La folie<!-- foreign language capitalisation --> is the sixth studio album by the English new wave band the Stranglers. It was released on 9 November 1981, through the EMI record label Liberty.

Background

The Stranglers had initially been the most commercially successful band of the punk/new wave period in Britain, but by 1981, their success had waned noticeably. La folie was a conscious attempt to deliver a more commercial product. It is co-produced by the band with engineer Steve Churchyard and mixed by Tony Visconti. The band's record company, EMI, gave Visconti a brief to mix each song as a potential single. The title track is based upon the story of Issei Sagawa.

The lyrics to "Ain't Nothin' to It" are credited to American jazz clarinetist and saxophonist Mezz Mezzrow. The band compiled expressions from Mezzrow's autobiography Really the Blues, which contains many passages of jive talk, and used them for the lyrics of the song.

There has been much controversy surrounding the lyrics to "Golden Brown". In The Stranglers – Song by Song, Cornwell states, ""Golden Brown" works on two levels. It's about heroin and also about a girl". Essentially, the lyrics describe how "both provided me with pleasurable times".

Release and reception

La folie was preceded by the release of the album's first single, "Let Me Introduce You to the Family", released on 7 November 1981 La folie was released two days later. AllMusic called it a fine and welcome album in the Stranglers' body of work, describing it as "mainly a collection of tight, punchy songs that often suggest the forthright approach of American new wave bands."

| extra13 = B-side of "Tomorrow Was the Hereafter", 1980

| length13 = 7:08

| title14 = Vietnamerica

| extra14 = B-side of "Let Me Introduce You to the Family"

| length14 = 4:01

| title15 = Love 30

| extra15 = B-side of "Golden Brown"

| length15 = 3:55

| title16 = You Hold the Key to My Love in Your Hands

| note16 = 1981 demo

| extra16 = Hits and Heroes, 1999

| length16 = 2:40

| title17 = Strange Little Girl

| extra17 = Non-album single, 1982

| writer17 = Black, Burnel, Cornwell, Greenfield, Hans Wärmling

| length17 = 2:40

| total_length = 56:17

  • <small>"Cocktail Nubiles" is a loungey version of "Bring on the Nubiles" from No More Heroes, using the music from the Frank Sinatra pop standard "Young at Heart". It was recorded during sessions for The Gospel According to the Meninblack in 1980. "Cocktail Nubiles" was released on the exclusive fan club release "Tomorrow Was the Hereafter".</small>
  • <small>Originally released on the 1980 compilation album IV (US and Canada only).</small>
  • <small>Originally from The Gospel According to the Meninblack.</small>

2018 expanded vinyl edition

Self-released by the Stranglers, La folie received a deluxe vinyl reissue in 2018, limited to 1000 numbered copies. The original 11-track album is coupled with a bonus 12-track album, entitled Extra Texture, the first side of which features non-album single "Strange Little Girl", associated B-sides, a radio edit, a demo, and a BBC radio session track. The second side collects 6 La folie tracks recorded live by the BBC on the La folie tour at the Hammersmith Odeon in London on 8 February 1982.

  • Side one and two as per original vinyl edition

;Extra Texture

  • <small>First transmitted on 11 February 1982 on the David Jensen Evening Show.</small>

;Live at Hammersmith Odeon

Personnel

The Stranglers

  • Hugh Cornwell – guitar, lead and backing vocals
  • Dave Greenfield – keyboards
  • Jean-Jacques Burnel – bass, backing vocals, lead vocals on "The Man They Love to Hate" and "La folie", co-lead vocals on "It Only Takes Two to Tango"

Bonus tracks

  • Dale Griffin – producer on "The Man They Love to Hate"" (BBC radio session)
  • The Stranglers – producer on "Vietnamerica" and "Waltzinblack"
  • Tony Visconti – producer on "You Hold the Key to My Love in Your Hands"
  • Steve Churchyard – mixing on "Love 30"

Charts

{| class="wikitable"

!Chart

!Peak

Position

|-

|UK Albums Chart

| style="text-align:center" |11

|-

|Dutch Albums Chart

| style="text-align:center;" |13

|}

References