Information Society - Hack (CD)

Hack
$49.98 - $49.98
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Hack

Release Date:10/16/1990
Label:Warner Bros / Wea
UPC:075992625821

Other Available Formats: Hack

User Reviews: Hack

  • Overall:

    A master Synth-Pop album with a dark sid

    By Professor Murda  Aug 22, 2002 | 1 out of 1 found this Hack review helpful

    Information Society is a band whose members constantly went in different directions from each other, from synth pop to goth to dance. While their other albums all have great hits and stand-out singles, Hack is by far their best effort to make one en...tire ALBUM play from begining to end as a single entity. The result is a techno-driven pop album with a thinly veiled dark side that still holds up today as an excellent album for any occasion. A definite must-have for anyone who's into the synth-pop bands of today. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Hack

  • All Music Guide

    The Minneapolis-based synth-pop group Information Society scored in 1988 with the Top Ten hits "What's On Your Mind (Pure Energy)" and "Walking Away," both from the band's platinum-selling self-titled debut album. The band released the more experimental Hack in 1990; although it contains a few tunes that are just as good as those on the debut, the album is marred considerably by repetition and excess. "Think," the first single, became a minor hit single in 1990, with good reason; the tune could have fit in quite well with the insanely catchy dance pop of the debut. Unfortunately, there are only a handful of tracks on Hack that show off Information Society's strengths. The band's best songs from the debut ("What's On Your Mind," for example) mixed Latin rhythms with somewhat dark synth-pop and vocalist Kurt Harland's snide delivery, which is reminiscent of the Thompson Twins' Tom Bailey. On Hack, too many of the tunes drag (like the unbearable "Fire Tonight") and sound alike ("Now That ...I Have You" is a virtual rewrite of "Think"), and the overuse of sound effects and production gimmicks suggests Information Society was attempting a more aggressive (or perhaps obnoxious) sound. Instead, this approach adds unnecessary weight to the material, and the pop sensibility that made the debut album so successful has all but disappeared. This album is also cluttered with annoying, pretentious between-song sound collages that serve no purpose other than to test the skip mechanism on CD players. If Information Society had spent a little more time coming up with actual songs instead of worthless filler, and if the band had focused more on hooks instead of production, Hack may have kept them from becoming a flash in the pan. The handful of good songs here prove the band could have maintained its success, but it was not to be. It tanked, not even going gold and failing to yield even one major hit. Information Society released Peace and Love, Inc. in 1992, which failed to re-establish the band as hitmakers. - William Cooper, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Information Society

An agreeable dance outfit with ties to industrial music, techno and funk plus an equally appreciable pop sense, Information Society hit the danceclubs and later the charts with their infectious breakout single, 1988's "What's on Your Mind (Pure Energy)." The group, a quartet formed in Minneapolis by James Cassidy, Paul Robb, Kurt Harland (aka Kurt Valaquen), and Amanda ... Read more