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Human League - Human League - Greatest Hits
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Human League - Human League - Greatest Hits

Facts

Artist(s)Human League
StudioA&M
Release DateNovember 7, 1988
UPC Code075021522725
 

Tracks

  1. Mirror Man
  2. (Keep Feeling) Fascination
  3. The Sound Of The Crowd
  4. The Lebanon
  5. Human
  6. Don't You Want Me?
  7. Being Boiled
  8. Love Action (I Believe In Love)
  9. Louise
  10. Open Your Heart
  11. Love Is All That Matters
  12. Life On Your Own

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User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (8 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteAn essential New Wave compilationQuote
This version of the Human League's "Greatest Hits" is the one to buy. You get 16 tracks, basically maxing out the CD's capacity with an assortment of New Wave classics from this pioneering band.

Sure, Phil Oakey (note: NOT "Oakley") and the girls had a few misses that were somehow included here ("Being Boiled" and the very annoying - though chart topping - "Human"), but there is also a wealth of great tunes. "Don't You Want Me", "(Keep Feeling) Fascination", "The Lebanon", and my favorite, the wistful and beautiful "Together In Electric Dreams".

Their 1994 hit "Tell Me When", from their comeback album "Octupus" is also included. The only notable absent song is 1990's "Heart Like A Wheel".

Human League blended intricate synth soundscapes with great vocal performances to create some of the premier New Wave compositions of the 80s and 90s. This compilation is a great overview of their career to date. Five stars!

P.S. The liner notes on "Greatest Hits" are copious and informative. March 19, 2005

rating: 5 QuoteAquired Taste, the good, the bad and the uglyQuote
Human League fans in general tend to think that all HL's songs were greatest hits, and therefore all deserve to be on an album of the same name (hence the four). Whilst now this album is a very dated excursion into a time when music was really just beginning to find it's feet, Rock and roll, Sca, Punk, Mod, big band, new-wave, new-romance have all seen their day, and little, if any of those genres live on today. This album really is not meant to be a modern take on a once great band, but rather, a trip down memory lane for those of us who grew up with it. Of course, as with any album proclaiming to be the greatest hits, there are some mediocre songs, and at least one very poor one. Being Boiled was never a great song, and later attempts to make it so, failed mostly because those who remember the original remembered the sheer boredom of Phil Oakley's voice on the "song". No passion in this one. But then there are the hits. Don't you want me, (keep feeling) fascination and Human.
My personal favourite however is the last song on the CD, Life on your own, this a real gem that will ring many emotions in many people.
All in all, if you are looking for something wild and sexy, skip this album, however if you want something "different" that has a history of it's own... you could do worse. March 13, 2005

rating: 5 QuoteStill a favorite album by them! Quote
I have had this greatest hits album by Human League for a couple of years now and still love it! All those hits from Don't You Want Me, to Human, to Fascination to Being Boiled are on here. Though some other compilations by them came later on, this is a good start for the unknown listener, 12 solid songs by this '80s group. October 7, 2004

rating: 4 QuoteDidnt Realize They Had So Many Hit Songs, Did You?Quote
Strangely enough, The Human League actually has four completely different "Greatest Hits" compilations. The first was "Human League Greatest Hits" released in 1988 with 12 tracks. The second was "The Human League Greatest Hits" released in 1995 with 16 tracks. The third was "The Best Of The Human League" released in 1997 with 16 totally different tracks, and finally there's "The Very Best of The Human League" (hmm...yet another original title) released in 1998 with 13 tracks. What's even stranger, for Human League fans anyway, is that the song "The Things That Dreams Are Made Of" does not appear on any of these albums. So in addition to one of these compilations, you will still need to buy the League's signature album, "Dare!" to get this song, which IS one of their best songs ever.

Besides "Don't You Want Me", "(Keep Feeling) Fascination", "Mirror Man", "Human" and "Tell Me When", the other songs will probably not be so familiar with people in the United States because they were actually U.K top ten hits. The song "Being Boiled" which appears on three of the "Greatest" albums is the only disappointment simply because it is not the revamped techno-punk version that appears on the "Travelogue" album, but rather the original (and very bland) version that was recorded in 1978 on the Fast Product independent label. Otherwise, this really is a chock full of goodies from The Human League, the undisputed pioneers of synth pop. April 25, 2001

rating: 3 QuoteBig hits that rule, but the rest......Quote
What a mixed bag after a few listens this album became. The Human League is a great new wave group that had a few really important records throughout the eighties and nineties. Not enough though to make this monstrous hits set. Let's get into the songs you most certainly know.

There is the defining track of new wave and eighties that is "Don't You Want Me". A scenario of a man makes a star and her going it on her own. And she leaves him? The engaging dialogue really captures you and the techno savvy mix of keyboards is just legendary and catchy. "Keep Feeling Fascination" is a cute upbeat keyboard number with a touch of ska feel but without the horns. The things this group did with keyboards, I'll tell ya. "Human" is a sensitive love song and is a continue in the direction of new wave brilliance but this time R&B masters Jim Jam and Terry Lewis take a crack at the group. The production is a simple blend of drum machines and light touches of ivory. A classic of the big hair era and their second number 1 ("Don't You Want Me" being their first). Their next well known hit on here might be kind of obscure, but if you had an eye on MTV and VH1 for about a month or so in 1995 you got a listen to this clubby record with a retro feel. "Tell Me When" is very much like "Don't You Want Me" but the sound is updated for a Europe dance effort that is very catchy, but I don't know that it was a huge chart topper here.

You might know and be fond of those four songs like I was and still am, but looked at the rest of the set and wondered "This Could Be Good". Well the truth is revealed in this set that The Human League really isn't that pop of a band, but more of an out their New Wave experiment that worked a few times. The rest of the songs are for the most part dark sounding accounts of love. "Mirror Man" is Motown like trip to "The Church Of a Poison Mind" (although this came first). No one asked for this, did they? Trippy desire comes off as scary in "Open Your Heart" and "Love Is All That Matters". These early efforts along with "The Sound Of The Crowd" are just plain dated and horrible. "The Lebanon" gets so much talk here that you think it was a great political song, but it's so dry and pop rocky that it feels stale.

The non big hits aren't so bad, but a required taste that you don't expect on here. The fun pop hits on here, though, are quite essential and very danceable. For those hits, you might want to get this set, but the aging eighties synth arrangements drag the album down. Also, I know it odd that I have the import, but I found it on a trip and just had to get something musically different from the UK. Maybe next time I should go for something modern. August 11, 2000

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