Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Hysteria

 
Album Review: Hysteria

Review

The Human League followed Dare! with more success, at least when it came to singles. The Motown-inspired "Mirror Man" and the frivolous (in a borderline-genius way) "(Keep Feeling) Fascination" maintained the group's momentum. When recording commenced for the full-length successor to Dare!, however, things got ugly. Martin Rushent, the producer who either receives all or no credit for the Human League's mainstream breakthrough, left the sessions. The slate was wiped clean, but the process was halted once more when another producer, Chris Thomas (Roxy Music, Sex Pistols), also split. Full of indecision and doubt, the group took forever to finish Hysteria. (Two and a half years in the '80s were, in fact, equal to forever, and U.S. label A&M intervened with the Fascination! EP, which contained the post-Dare! singles that did not appear on this album.) Hysteria is mediocre and easily the least of the group's albums to that point. Conscious not to repeat themselves and unable to do it without sacrificing their personality, most of the changes sound forced and fussily mulled over. It was one thing to get political and introduce some uncharacteristic guitar lines on "The Lebanon" (alienating your fanbase should always be encouraged, especially when it's done with a single that looks atrocious on paper but sounds fantastic), but "Rock Me Again" is the kind of thing the group once worked against, with Philip Oakey adopting an awkward, straining rock voice. The melodies are often flat, the arrangements are frequently bloodless. With only a couple exceptions, Hysteria sounds exactly like an album made under extreme post-platinum pressure. If you were to replace your pick of two tracks with "Mirror Man" and "(Keep Feeling) Fascination" -- which really wouldn't sound any more out of place than "The Lebanon" -- you'd at least have something resembling the group's old standard. Fun fact: it was released three years before a very different Sheffield band's Hysteria. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
I'm Coming Back Human League (4:12)
I Love You Too Much Human League (3:27)
Rock Me Again and Again and Again and Again and Again and Again ... Lee Austin, James Brown Human League (3:35)
Louise (Lyrics) Jo Callis, Philip Adrian Wright, Philip Oakey Human League (5:00)
The Lebanon (Lyrics) Jo Callis, Philip Oakey Human League (5:04)
Betrayed Philip Oakey Human League (4:06)
The Sign Human League (3:49)
So Hurt Human League (3:54)
Life on Your Own (Lyrics) Philip Adrian Wright, Philip Oakey, Jo Callis Human League (4:08)
Don't You Know I Want You Jo Callis, Ian Burden, Philip Oakey Human League (3:10)

Credits

Ian Burden (Bass), Ian Burden (Guitar), Hugh Padgham (Mixing), Philip Oakey (Synthesizer), Susanne Sulley (Vocals), Jo Callis (Synthesizer), Jo Callis (Guitar), Ken Ansell (Layout Design), Philip Oakey (Vocals), David Motion (Assistant Engineer), Jim Russell (Programming), Human League (Producer), Hugh Padgham (Producer), Philip Adrian Wright (Synthesizer), Philip Oakey (Programming), Martin Rushent (Drum Programming), Philip Oakey (Keyboards), Steve Jackson (Assistant Engineer), Jo Callis (Vocals), Renate Blauel (Engineer), Jo Callis (Keyboards), Philip Adrian Wright (Keyboards), Joanne Catherall (Vocals), Ian Burden (Synthesizer), Simon Fowler (Photography), Hugh Padgham (Engineer), Bill Price (Engineer), Gavin McKillop (Engineer), Jeremy Allom (Assistant Engineer), Ian Burden (Keyboards)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Hysteria (Human League album)
Top
Hysteria
Studio album by The Human League
Released May 1984
Genre Synthpop
Label Virgin Records
Producer Hugh Padgham
Chris Thomas
The Human League
Professional reviews
The Human League chronology
Fascination!
(1983)
Hysteria
(1984)
Crash
(1986)

Hysteria is the fourth album by the British synthpop band The Human League. Following the worldwide success of their 1981 album Dare, the band struggled to make a successful follow-up and the sessions for Hysteria were fraught with problems. The album name itself is taken from the problematic recording period.[1] Producers Martin Rushent and Chris Thomas both left the project which would eventually be finished by producer Hugh Padgham.

By the time Hysteria was released, three years had passed since Dare and the album met with relatively lacklustre success in comparison to its multi-platinum predecessor. Three singles from the album made the top-twenty of the UK singles chart but first single The Lebanon was the only song to chart in the U.S., stalling at number sixty-four on the Billboard Hot 100. The album peaked at number three in the UK, later being certified Gold.

In 2005 Hysteria was remastered and re-issued with B-sides and extended mixes as bonus tracks.

Track listing

  1. "I'm Coming Back" (Oakey, Wright)
  2. "I Love You Too Much" (Burden, Callis, Wright)
  3. "Rock Me Again and Again and Again and Again and Again and Again (Six Times)" (Austin, Brown)
  4. "Louise" (Callis, Oakey, Wright)
  5. "The Lebanon" (Callis, Oakey)
  6. "Betrayed" (Oakey, Wright)
  7. "The Sign" (Burden, Callis, Oakey)
  8. "So Hurt" (Burden, Callis)
  9. "Life On Your Own" (Callis, Oakey, Wright)
  10. "Don't You Know I Want You" (Burden, Callis, Oakey)
  11. "Thirteen" (from "The Lebanon" 12-inch single, and 7" B-side)
  12. "The World Tonight" (from "Life on Your Own" 12-inch single, and 7" B-side)
  13. "The Lebanon" (extended version)
  14. "Life on Your Own" (extended version)
  15. "The Sign" (extended version)

References

  1. ^ Windle, Rob [1]

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hysteria (Human League album)" Read more