℗ 1987 Warner Music UK Ltd
Released | August 14, 2015 |
Duration | 45m 34s |
Record Label | Rhino |
Genre | Rock (Gothic) |
Floodland
The Sisters Of Mercy
Available in MQA and 96 kHz / 24-bit AIFF, FLAC high resolution audio formats
1.1
|
Dominion / Mother Russia
The Sisters Of Mercy |
7:00 | |||
1.2
|
Flood I
The Sisters Of Mercy |
6:17 | |||
1.3
|
Lucretia My Reflection (Vinyl Version)
The Sisters Of Mercy |
4:55 | |||
1.4
|
1959
The Sisters Of Mercy |
4:12 | |||
1.5
|
This Corrosion
The Sisters Of Mercy |
9:30 | |||
1.6
|
Flood II (Vinyl Version)
The Sisters Of Mercy |
6:14 | |||
1.7
|
Driven Like the Snow (Vinyl Version) EXPLICIT
The Sisters Of Mercy |
4:38 | |||
1.8
|
Never Land (A Fragment)
The Sisters Of Mercy |
2:48 |
Floodland is the second studio album by English gothic rock band the Sisters of Mercy. It was released on 13 November 1987, through Merciful Release internationally and distributed by WEA, with Elektra Records handling the United States release. After the release of the band's debut studio album, First and Last and Always (1985), members Craig Adams and Wayne Hussey left to form the Mission, causing the dissolution of the Sisters of Mercy. As a result, band frontman Andrew Eldritch formed a side project known as the Sisterhood. After the first Sisterhood album was received negatively overall, Eldritch restarted the Sisters of Mercy and hired the Sisterhood member Patricia Morrison for the recording of a new album.
Eldritch wrote the songs of Floodland in Hamburg; the city's large amount of water influenced its title as well as the recurring lyrical theme of water. He then called upon Larry Alexander to produce the album with him and Jim Steinman to produce the songs "Dominion" / "Mother Russia" and "This Corrosion". Recording sessions began at Power Station Studios in New York City during January 1987 and carried on throughout the first half of the year at Strawberry Studios in Stockport and The Wool Hall in Bath. Eldritch served as the vocalist, performed all instruments, and programmed the band's drum machine, "Doktor Avalanche".
The drum machine acted as the drum player; Morrison did not contribute to the album despite being a member of the Sisters of Mercy. In contrast to the conventional group-based recording sessions for First and Last and Always, Floodland was pieced together on computers using sequencers. The music incorporates the genres of gothic rock and dark wave, while the lyrical content sees Eldritch cast as the observer of a slowly deteriorating world. Some of the events that inspired certain songs include the Chernobyl disaster, the Cold War, and the band's previous break-up.
96 kHz / 24-bit PCM – Rhino Studio Masters
Tracks 1-8 – contains high-resolution digital transfers of material originating from an analogue master source
Tracks 1-8 – contains high-resolution digital transfers of material originating from an analogue master source
Track title | Peak (dB FS) | RMS (dB FS) | LUFS (integrated) | DR | |
Album average Range of values | -1.60 -6.02 to -0.97 | -18.00 -26.06 to -15.72 | -14.94 -23.00 to -12.30 | 12 10 to 15 | |
1 | Dominion / Mother Russia | -0.98 | -15.72 | -12.7 | 10 |
2 | Flood I | -0.97 | -15.94 | -13.1 | 11 |
3 | Lucretia My Reflection (Vinyl Version) | -0.97 | -15.73 | -12.3 | 10 |
4 | 1959 | -6.02 | -26.06 | -23.0 | 15 |
5 | This Corrosion | -0.97 | -16.61 | -13.0 | 11 |
6 | Flood II (Vinyl Version) | -0.97 | -16.89 | -13.7 | 11 |
7 | Driven Like the Snow (Vinyl Version) | -0.97 | -18.13 | -16.0 | 13 |
8 | Never Land (A Fragment) | -0.97 | -18.92 | -15.7 | 13 |