Following their critically acclaimed Creation Records’ debut, The House Of Love signed to Fontana and embarked on four years of non-stop recording and touring that would take them into the mainstream. Produced in association with founder, frontman and principle songwriter Guy Chadwick, ‘Burn Down The World’ takes an in-depth look at that period in the band’s career, both in the studio and onstage. Featuring countless never before heard demos, lost tracks and live recordings sourced from Fontana’s archive, alongside rare fan club-only releases, compilation appearances, promotional versions and tracks never before available on CD, and accompanied by the thoughts of Guy Chadwick, ‘Burn Down The World’ sheds new light and insight on a rollercoaster ride which took House Of Love from indie darlings to mainstream globetrotters.
Anthology is a compilation of rare demos and live recordings by House of Lords, released on October 14, 2008. The album was mixed and produced by the band's original drummer Ken Mary. Begun as one of Gene Simmons pet projects for the record label bearing his name, House Of Lords (originally known as Giuffria) has been producing what has become known as AOR/melodic rock for over 20 years. The House Of Lords trademark sound combines the swagger of late '80s Whitesnake with the mystical power of Tony Martin-era Black Sabbath, and now the Lords' solid catalog gets a retrospective treatment with a well-deserved Anthology.
Four-hour, 3-CD overview of the American music scene in 1967. A dazzling cornucopia of psychedelia, garage punk, folk-rock and sunshine pop that acted as the soundtrack to the Summer of Love (US division).
The Best of Everything but the Girl is divided between selections from their early records and remixes of '90s hits such as "Missing." Consequently, the album draws a slightly misleading portrait of their career, yet it still functions as an excellent introduction to the band, since it features many of their best songs, including "Apron Strings."