"
She Loved Like Diamond" was the third single from Spandau Ballet's second album,
Diamond, but after its number 49 showing on the
UK Singles Chart in early 1982, the band feared that their future was in jeopardy. They hired
Buggles founder
Trevor Horn to remix the
Diamond track "
Instinction" in order to have another single to promote the release of the
LP, but Spandau songwriter
Gary Kemp was concerned about putting the most
pop-sounding song on the record in the hands of a pop producer. Spandau Ballet made a point of representing their peers in the London club scene that began with their first album,
Journeys to Glory, but after the "Instinction" remix went to number 10, which meant he no longer had to focus solely on what they wanted to hear. In his autobiography
I Know This Much: From Soho to Spandau, he wrote, "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. Where previously it had been about
riffs and
grooves, this time it would be about melody and
chords." He also averred that Spandau Ballet "felt no shame in embracing" a pop audience. The band attempted to continue their work with Horn, who was especially interested in a new song Kemp had written called "Pleasure", but after a day of rehearsals in which drummer
John Keeble was unable to satisfy Horn's demands, the new producer was ready to replace him. Kemp rejected the idea, and Horn decided to end his work with the band. Kemp told
Smash Hits magazine in 1982, "We couldn't have worked with Trevor because he was too overpowering, too dogmatic." The band's manager, Steve Dagger, suggested producers
Tony Swain and Steve Jolley, who had recently worked with
Bananarama, so the band presented the duo with several songs Kemp had finished writing. The plan was to have them produce just one single to get a sense if they were right for the group before committing to anything more, and although "
Communication" was considered, the song Jolley chose for their assignment was the "up-tempo, more obvious pop sing-along" "Lifeline". Spandau Ballet was credited alongside Jolley and Swain as producers of "Lifeline" ==Recording==