their attention to wider themes, including the global
politics of the Reagan-Thatcher
era. They did away with the predominantly synth-pop feel of the first
album, instead expanding into a more sophisticated sound that would
become the band's stylistic hallmark. Anchored around the creative hub
of producer Hughes, Stanley and Orzabal, the new Tears for Fears sound
helped to propel Songs from the Big Chair into
becoming one of the year's biggest global sellers and achieve
quintuple-platinum sales status in the U.S. (where it remained the no.1
album for five weeks).
The album's success was in conjunction to the array of hit
singles it yielded: "Mothers Talk" (the first to be released in the UK,
but the last to be released in the US in a remixed form), "Shout" (#4 UK, #1
in the U.S.,
Australia,
Canada, Germany, the Netherlands,
Switzerland,
etc., and a huge hit in other territories, in fact one of the biggest
of the eighties),
"Everybody Wants to
Rule the World", (their biggest UK hit at #2 and another #1 in
the U.S.), "Head Over
Heels" (UK #12, US #3) and "I Believe (A
Soulful Re-Recording)" (UK #23). Some territories even saw the release
of limited edition 10" singles for
these hits, in addition to the regular 7" and 12" formats.
Following the album's release, the band went on a world tour
that lasted most of the year. During this tour, Orzabal
and Smith
discovered an American female singer/pianist, Oleta
Adams, who was performing in a Kansas
City, Missouri
hotel bar, with whom they invited to collaborate on their next album.
The album's title was inspired by the book and television
mini-series Sybil, the chronicle of a woman
with multiple personality
disorder who sought refuge in her analyst's "big chair", Orzabal and
Smith stating that they felt each of the album's songs had a
distinctive personality of its own. The band also released a video
collection/documentary entitled "Scenes From The Big Chair" the same
year, while their first two earliest singles were re-released, both
reaching the UK
Top 75. In 1986, upon completion of the lengthy and exhausting Big
Chair world tour, Manny Elias left the group.
Also in 1986, Orzabal and Stanley collaborated together on a
side project named "Mancrab". They released one single, "Fish For
Life", which was written for the soundtrack of the film "The Karate Kid, Part II".
The track was written and produced by Orzabal and Stanley, and
featuring vocals by US singer/dancer Eddie Thomas.
Live Aid controversy
Album cover of Everybody Wants to
Run the World (1986).
In 1985, a controversy broke out in regard to the band's plan
to participate in Bob Geldof's Live Aid
charity event. Tears for Fears was originally scheduled to perform at JFK
Stadium in Philadelphia; however, on the morning
of the historic event, July 13, 1985, it was announced that Tears for Fears had
pulled out of the show. The official reason given for their
non-appearance was that two of their backing musicians had quit -
guitarist Andrew Saunders and saxophonist Will
Gregory, due to the expiration of their contract. Instead, in
place of appearing, the band pledged to donate proceeds from their
world tour played in Tokyo,
Sydney, London and New York.
In 1986, a slightly rewritten version of one of their biggest
hits was recorded and released for the British
fund-raising
initiative Sport
Aid, a splinter project of Band Aid in which people took part
in running races of varying length and seriousness to raise more money
for African projects. The slogan was "I Ran the World"; therefore Tears
for Fears released "Everybody Wants To Run The World" (#5 in the UK). They were indirectly
involved in the earlier Band Aid single "Do They Know It's
Christmas?" of 1984 which featured a slowed down sample
from their song "The Hurting" in the introduction.
The Seeds of Love
and the end of an era
Album cover of The Seeds of Love
(1989).
