Fine Young Cannibals - She Drives Me Crazy (1988 - London Recorders - 886 361-1)

Fine Young Cannibals (FYC) were a British pop‑rock / sophisti‑pop trio formed in Birmingham in 1984 by David Steele and Andy Cox (both formerly of The Beat) with vocalist Roland Gift. Their 1985 debut album produced the international hits “Johnny Come Home” and a cover of “Suspicious Minds,” while their 1989 follow‑up The Raw & the Cooked topped the UK, US, Australian, and Canadian charts and generated two U.S. No. 1 singles: “She Drives Me Crazy” and “Good Thing.” The group won two BRIT Awards in 1990 (Best British Group and Best British Album) and briefly appeared in the 1987 film Tin Men as a house band. They disbanded in 1992, reunited briefly in 1996, and their members pursued separate projects afterward. London Records (also known as London Recordings) is a British label established in 1947 by Edward Lewis of British Decca Records, created to distribute Decca’s releases in North America after the U.S. and U.K. Decca companies split and could no longer share the Decca trademark. The label became known for issuing British Decca material in the U.S. and, conversely, for releasing licensed American recordings in the U.K., including material from Chess, Atlantic, Motown, Liberty, Imperial, and Sun. London Records handled a wide range of genres—classical, pop, R&B, jazz, country, Latin, and international music—and was the U.S. home for major acts such as The Rolling Stones (pre‑1971). After PolyGram acquired British Decca in 1979, London became semi‑independent, later moving under Warner Music Group in the 1990s, and eventually being acquired by Because Music (which controls most post‑1980 catalogues), while Universal Music Group retains rights to the pre‑1980 catalogue and trademarks. Stay connected:   / djgilgamesh     / user124277