Discography  
Albums Singles

Join the Dots

Disc 1 (1978-1987)
10:15 Saturday Night
Plastic Passion
Pillbox Tales
Do The Hansa
I'm Cold
Another Journey By Train
Descent
Splintered In Her Head
Lament (flexipop version)
Just One Kiss
The Dream
The Upstairs Room
Lament
Speak My Language
Mr. Pink Eyes
Happy The Man
Throw Your Foot
New Day
The Exploding Boy
A Few Hours After This
A Man Inside My Mouth
Stop Dead

Disc 2 (1987-1992)
A Japanese Dream
Breathe
A Chain Of Flowers
Snow In Summer
Sugar Girl
Icing Sugar
Hey You!!! (12" extended remix)
How Beautiful You Are (Radio Sampler CD)
To The Sky
Babble
Out Of Mind
2 Late
Fear Of Ghosts
Hello I Love You (psychedelic version)
Hello I Love You
Hello I Love You (Slight Return mix)
Harold and Joe
Just Like Heaven (Dizzy mix)

Disc 3 (1992-1996)
This Twilight Garden
Play
Halo
Scared As You
The Big Hand
A Foolish Arrangement
Doing The Unstuck (12" remix)
Purple Haze (virgin radio version)
Purple Haze
Burn
Young Americans
Dredd Song
It Used To Be Me
Ocean
Adonais

Disc 4 (1996-2001)
Home
Waiting
A Pink Dream
This Is A Lie (ambient mix)
Wrong Number (P2P mix)
More Than This
World In My Eyes
Possession
Out Of This World (Oakenfold remix)
Maybe Someday (acoustic mix)
Coming Up
Signal To Noise (acoustic version)
Signal To Noise
Just Say Yes (Curve remix)
A Forest (2001 Mark Platti mix)

Robert on 'Join the Dots'...

“In some ways the box set is a vanity press kind of thing. I think we’re the only band with a sizeable back catalogue that hasn’t had a B-sides collection. It’s taken us a long time to get there, because there’s such a negative perception of The Cure in the UK – up until this year.” (Record Collector - January 2004)

"I did the booklet with Simon, so it will be the definitive version of events and some myths will be exploded. I wanted to spend an evening reminiscing and always wanted to visit Crawley in Hampshire - I always thought it would be a doppleganger town to Crawley in Sussex - so we met up in the only pub. The landlord started serving us at 6 and pushed us out the door at four in the morning. That’s more hospitable than most Crawley, Sussex barmen I’ve come across. Simon’s contributions were mostly unprintable, libellous anecdotes, but I thought at least if I did it in tandem with him, it would give me less incentive to elaborate. But then he started looking at me funny anyway - I think that was the beer...” (Record Collector - January 2004)