It was 1989 before the group released its third album, The
Seeds of Love (on which Ian Stanley appeared
for the last time as a TFF member), at a reported production cost of
over a million pounds. The album was written largely by Orzabal along
with keyboardist Nicky Holland, who had toured with the band on their
global 1985 "Big Chair" tour. Moving from various studios and using
various sets of producers, the band decided to take the reins
themselves with assistance from engineer Dave Bascombe. Much of the
material was recorded in jam-sessions and later edited down. The length
of the production left the band with lumbering debt and a
record-company eager to cash in on lost earnings. The album retained
the band's epic sound while showing increasing influences ranging from jazz and blues to The
Beatles, the last of which is evident in the hit single
"Sowing The Seeds of Love" - the first record ever played on Atlantic
252, the UK and Ireland Longwave Radio station. Another single was
"Woman In Chains" (Top 30 hit in the UK, in France, Italy, Netherlands,
Sweden,
etc.), on which Phil Collins played drums and
Oleta
Adams — whom Orzabal would later guide to a successful solo career —
shared vocals. The album was a big worldwide success again, entering
the UK album charts at no.1, making the Top 10 in
the US (though charting lower there than its multi-platinum
predecessor) and in numerous countries, and eventually going on to sell
millions of copies worldwide. The band set out on an extensive "Seeds
of Love" tour sponsored by Philips to start recovering the debt
incurred. The show would be captured on the "Going to California" video
as the singles "Advice For The Young At Heart" and "Famous Last Words"
delivered some moderate chart success.
A 64-page companion book, simply titled "Tears for Fears - The
Seeds of Love", was released by Virgin Books in 1990 and offered
extensive insight from Orzabal, Holland and Adams into the songwriting
and production process for the album, as well as the musical scores for
each track and rare promotional photographs from the era.
Breakup and solo careers
Album cover of Tears Roll
Down (Greatest Hits 82-92) (1992).
After The Seeds of Love,
Orzabal and Smith had an extremely acrimonious falling out. Though only
in their late twenties, the two had been in the musical spotlight for
nearly a decade. Moreover, they were no longer the angst-ridden
teenagers they had been when they first met. The split was blamed on
Orzabal's intricate but frustrating approach to production and Smith's
desire to slow down the pace of their work. As well, Smith had also
been deeply affected by the breakdown of his marriage to Lynn Altman,
whom he had met in his teens. Orzabal kept the band name alive by
releasing the 1992 hit single "Laid So Low (Tears Roll Down)" in order
to promote the greatest hits collection Tears Roll
Down (Greatest Hits 82-92) which featured every
top 40 hit single to date apart from "The Way You Are" and the Sport
Aid fundraiser. Over the course of the 1990s, Curt and Roland would
launch thinly-veiled attacks on each other via their music.
Smith relocated to New York City and took several years
to recover from the spotlight. In 1993 he recorded the album Soul On Board.
The album was subsequently a commercial failure and Smith himself has
said on numerous occasions that he despised it, alleging that he only
made it in order to fulfill his recording
contract. In 1995 he met local songwriter and producer Charlton Pettus.
The two formed a self-described "organic" partnership, writing simple,
melody-based songs and recording them at home on vintage analogue
equipment.
From 1996 to 1998 their band, Mayfield,
performed occasional sets in clubs throughout Greenwich
Village and SoHo
including Brownie's, the Mercury Lounge, and CBGB. The band's name
is actually a play on the name Curtis Mayfield (i.e.: "Curt is
Mayfield"). As a live band, Mayfield performed with minimal production
and no commercial obligations, and Smith's sense of musicianship was
rekindled for the first time since his teenage years.
Eschewing major record labels, Smith formed
his own label, Zerodisc, to release
Mayfield's music, and was an early advocate of using the internet to
share and distribute music outside the mainstream industry. The
Mayfield album was released online in 1997, and released to stores in
1998. A second album, Aeroplane
(released as Curt Smith rather than "Mayfield"), was released in 1999,
showcasing the songs written during Mayfield's club days as well as new
renditions of a couple of TFF classics. Smith also took on the
management or co-management of several independent bands and musicians.
