Dare!/Love and Dancing
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8 new or used available from £8.94
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Things That Dreams Are Made Of - Human League
- Open Your Heart - Human League
- Sound Of The Crowd - Human League
- Darkness - Human League
- Do Or Die - Human League
- Get Carter - Human League
- I Am The Law - Human League
- Seconds - Human League
- Love Action (I Believe In Love) - Human League
- Don't You Want Me - Human League
- Hard Times - League Unlimited Orchestra
- Love Action (I Believe In Love) - League Unlimited Orchestra
- Don't You Want Me - League Unlimited Orchestra
- Things That Dreams Are Made Of - League Unlimited Orchestra
- Do Or Die - League Unlimited Orchestra
- Seconds - League Unlimited Orchestra
- Open Your Heart - League Unlimited Orchestra
- Sound Of The Crowd - League Unlimited Orchestra
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #114877 in Music
- Released on: 2002-10-21
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
Classic 80's Pop never felt so fresh
When it was released 1st time around, Dare was a huge seller, the album that made The Human League. The pity is they never followed it up with anything of note. The occasional Pop classic like Mirror Man, or Fascination, but too often bland music that never really caught the imagination. Not here though, track after track, the League stomp out a pop classic, one that in its first incarnation sold over 6 million copies, spawned a classic number one in the UK with Dont You Want Me, and generally wrote this band from Sheffield into the vaults of history. Twenty one years later this music does sound a little empty and dated, but thats fine with me. I like my music to have that lived in feeling. It opens with "The Things That Dreams Are Made Of" which opens with a thumping beat, tearing synths and Oakey spouting his usual lyrical guff. "Takes time to see the wonders of the world" he says, by the end of this track you feel you just have. Open your heart, Love Action, Sound of the Crowd were all UK singles and are great tracks in themselves. Do or Die was good enough to be a single, just proving what a great pop album it was in its day. Seconds is a wonderful song, I am the Law haunts you as does its preceding track Get Carter. Top Drawer stuff from one of the leaders of the early eighties.
The Love and Dancing addition is really just a remix/instrumental album, not really of great note compared to Dare, but nice to listen to once in a while. This album belongs in any collection, even if its just for the opening track!
Upgraded from vinyl
I just bought this after not hearing it for years as only had it on vinyl. The quality of the production is great. It's great to hear songs like Seconds and The Things That Dreams Are Made Of again. The remixes sound a little dated but the Don't You Want Me remix stands out. Well worth it.
Brilliant Double Pack of great Human League albums.
The Human League are going under a bit of a renaissance of late, despite the terrible advert that quotes Don't You Want Me?; their sound is evident in the electroclash scene (see Futurism) and the sound of Love Action is found not only in George Michael's oblique protest single Shoot the Dog , but Kylie Minogue's classic Can't Get You Out of My Head. Added to that the excellent album they released last year and we can almost forgive atrocities like Crash! and the terrible album from 1990 which had Soundtrack for a Generation on it.
Here we have Human League's finest moment reissued- Dare! extends on the dark early sound of the League- tracks like Do Or Die, I am the Law and Seconds are as SF as JG Ballard or tracks like Life Kills and Circus of Death (and Seconds refers to the great John Frankenheimer film). But following the departure of Ware and Marsh to BEF/Heaven 17 (see the as great Penthouse & Pavement), Oakey drafted in producer Martin Rushent and singers/dancers Joanne Catherell and Suzanne Sulley. Here we could have a kind of futurist Abba, add in a little Chic and Moroder and we would have one of the most ambitious and succesful pop albums of all time (which operated in a realm populated by similarly ambitious albums like New Gold Dream, The lexicon of Love, Tin Drum, Sulk, Songs to Remember, A secret Wish, Non-Stop erotic Cabaret). The cover of the theme to Get Carter is as good as the later version by Stereolab; while singles Sound of the Crowd, Open Your Heart, Love Action and Don't You Want Me? are as fine as pop singles can be (and only Timbaland and the Neptunes are making singles as consistent as this these days...). The greatest song is These are the Things That Dreams Are Made Of- which moves in just a few minutes from the synth familiar to Reproduction/Travelogue fans to the greatest pop song of all time, namechecking The Ramones and Chic's Good Times...
As a bonus to this key album, you get Love & Dancing from the League Unlimited Orchestra- where Rushent overhauls the songs of Dare and Hard Times into lush extended instrumental versions. This as great as Moroder's E=Mc2 or Kraftwerk's Trans Europe Express. Plus, it's quite revolutionary- excepting reggae/dub artists and Spandau Ballet, there were few bands making records suited to clubbing like this.
Dare! is one of THE albums of the 1980's, it has dated wonderfully and this reissue with Love & Dancing make this one of the best reissues of recent years. Roll on new versions of Reproduction and Travelogue, don't bother with Hysteria or Crash though!





