[4] In September 1986, the group played an Artists Against Apartheid concert at Barrowland Ballroom, Glasgow, alongside acts such as The Big Dish and Lloyd Cole.
[4] The band toured to promote Strange Kind of Love, including the United States and Japan, and garnered support slots with Tina Turner, Simply Red and B.
A half-hour set from the band also featured on the Night Network television show and they performed the "Strange Kind of Love" single on Wogan.
Strange Kind of Love, which has sold in excess of 250,000 copies worldwide, was re-released in April 2010, with added demos and new sleeve notes from James Grant, Paul McGeechan and Gary Katz.
The band, now supplemented by permanent drummer Gordon Wilson and rhythm guitarist Douglas MacIntyre,[4] returned to the studio to record the follow-up, to be entitled The Mother's Boy, but the songs met disapproval from Phonogram.
The band gave a pre-release playthrough of the album at City Halls in Candleriggs, Glasgow, which included an encore featuring Tom Waits' "Clap Hands" and Bob Dylan's "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere".
Three singles were released from the album, "My Love Lives in a Dead House", the Wishing Waters EP on which "Looking for Angeline" was the lead track, and "Winter".
Love and Money's fourth album, Littledeath (1993) was released independently on Iona Gold records and featured the single, "The Last Ship on the River".
Love and Money reformed 'for one night only' for a successful sell out show at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall as part of Celtic Connections 2011.
They played the albums Strange Kind of Love and Dogs in the Traffic in their entireties, and dedicated the song "Walk The Last Mile" to bassist Bobby Paterson, who had died in 2006.
Grant also scored the film, The Near Room and has collaborated with Capercaillie's Karen Matheson, performing live and writing songs for her solo records.