The recording and mixing of The House of Love was beset with problems, with the band members distracted by hedonism, ego and indecision. Group leader Guy Chadwick would later comment "we really needed guidance at that crucial point. Most groups just go nuts. It's like this huge trolley full of booze being placed in front of you. With a whiff of success, people change towards you. We were taking too many drugs, I was drinking ridiculously and that's the worst combination when things are going wrong." As opposed to the recording of the debut album, the new recordings were spread out over two years in multiple studios and would involve the work of four different producers as well as production involvement by the band members themselves. The band would find themselves at odds with their A&R man Dave Bates, who saw the band as generators of hit singles and who had selected the album producers as well as commissioning remixes which the band loathed and had not authorised. During the slow and argumentative recording process, The House of Love's rhythm section Chris Groothuizen and Pete Evans would moonlight as members of a separate band, My White Bedroom. More seriously affected was lead guitaristTerry Bickers, an introverted character who was already unhappy with the implications of the band's deal with Fontana. Bickers would retreat into manic depression as his relationship with Chadwick deteriorated into a non-speaking one in which the two were more likely to communicate by post rather than have a face-to-face conversation. Following the completion of the album, Bickers would acrimoniously quit The House of Love during the early days of the sixty-date promotional tour. A couple of years later he would comment "I just found at the time that I didn't have the same aspirations as the rest of the band. I was more into exploring music than exploring the exploitation of markets around the globe. They were really into crusading. And winning. I wasn't."
Singles
The House of Love would eventually generate four singles. The first of these was "Never" which stalled at number 41 in the singles chart on release in 1989, as did the November follow-up "I Don't Know WhyI Love You". The third single was a re-recording of the band's debut single "Shine On", which became the band's biggest and best-known British hit. The last of the four was "The Beatles and the Stones", which reached number 36.
Re-recordings
Several tracks on the album were re-recordings of previously released House of Love songs. The most obvious of these was "Shine On", but both "The Hedonist" and "Blind" had previously been B-sides of singles released on Creation Records.