Smith cut nine demos for another solo album, Halfway,
Pleased, in 2002. After making the demo tracks available on
his web site, he set the project aside for several years until the
recording and promotion for 'Everybody Loves a
Happy Ending' had run its course. One of the Halfway Pleased
tracks, "Who You Are", was recorded for Happy Ending
in a slightly different version. Halfway, Pleased
was mastered by Tim Palmer in 2006 and released on French
label XIII Bis Records in April 2007. On
the web site for the album, Smith included prose stories behind two of
the songs, revealing the title track to be a memoir of his mother's postnatal
depression and Perfect Day to be the final thoughts
of a fictional suicide bomber.
Second line-up and Elemental
/ Raoul & The Kings Of Spain
(1993).]]
In 1993, Orzabal (still under the name Tears for Fears)
released the album Elemental
together with longtime collaborator Alan Griffiths and co-producer Tim
Palmer. It yielded the international hit "Break It Down Again" (Top 20
in the UK, France, Italy, the Netherlands,
etc.) and was supported with a successful U.S. college tour, where
"Break It Down Again" reached #25.
Despite being regarded by some faithful as "an album without
Smith", many found this LP to be an enjoyable blend of good songwriting
and creative production. The album was top 5 in the UK and France and
top 30 in several other countries. It charted considerably lower in the
US than the previous two studio albums, though was still certified Gold
status for sales of over half a million copies there. The singles
"Cold", "Elemental" and "Goodnight Song" met with minor chart success
in certain territories.
Orzabal, still working with Griffiths and Palmer, released another
Tears for Fears album in 1995, Raoul and the Kings of
Spain, a more contemplative work that delved
into his own Spanish heritage and showed a new Latin musical
influence (Raoul was originally the name Orzabal's parents wanted to
give him, and is also the name of his own first son). Orzabal stated
that it was not a concept album but that there was a theme, namely that
of familial relationships. Although it continued Tears for Fears'
legacy of outstanding songwriting, big production
values, and varied influences, the album was not a commercial success
by Tears for Fears standards, though minor chart success came via the
single release of the title track (top 40 in the UK) and (to a
lesser extent) the single "God's Mistake". Raoul And The
Kings Of Spain also included a reunion with Oleta
Adams who collaborated with Orzabal on the track "Me And My Big Ideas".
A worldwide tour, which included a frenzied welcome in Latin
America, had the effect of straining Orzabal's energies rather than
supporting them. The release of Raoul was delayed
for nearly a year due to a last-minute label switch from Mercury
to Epic,
and the ensuing confusion (Mercury had already begun promotion) did not
help the album's chances either. Although the tracklisting for the
album had been changed at the record company's request, Sony did not extend
Tears for Fears' contract.
In 1996 a B-sides collection, Saturnine Martial
& Lunatic, was released on Mercury,
which included B-sides and some rare tracks from the successful 1982-93
period. The liner notes by Orzabal and Hughes gave fans an insight into
the songwriting process as well as a rare glimpse of self-deprecating
humour regarding the tracks which they would rather forget.
Remastering
In 1999, Mercury Records released remastered editions of Tears
for Fears' first three albums which included B-sides, remixes, and
extended versions. Supervised by producer Chris Hughes it proved to be
a meticulous effort bringing new clarity to the recordings. As with Saturnine,
the liner notes provided rich background and new insights into the
music to even longtime fans. The remasters also had the effect of
establishing Tears for Fears as definitive artists, helping them to
escape the dreaded "80s band" moniker.
The dizzying array of record company mergers and acquisitions in
the late 1990s eventually placed Tears for Fears' back catalogue into
the Universal fold.
After undertaking production work (and some songwriting) for Icelandic
singer/songwriter Emiliana Torrini on her acclaimed
1999 album "Love In The Time Of Science", Orzabal reteamed with
Griffiths and released the album Tomcats Screaming Outside,
released on Eagle Records as a solo
project under his own name. Whereas Tears for Fears' work had become
guitar-based, Tomcats Screaming Outside showcased a
predominantly electronic style and a darker approach. The album was
released in April 2001 in the UK and Europe, but had the unfortunate
coincidence to be released on September 11, 2001 in the US, the
same day the United States experienced its worst-ever terrorist attack, and
ultimately drew little notice outside the group's core fan
base.
