The recording of
Laughter & Lust was preceded by a five-week "workshop tour" in the US during September and October 1990. The tour, which was billed as "Joe Jackson's Workshop", included performances of songs to be recorded for the album as a way of testing the new material before an audience.
Laughter & Lust was then recorded over the course of October and November 1990 at
Dreamland Recording Studios in
Hurley, New York. It was mixed at
Electric Lady Studios in November and December 1990.
Laughter & Lust was Jackson's first album for
Virgin, following his departure from
A&M in 1990. Jackson and his band embarked on a world tour to promote the album, which began on 18 May 1991 in
Münster, Germany, and ended on 20 September 1991 in Sydney, Australia. The latter show was filmed and released in 1992 as
Laughter & Lust Live. Jackson told the
Sandwell Evening Mail in 1991, "It's an album of light and shadows. Most of the songs are about sex and other romantic entanglements. We've put a lot of thought and feeling into the new songs." He added to the
Evening Standard, "It's about one-third autobiographical, I suppose. You have to put yourself, your own experience into it or it isn't convincing."
Laughter & Lust would be Jackson's last non-classical studio album until 2000's
Night and Day II. Jackson recalled in 2003, "After the
Laughter & Lust world tour, it all turned to shit, basically. I had real bad writer's block. I couldn't even listen to music. I just lost it, totally. It was awful." In a 1994 interview with
Cash Box, Jackson said, "
Laughter & Lust, I felt, was the closest thing I could possibly do to a commercial pop record that I thought everyone was gonna love. And it was not very successful in the States. It did okay in Europe, actually. So it wasn't a complete flop." ==Critical reception==