This reissue came in two different variations:
- The original reissue features a strapline running across the top right hand corner stating 'compact price'. The other differences featured on the rear of the CD where an additional number was printed beneath the publishing details. The paper stock that the booklet is printed on is also a lot thinner than on the original.
- Later copies lost the strapline. The CD booklet pages have also been rearranged: The third page with Andy has been swapped with the one of Paul and Neil Weir, while the production credits page has been swapped with the page featuring Mal and the track details. The catalogue number on the rear of the booklet has been replaced with a new one. The CD itself features a new imprint: The Virgin logo loses the circle that features on the previous releases, the Compact Disc logo is smaller, the additional catalogue number is also added beneath the original. The barcode on the rear of the CD case is also different and is also featured in a lined box.
On both versions, the actual image of the sleeve has also been shifted down slightly from the original.
Stay had originally been scheduled as the first single from the album. In fact
the band worked with Tom Lord Alge on a new mix of the song with additional
backing vocals and extra guitar parts. However, Virgin refused to release Stay
as a single and in fact were pushing Shame as a more likely candidate. The 'universal
wheel' refers to the world while the 'black rose' signifies the end of love.
(Forever) Live And Die was the first single released from the album.
The Pacific Age was based on an idea that Andy had about world economics.
In the 1987 OMD biography Messages he said "My initial idea was to make
people aware of the change in the economic world that has taken place in the past
few years: The Japanese, the Koreans, the Chinese of Taiwian, they all dominate
the big international market now".
The Dead Girls takes its title from a book that Andy spotted in a Los Angeles
bookshop, although the song has nothing to do with the book itself. Aliss Terrell
provided the French vocal.
Shame was the third and final single to be released from the album. The band
were surprised to learn that Virgin had scheduled Shame as a single (especially
as they had been on tour at the time) and they still preferred their version of
Stay.
Southern was actually quite an old song OMD had been working on and which had
previously been scheduled for inclusion on the previous album Crush. For The Pacific
Age, the band reworked the song and included the original (but unused) bass line
from Telegraph and the brass section for the live version of Pretending To See
The Future. The song lacked suitable lyrics however, until Andy came across
a series of taped speeches and noticed one by the civil rights activist Martin
Luther King which seemed to fit perfectly into the context of the song, without
diminishing the power of the speech itself. The speech was actually King's last
public appearance recorded on 3rd April 1968 shortly before he was assassinated
outside a Memphis hotel.
Flame Of Hope had originally started out as a B-Side, written and recorded
in 4 hours. The band liked the finished song so much though that they decided
to keep it for the album. The song also uses some of the Japanese TV ad samples
that had been left over from the recording of Crush. "It's about a confusion
of feelings" Andy remarked in an OMD fanclub newsheet "about
how, when you're even at your most angry and depressed about someone, you can
still find reasons to love them".
Goddess Of Love was originally written for the soundtrack to the film Pretty
In Pink before a dramatic rewrite of the film script rendered the lyrics of
the song redundant. The band radically reworked the song for inclusion on The
Pacific Age, notably rewriting some of the lyrics.
We Love You was the second single released from the album. The song had actually
been written for the soundtrack to the film Playing For Keeps and was rewritten
and rearranged for the album version.
"Watch Us Fall refers to a guy and his girlfriend in a yo-yo relationship"
Andy remarked in the book Messages "It's like you want to get rid
of someone but you can't and you think 'here we go again...".
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