Love Jealousy Hate

SEXEPIL

Love Jealousy Hate

HungarianHungarian
Format
Vinyl, LP, Album
Year
1991
Country
Hungary
Cat. No.
ZN 009
Genre
Rock
Style
Indie Rock

TRACKLIST

4.17 / 5

SIDE A

A1Angel3:57
A2Why3:23
A3Nobody Is An Island4:04
A4The Wind4:00
A5Wonder Boy2:17
A6Big Days3:11

SIDE B

B1Once Upon A Time In The East (Intro) / Bliss4:45
B2Buda Girl5:08
B3Flash From Heaven3:10
B4Somewhere2:38
B5Paradise2:30
B6Garden Of Eden2:40

ABOUT THIS RECORD

THE ALBUM

Love Jealousy Hate was released in 1991 on Zona Records in Lithuania, appearing at the precise moment the country was reasserting its independence from the Soviet Union and its recording industry was breaking free from the Melodiya distribution monopoly. The album sits within the post-punk and new wave currents that had been circulating through Eastern European underground scenes during the late 1980s, delivered with the rawness typical of early independent Baltic releases from this period. Its release on Zona — one of the nascent independent Lithuanian labels operating outside the old Soviet infrastructure — made it a early marker of what a genuinely independent Lithuanian rock record could look like in the immediate post-occupation era.


ARTIST & RECORDING CONTEXT

Sexepil were a Lithuanian rock act whose name, borrowed from the French-inflected Soviet slang for sex appeal, telegraphed a deliberate irreverence toward both Soviet cultural norms and the earnestness of official pop. Beyond that, detailed documentation of the band's lineup, recording studio, or production credits for this release is limited in available sources, which is typical of early Lithuanian independent releases from 1991, where studio infrastructure was improvised and credits were often sparse or absent from the physical release itself.


COLLECTOR SIGNIFICANCE

Love Jealousy Hate is a product of the very first wave of genuinely independent Lithuanian record production, pressed at a time when the infrastructure for private vinyl manufacture in the Baltic states was minimal and quantities were accordingly small. Early Zona Records releases from 1991 are scarce in any condition, and this one occupies a specific historical niche as Lithuanian rock output from the independence transition year. Collectors focused on Baltic post-punk or the broader history of Eastern Bloc independent labels will find it genuinely difficult to locate.

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