It's My Life is the second studio album by Talk Talk, released in 1984. It was a Top 5 hit album in several European countries, thanks to the big international success of its singles (notably "Such a Shame"), but it only reached #35 in the UK Top 40 chart. In the United States, the album just missed the Top 40, reaching #42. It's My Life was particularly successful in the Netherlands, reaching #3 and staying in the charts for 64 weeks between 1984 and 1986. It's My Life is the second studio album by Talk Talk, released in 1984. It was a Top 5 hit album in several European countries, thanks to the big international success of its singles (notably "Such a Shame"), but it only reached #35 in the UK Top 40 chart. In the United States, the album just missed the Top 40, reaching #42. It's My Life was particularly successful in the Netherlands, reaching #3 and staying in the charts for 64 weeks between 1984 and 1986. false 2022-10-22 13:11:18 It’s My Life 7.3 1986 1986-01-01 1986-01-01 42 Electronic New Romantic New Wave Synth-Pop 115733 2138346 55b66d82-a63a-4f32-b678-388a0e0a67c7 a74f43e4-50c4-4b19-a2ce-c05ce9bccb03 84cf35fd-adb5-3fdd-9eec-8535b134be13 /media/data/media5/Music/Talk Talk/It's My Life/folder.jpg Talk Talk AlbumArtist Talk Talk Artist Talk Talk Talk Talk 1 Dum Dum Girl 03:43 2 Such a Shame 05:31 3 Renée 06:15 4 It’s My Life 03:47 5 Tomorrow Started 05:54 6 The Last Time 04:11 7 Call In the Night Boy 03:44 8 Does Caroline Know? 04:23 9 It’s You 04:26 Talk Talk were an English band formed in 1981, led by Mark Hollis (vocals, guitar, piano), Lee Harris (drums), and Paul Webb (bass). Initially a synth-pop group, Talk Talk's first two albums, The Party's Over (1982) and It's My Life (1984), reached top 40 in the UK and produced the international hit singles "Talk Talk", "Today", "It's My Life", and "Such a Shame". They achieved widespread critical success in Europe and the UK with the album The Colour of Spring (1986) along with its singles "Life's What You Make It" and "Living in Another World". 1988's Spirit of Eden moved the group towards a more experimental sound informed by jazz and free improvisation, pioneering what became known as post-rock; it was critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful. Friction with the band's label, EMI, resulted in legal action and countersuing. Webb departed, and the band switched to Polydor for their final studio album, 1991's Laughing Stock, but split soon afterwards. Singer Mark Hollis released one solo album in 1998 before retiring from the music industry; he died in 2019. The band's founding bass player and drummer, Paul Webb and Lee Harris, played in several bands together; long-term collaborator Tim Friese-Greene continued in the business as a musician and producer.