Finding a producer proved difficult for the band. They first went with
Chris Thomas, when that did not work out they brought in
Stewart Copeland. With Copeland they only recorded one track, "Hey Rusty", then finally found
Ian Stanley, famous for his work with
Tears For Fears. Bass player
Lawrence Donegan reflected in 2004 that "with the previous LP,
Easy Pieces, we had tried to broaden out and make more of a pop record and it hadn't really worked. It sounded rushed and the songs were not all up to standard. So, a year after
Easy Pieces, we went into the studio to try and make something more powerful. But the LP that we actually made took so long that we lost our initial vision by the time we finished it. The songs that Lloyd was writing were more introspective, so the stadium rock idea gradually went out the window."
Mainstream cost £300,000, ten times as much as their 1984 debut album
Rattlesnakes, and took five months to record. Keyboardist Blair Cowan had already left the group by the time the album came out (hence his picture is missing from the photographs of the band that feature on the artwork, and only included on a 'dedication' to him on the inner sleeve) and Donegan was also close to calling it a day, having been accepted on a journalism course. As a result the group decided that they had come to a natural end and to split up after the release of the album, but were obliged to promote it and undertake a tour first, which took a year. After the Commotions broke up, Cole moved to
New York to resume his songwriting partnership with Cowan and joined up with
Fred Maher and
Robert Quine, both former associates of
Lou Reed, to begin work on a solo career. ==Composition==