Reunion: Everybody
Loves a Happy Ending
Album cover of Everybody Loves a
Happy Ending (2004).
In 2000, routine paperwork obligations led to Orzabal and
Smith's first conversation in almost a decade. The two patched up their
differences and Orzabal flew to Smith's home in Los
Angeles for what they assumed would be a hesitant attempt at
songwriting.
The songwriting sessions, which included Charlton Pettus, Smith's
collaborator from the Mayfield years, went so well that fourteen songs
were written and recorded in less than six months. The ensuing album, Everybody Loves a
Happy Ending, is in many ways a natural
successor to The Seeds of Love, featuring vibrant
Beatles-esque melodies, solid songwriting, and turns of phrase, but the
album also has a free spirit that Orzabal and Smith would
have shunned in their earlier, more serious years. This spirit is
largely the work of co-writer and producer Charlton Pettus, who
succeeded at the formidable task of welding Orzabal's lush songwriting
with the live energy of Smith's Mayfield shows. Indeed, one of the
highest compliments paid to the album was one reviewer's comment that "John
Lennon and Paul McCartney are alive
and well."
The twelve-track album was scheduled for release on Arista
Records in late 2003, but a change in management at Arista led to a
last-minute label switch to New
Door, a new offshoot of Universal, and delayed the release until September
14, 2004.
Two successful U.S. tours followed. The 2004 tour included an
unrehearsed guest appearance by Oleta Adams at the Kansas
City show for a performance of "Woman in Chains".
Everybody Loves a
Happy Ending was released in the UK and Europe in March
2005 on Gut
Records, shortly after the comeback single "Closest Thing To Heaven"
became the first Tears for Fears UK
Top 40 hit in a decade. The promo video for the single was a colourful
fantasy, featuring Hollywood actress Brittany
Murphy riding in a hot air balloon. The European
releases of the album contained all fourteen tracks written and
recorded during the ELAHE sessions. A brief tour of larger UK venues followed in
April.
A performance at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris, recorded in
June 2005, was released on CD
and DVD in France and Benelux, as Secret
World Live in Paris on the XIII Bis label in
early 2006 and became an instant bestseller, with over 70,000 physical
copies sold in addition to downloads. The CD contained one new studio
song, "Floating Down the River", and a remastered Mayfield track, "What
Are We Fighting For?". The relationship with XIII Bis proved so
successful that Smith chose the comparatively small French label to
release his 2007 solo album, Halfway, Pleased.
In 2006, the classic Songs from the Big Chair
album got the deluxe treatment with additional B-sides and rarities
added, expanding even further from the 1999 remastered version. The
release was presented with care and did not include the lyrics as the
artists had intended with the original release, but came with a 24 page
booklet including rare photographs and newly written liner notes. The
two-disc set contained four sections, including one with the album
taken from the original remasters from 1999. It also included the piano
version of "The Working Hour" which had previously only been available
as a rare promotional item, as well as
numerous B-sides, and the 7" versions of the singles (including the
aforementioned "The Way You Are" and the 1986 US remix of "Mothers
Talk"). The last section showed the true 80s effect of five remixes,
heavily reliant on sequencers, sampling and programming.
In 2005 the band began discussions for the release of an
anthology which would be issued with their own involvement, as opposed
to the frequent release of numerous greatest hits collections,
compilations, DVDs, and repackaged reissues of the same which are
usually issued by record companies without the band's involvement or
blessing. Despite best intentions, record company backtracking delayed
the release until 2006, by which time the release was an unremarkable
compilation issued as part of Hip-O's generic "Gold" series and not a
true anthology.
The band played the Night of the Proms festival in
Belgium and the Netherlands in 2006 and Belgium, France, and Spain in
2007.
Impact and influence
Musical legacy
In the song "In Love With the 80s (Pink Tux to the Prom)", rock band Relient K
pays tribute to Tears for Fears with a line in the chorus, "And my
favorite band will always be Tears for Fears".
