The album was recorded between mid-December 1978 and early-February 1979 in the grounds of Farmyard Studios,
Little Chalfont,
Buckinghamshire, using the mobile unit The Mobile Studio, with further recording at
Abbey Road Studios (including the recording of a violin section for the track "Pleasantly Disturbed"), and additional recording and mixing at
Townhouse Studios, London. After the band's first choice of producer
John Cale was vetoed by
Arista Records, the album was produced and mixed by
John Leckie. The album was completed in late February 1979. The original working title for the album "Children of the Game" (a reference to
Jean Cocteau's novel of that name) had been dropped and changed to "Life in a Day" after the band had written the title track in January 1979. The recording sessions yielded the full album, the B-side "Special View" and two unfinished out-takes, "Rosemary's Baby" and "Children of the Game". The track-listing and mastering was finalised in March 1979. Band manager Bruce Findlay made an unplanned musical contribution after some drunken "stumbling around on the keyboards" during a check-in visit to the band at the Townhouse: Leckie, who had been trying to find a middle eight for the song "All for You", eventually opted to insert a recording of Findlay's experimentation. ==Release==