When Spandau Ballet first formed, their guitarist/songwriter
Gary Kemp had been aware of how previous generations of Britain's youth culture had bands representing them, such as the
Mods having
the Who and the
Small Faces. He wanted people to associate Spandau with the
fashion-wise clientele of a popular Tuesday night London gathering called the Blitz, and had written songs that sounded like what was played there, what he described as "white European dance music". Their first album,
Journeys to Glory, was a successful culmination of this style of material that Kemp had written at his own pace and that had been tested in front of the Blitz crowd over an extended period of time, but coming up with songs for their second effort,
Diamond, was more challenging. Although following a renewed interest in
funk gave them a number 3 UK hit with its first single, "
Chant No. 1 (I Don't Need This Pressure On)", the writer's block Kemp suffered as it climbed the
UK Singles Chart resulted in his mimicking its use of horns and group vocals for the next single, "
Paint Me Down", which had a number 30 showing in the UK, the lowest peak position there of any of their singles to date. The band hired
Buggles founder
Trevor Horn to do the new arrangement of the song, which reached number ten in the UK In his autobiography
I Know This Much: From Soho to Spandau, he explained, "The freedom of not having to write just for Soho meant I could dive into that great big reservoir of pop, deep with melody and soul, and hopefully surface with the pearls I wanted." Because of the rebound the band experienced with Horn's reworking of "Instinction", the plan was to have him produce the next album. He was especially impressed with one of Kemp's recent compositions, "Pleasure", and wanted to start working with the band on it immediately. The rehearsal went well, and they began recording it at
AIR Studios with the mindset that it would be the first single from the new album, which was initially called
The Pleasure Project. On the first day of recording, however, Horn had drummer
John Keeble redo the track repeatedly over the course of the ten-hour day to try to get it perfect and called Kemp that evening to offer to programme the drums and suggest that they get a new drummer. Kemp was stunned by the suggestion: "I heard myself saying that programming the drums would not just be psychologically wrong for our team spirit, but it would also undermine John as a player." He refused Horn, who decided not to continue working with them. The band's manager, Steve Dagger, suggested producers
Tony Swain and
Steve Jolley, who recently had success with
Bananarama, and Kemp performed some of the songs he had just written for the duo with the plan of having them produce the first single from the new album to see if they had a good working relationship with the band. While Swain was leaning toward "
Communication" as the best choice for their next hit song, Jolley insisted that they work on the "up-tempo, more obvious pop sing-along" "Lifeline". The band was credited alongside Jolley and Swain as producers of "Lifeline" and would be on the album as well. "Lifeline" was recorded at Red Bus Studios in
Paddington as Spandau Ballet got a feel for their new producers, but they worked on the rest of the album at
Compass Point Studios in
the Bahamas because of the soul music that had been recorded there and because Kemp felt that the tropical surroundings would help give the music the feeling he was trying to achieve. ==Songs==