Perfect Pop Songs, vol. 4: Inbetween Days-The Cure
Robert Smith has supposedly been quoted as saying that Friday I'm In Love is a Cure song for people who don't like The Cure, and as such, it's easily their most popular song, at least in terms of mainstream radio play. As a pop song, it's fantastic and wonderfully catchy, but as a representation of The Cure's musical oeuvre, it's wildly misleading. In my opinion, Inbetween Days is a much better pop distillation of The Cure and the world inside Robert Smith's head. Like Friday, it's a poppy, upbeat track, but its lyrics betray its writer's pet themes and obsessions--death, aging, paranoid love and loss are all explored in a two and a half minute dance track. Before I was really familiar with The CureI remember buying The Head on the Door along with Disintegration at an Oregon record store and having the clerk tell me that it was their best album. The album is from an unusual time in the band's history, and is probably the poppiest piece of work Robert Smith has ever produced, nestled inbetween the psychedelic trip The Top and Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me, which retained some of Head's pop elements while leaving heavy indications of the dark, introspective direction the band would take with Disintegration. The most recent singles the band has produced have shown something of a return to the poppy sound of The Head of the Door, and while they're fun, there's still nothing they've recorded that can compare to the simultaneously uplifting and despairing Inbetween Days.














