Showing posts with label The Human League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Human League. Show all posts

Back To Where It All Started: Our Interview With The Human League's Philip Oakey

Today I have the absolute pleasure of talking with Philip Oakey, part of the trio - along with Susan Ann Sulley and Joanne Catherall - that makes up that iconic band, The Human League! Although most people recall The Human League and immediately think '80s, the truth is they are a band who have been active, either making new music or playing live shows, almost continuously since their inception. In between tour dates I caught up with Philip to talk about their latest album, the beginning of MTV, and the hard work of everything in between.

(Total plus? Listening to his sexy English accent. HOT!)

How are you today?
I'm good, thank you.

So tell me about the new album, Credo.
Well, we just decided it was time to return more or less to our roots. In Britain we've been sort of a bit swamped with guitar records for a few years and there seemed a little opportunity - people have maybe gotten a little bit bored with the guitar stuff again - to do a synthesizer album. So we went out and did it.

Do you have a theme to the album?
The theme's more what it's based on and it's just the fact that it's based on old synths. Sort of new recording methods and so on but more of a sort of celebration of what got us into music in the first place. Which was, you know, synthesizers becoming available for the first time.

The Human League, "(Keep Feeling) Fascination"

As I mentioned two months ago, this is one of my favorite songs from the '80s.

From 1983, here's The Human League with "(Keep Feeling) Fascination."

Enjoy!

Keep Feeling... Charcoal?

So I saw the following ad yesterday. Listen carefully:



In addition to being a horrible cover, it's a terrible song to use to sell charcoal. Couldn't they have used "Light My Fire?" "Start Me Up?" But no, they had to reboot, remake, and regurgitate The Human League's "Fascination," one of my favorite songs from the early '80s.

So here's what we'd like you to do for this week's Your Say Hump Day: list the commercials which contain the worst uses of rock music.

Go!