In an appearance on the UK television programme Saturday
Superstore on 7 December 1985, Paul McCartney stated that his current
favourite band at that time were none other than Tears for Fears.
Their song "Everybody Wants to
Rule the World" was the theme song for Dennis
Miller's HBO
show Dennis Miller Live and was
featured in the 1985 comedy film Real
Genius and in the opening titles for the 1992 British dramedy Peter's
Friends starring Kenneth Branagh and Emma
Thompson, as well as the 1997 comedy Romy and
Michelle's High School Reunion starring Lisa
Kudrow and Mira Sorvino. It can also be heard in
the background during a scene in the 2006 comedy Click.
This song also appears in the episode Everybody Hates A
Part-Time Job of the TV series Everybody
Hates Chris.
Shawn (James Roday) and Gus (Dulé Hill)
"cover" TFF's "Shout" in American Duo,
the Season 2 premiere episode of the USA Network series Psych, Shawn as Roland
Orzabal and Gus as Michael Jackson.
A haunting cover of "Mad World" by Michael Andrews and Gary Jules
was featured on the soundtrack to the cult film Donnie
Darko and reached UK
Number 1 spot for Christmas 2003. "Head Over Heels" was also
used in the film. Despite chart-topping success in the USA, Tears for Fears
themselves had yet to reach the top spot in their native country. The
timing of the Gary Jules "Mad World" cover led many critics to accuse
Tears for Fears of reforming to capitalise financially on the single's
success, when in fact they had reformed years before the cover was
recorded.
The success of the single also led to the re-emergence of the Tears
Roll Down greatest hits album, which returned to the UK top
ten and spent eight weeks in the album chart, a dozen years after its
release.
This same cover of "Mad World" is also used in a
trailer for the Xbox
360 game Gears of War and caused the song to
become number one for a time on the iTunes
music store.[1]
On Disturbed's
first album, The Sickness,
they covered "Shout".
The song Pale Shelter is featured in the 2002 PlayStation
2 videogame
Grand Theft Auto: Vice
City as part of the New wave radio station Wave 103.
In early 2004, Universal Music reprinted the first
three albums for sale in the UK following the success of the
Andrews/Jules cover.
Everybody Wants to
Rule the World was covered by Isha on her album Time and Again
in 2004, and by JamisonParker for the CD Punk
Goes 80's in 2005.
In a nod to quantum physics, the band recorded a
b-side called Schrödinger's Cat,
and there is a lyrical reference in God's Mistake
to Einstein's
famous quote, "God
does not play dice."
Metalcore
band Evergreen Terrace covered the song
Mad World on their album Writer's Block.
Australian
electro rock band Rogue
Traders included the melody from 'Head over Heels' in their 2006 hit 'In Love Again'
which received heavy radio play in Australia in 2006 / 2007.
Punk rock legend Patti Smith covered "Everybody Wants To
Rule The World" on her album twelve.
Discography
For more details about the discography, see
Tears for Fears
discography.
Studio Albums:
- 1983 The Hurting
- 1985 Songs from the Big Chair
- 1989 The Seeds of Love
- 1993 Elemental
- 1995 Raoul and the Kings of
Spain
- 2004 Everybody Loves a
Happy Ending
Singles (single releases vary
according to territory):
- 1981 "Suffer The Children"
- 1982 "Pale Shelter
(You Don't Give Me Love)"
- 1982 "Mad World"
- 1983 "Change"
- 1983 "Pale Shelter" [re-recording]
- 1983 "The Way You
Are"
- 1984 "Mothers Talk"
- 1984 "Shout"
- 1985 "Everybody Wants to
Rule the World"
- 1985 "Head Over
Heels"
- 1985 "I Believe (A
Soulful Re-Recording)"
- 1986 "Everybody Wants to
Run the World"
- 1986 "Mothers Talk (US remix)"
- 1989 "Sowing the Seeds of Love"
- 1989 "Woman in Chains"
- 1990 "Advice for the Young
at Heart"
- 1990 "Famous Last Words"
- 1991 "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams" †
- 1992 "Laid So Low (Tears
Roll Down)"
- 1993 "Break It Down Again"
- 1993 "Cold"
- 1993 "Goodnight Song"
- 1994 "Elemental"
- 1995 "Raoul and the Kings of Spain"
- 1995 "Falling Down"
- 1995 "Secrets"
- 1996 "God's Mistake"
- 2005 "Closest Thing to Heaven"
- 2005 "Call Me Mellow/Everybody Loves a Happy Ending"
- 2006 "Secret World"
† though not formally released as Tears for Fears, this was
the B-side to "Advice for the Young at Heart", remixed by Fluke and
subsequently released on Tears for Fears official label.
