I am on a bit of an 80s nostalgia kick again this week, following
Tuesday's faboo Erasure concert.
Imagine my joy to find that on this very day
thirty years ago the seminal synth-pop album
Dare by The Human League made its debut at the top of the charts in the UK!
I - like many people I guess - still have a cherished copy of the vinyl on my shelf; and still, if truth be told, have its minimalist cover still fondly etched on my brain.
Dare is as much a part of my DNA as is my accent.
It was (alongside such other works of genius as Grace Jones
Nightclubbing, Depeche Mode
Speak & Spell and Soft Cell
Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret) the soundtrack to my blossoming obsession with the whole electronic "New Romantic" era.
I vividly recall dancing
on my own (not an uncommon thing at the time) on a dancefloor to
Love Action. I would sit in my bedroom with
Sound of the Crowd or
The Things That Dreams Are Made Of blaring through the windows.
Everyone went wild for
Don't You Want Me, but I preferred
Open Your Heart with its magnificently uplifting lyrics (which meant everything to a crazy mixed-up teen like me):
And when it hurts
You know they love to tell you
How they warned you.
They say "Don't be surprised at someone's lies"
They think they taunt you
But if you can stand the test
You know your worst
Is better than their best.
And so you stand here with the years ahead
Potentially calling
With open heart or with a spirit dead
You walk on.Every track worked harmoniously with the next, and the result even today is a magnificent sum of its parts. In summary,
Dare is a phenomenon, never to be repeated...
Here's a YouTube version of a
Dare mixtape (quite an 80s thing in itself):
Enjoy the memories...
Dare entry on Wikipedia
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