Dream Home Heartache

Dream Home Heartache
Studio album by Rozz Williams and Gitane Demone
Released 1995
Recorded Between March 28 and April 5, 1995, Netherlands
Genre
Label Triple X
Rozz Williams and Gitane Demone chronology
Every King a Bastard Son
(1992)Every King a Bastard Son1992
Dream Home Heartache
(1995)
The Whorse's Mouth
(1997)The Whorse's Mouth1997
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Dream Home Heartache is an experimental dark cabaret collaboration album featuring Rozz Williams and Gitane Demone, both former members of Christian Death. It was released in late 1995 by Triple X Records after being recorded between March 28 and April 5, 1995 in the Netherlands. Williams and Demone toured Europe and North America in support of the album, provoking a riot in Mexico City when fans were unable to enter the sold-out venue. The album is named after the Roxy Music song "In Every Dream Home a Heartache", a cover of which is the first and last track. The album features synthesisers, pianos and accordions, with cabaret-influenced (at times nearly a cappella) vocals.

The album has been described in print as "a stunning collection of bluesy cabaret songs",[2] "on the pretty side of goth", and as "quite possibly Williams' most appealing work outside of Christian Death."[1] Greg Fasolino, Katherine Yeske and Scott Ferguson, of alternative music magazine Trouser Press, describe the album as "a surreal experience that could be the score to some warped, shadowy Broadway musical".[3]

Track listing

Track Song Writer Length Notes
1 "In Every Dream Home a Heartache" Ferry 7:33 Cover of Roxy Music's song of the same name
2 "These Vulnerable Eyes" Demone, Rekvelt 3:46
3 "The Pope's Egg Hat" Rekfelt, Williams 5:11
4 "Manic Depression" Hendrix 6:03 Cover of Jimi Hendrix's song of the same name
5 "Flowers" Williams 6:07 Featured on Projekt Records' A Dark Cabaret[4]
6 "A World Apart" Gaumer, Rekvelt, Williams 3:48
7 "Moon Without a Tear" Demone 2:32
8 "In Every Dream Home a Heartache (Reprise)" Ferry 2:31 Cover of Roxy Music's song of the same name

References

  1. 1 2 Allmusic review
  2. "Rozz Williams: Singer was icon of goth-rock movement". The Ottawa Citizen (1998-4-11). p. B4.
  3. Fasolino, Greg; Yeske, Katherine; Ferguson, Scott. "Christian Death". TrouserPress.com. Accessed 2012-3-28.
  4. "Projekt Presents: A Dark Cabaret". Projekt Records. Archived from the original on 2010-11-28. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
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