Official compilations and Live-Albums:
- 1992 Tears Roll
Down (Greatest Hits 82-92)
- 1996 Saturnine Martial
& Lunatic
- 2001 Shout: The Very Best of Tears for Fears
(Only released in the US)
- 2006 Gold
- 2006 Secret World (Live
In Paris 2005)
- 2006 Songs from the Big Chair -
Deluxe Edition
Other compilations:
- 1986 Everybody Wants to Mix the World
(Remixes compilation released only in Argentina)
- 1991 Flip (B-sides compilation only
released in Japan)
- 2000 The Millennium Collection: The Best of Tears
for Fears
- 2001 Classic Tears for Fears
- 2001 The Working Hour: An Introduction to Tears
for Fears
- 2003 Tears for Fears: The Collection
- 2006 Sowing the Seeds of Love: The Best of Tears
for Fears
- 2007 Famous Last Words - The Collection
Videos and DVDs:
- 1983 The Videosingles (Mad World, Change, Pale
Shelter)
- 1984 In My Mind's Eye (Live at the London
Hammersmith Odeon)
- 1985 Scenes from the Big Chair
- 1990 Sowing the Seeds (The Seeds of Love
videosingles)
- 1990 Going to California (Live from Santa Barbara)
- 1992 Tears Roll Down (Greatest Hits 82-92)
- 2006 Secret World (Live in Paris 2005, incl. DVD)
Other Videos and DVDs:
- 1990 Tears for Fears: Live at Knebworth '90
(Change, Badman's Song, Everybody Wants to Rule the World)
- 2003/5 Tears for Fears - 20th century/Universal
Masters (two minor video collections that include some
post-1992 promos not available on the "Tears Roll Down" compilation)
See also
- List of
number-one hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)
- List
of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
- List of songs by
Tears for Fears
External links
|
Tears for Fears |
| Roland
Orzabal ·
Curt Smith
Ian
Stanley ·
Manny
Elias
Discography
Studio albums: The
Hurting ·
Songs from the Big Chair ·
The Seeds of Love ·
Elemental ·
Raoul and the Kings of
Spain ·
Everybody Loves a
Happy Ending
Compilations: Tears Roll
Down (Greatest Hits 82-92) ·
Saturnine Martial
& Lunatic
Live albums: Secret
World
Singles: Suffer the Children ·
Pale Shelter
(You Don't Give Me Love) ·
Mad
World ·
Change ·
Pale
Shelter ·
The Way You
Are ·
Mothers
Talk ·
Shout ·
Everybody Wants to
Rule the World ·
Head Over
Heels ·
I Believe (A
Soulful Re-Recording) ·
Everybody Wants to
Run the World ·
Sowing the Seeds of Love ·
Woman in Chains ·
Advice for the Young
at Heart ·
Famous
Last Words ·
Laid So Low (Tears
Roll Down) ·
Break It Down Again ·
Cold ·
Goodnight
Song ·
Elemental ·
Raoul
and the Kings of Spain ·
Gods Mistake ·
Secrets ·
Falling
Down ·
Closest Thing to Heaven ·
Everybody
Loves a Happy Ending / Call Me Mellow ·
Secret
World
|