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Mad Love (EP)

Mad Love
An abstract painting featuring black-and-white lines and alternating shades of blue. In the top-left corner there is a photograph of a woman; in the top-right corner black lowercase text reads "Lush" and yellow lowercase text above it reads "Mad Love".
EP by Lush
Released 26 February 1990 (1990-02-26)
Recorded December 1989 (1989-12)
Studio
Genre
Length 11:48
Label 4AD
Producer Robin Guthrie
Lush chronology
Scar
(1989)Scar1989
Mad Love
(1990)
Sweetness and Light
(1990)Sweetness and Light1990

Mad Love is the debut extended play by the English alternative rock band Lush. It was released on 26 February 1990 by 4AD. Produced by Cocteau Twins guitarist Robin Guthrie, Mad Love was composed of four tracks—including a rerecording of "Thoughtforms", a song from Lush's debut mini-album Scar (1989).

In contrast to Scar, Mad Love features more polished production techniques and expansive music styles, including elements of jangle pop, post-punk and shoegazing. It was well received in the United Kingdom and the United States, with Mad Love being the band's first release to place in the mainstream UK Singles Chart and its opening track "De-Luxe" in the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart. A minor success, it topped the UK Independent Singles Chart upon release.

Lush released their debut mini-album Scar in October 1989 to warm reviews. Scar was originally to be produced by Guthrie, but several scheduling difficulties occurred—including the sessions for the Cocteau Twins' album Heaven or Las Vegas and the birth of Guthrie's daughter—which led to the band choosing a different producer. In December 1989, Lush recorded Mad Love during sessions at Guthrie's own studio, September Sound, in southwest London and further sessions at the Church, a mid-range studio in north London.

Vocalist-guitarist Miki Berenyi considered Guthrie's production on Mad Love "quite different" to John Fryer's techniques on Scar, describing Guthrie's as "more commercial; it's not nearly as raw or rough". She said that the sound of Mad Love was more akin to how the band sounded live, with more emphasis on guitars but "not nearly as delicate", as the band had a reputation in the British music press for poor performances in their early career.


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