Credo is the ninth studio album by The Human League. It is their first studio album since Secrets in 2001. It has been produced by fellow Sheffield act I Monster and is released on Wall of Sound.
The Human League are so credible itâs incredible. In fact, theyâre probably more highly regarded in 2011 than they were in 1981 when they released their landmark album Dare!
Theyâre used to everyone from Madonna to Moby, Pet Shop Boys to Robbie Williams, citing them as an influence. Now the dubstep generation â notably, the acclaimed Darkstar, who cover the Leagueâs 1982 B-side âYou Remind Me Of Goldâ on their current album, North â have begun to pay homage to the original sound of Sheffield.
But theyâre about more than esoteric infiltration â there has been mainstream penetration, too, commensurate with a band who gave us the greatest ever Christmas Number 1 single with 1981/2âs âDonât You Want Meâ, who have had four Top 10 albums and eight Top 10 singles in the UK as well as two US Number 1 singles and sold 20 million records worldwide: the most lauded TV program of recent times, time-travel saga Ashes To Ashes, based one of its main characters on Joanne Catherall, while the mighty Philip Oakey appeared in a recent episode of Top Gear at the personal behest of Jeremy Clarkson who regularly name-checks the League in his newspaper column.
Then there are the âLâ girls, the new generation of synth-driven female pop artists, who have got in on the League-adoring act: La Roux is a known admirer of the electro pioneers, while Little Boots is such a fan she requested Philip Oakeys input on her debut album. Even Lady Gaga professed to be a devotee when she met them recently; they had adjacent dressing rooms at the âVâ Festival.
âShe sat there in her bra and pants and we told her we were a huge fan of hers and she told us she was a huge fan of ours as well,â says Susan Ann Sulley, who has never been a waitress in a cocktail bar but has been a member of the League since Martyn Ware and Ian Craig Marsh left the band in 1980 to form Heaven 17. âIâm not star-struck by many people and I donât hero-worship anyone, but she was lovely.â
But not surprisingly for a group who were famously described by David Bowie in 1979 as âthe sound of the futureâ, and indeed the group was once called The Future, The Human League have never been about resting on their laurels or relying on past glories to see them through. Which is why, in March 2011, they will be releasing Credo, their 9th studio album, as brilliant a distillation of their ideas about pop and dancing, glamour and electronics, as anything they have ever done.
They called it Credo, meaning âbeliefâ, for The Human League fans who never stopped believing in the band in the decade since their last album, 2001âs critically acclaimed Secrets.
âWhen I was growing up, Roxy Music was the most important thing in my life,â explains Philip Oakey, along with Iggy Pop the owner of the most instantly recognizable, dolorous yet authoritative baritone in pop. âWhen they split up [in 1976], I was bereft. And then one day I opened a music paper and saw an announcement for a new album called Manifesto [1979] â I liked the title and the idea that it was their manifesto, which they believed in it. So I looked for a word like that, because weâve been in the wilderness for a bit. The word âCredoâ is about believing â it says everything about the record, which is exactly the record we would want to have made for release in 2011.â
Credo was produced by âI Monsterâ, the Sheffield duo behind the 2001 single Daydream In Blue and for many years the brains behind a slew of distinctive, playful electronica from the Steel City.
âWe canât understate what I Monster have done,â says Philip of Dean Honer and Jarrod Gosling. Susan agrees: âIt wouldnât have taken such a short time had they not been involved. This is the quickest weâve ever worked.â Adds Philip: âThey grabbed the whole thing and simplified it.â
They note the irony of a band who spent years working with musicians from all over the planet, including stellar R&B producers Jam & Lewis on their 1986 single Human and album Crash, now being a Sheffield-only affair.
âWe made the decision to not work with Sheffield musicians in case we fell out or something,â says Susan. Laughs Joanne: âWe just didnât want anyone in Sheffield finding out how horrible we are!â Joking aside, they are delighted with their all-Sheffield set-up. And Joanne credits I Monster with bringing more of a sense of coherence to Credo.
âWe wanted it to be a consistent record, not, you know, two tracks with that producer and two tracks with someone else,â she says. âWe wanted it to have a unified feel, rather than going from one style to anotherâ.
Credoâs style is a refinement of the approach adopted by The Human League in 1980-1 when they took the revolutionary decision to employ commercial tactics to inveigle experimental art-school ideas into the mainstream. Love Action, Open Your Heart, Sound Of The Crowd, Donât You Want Me, Do Or Die, Hard Times, The Things That Dreams Are Made Of â these love, or anti-love, songs and anthems for dispossessed teens with their shiny production and hummable melodies, given added momentum by a series of menacing synth-bass riffs and riveting electronic pulse-beats, all presented in that Vogue-magazine-ish way via the artwork for Dare!, were nothing less than acts of radical subterfuge.
And so it is with âCredoâ â which Philip, looking forward as ever, sees as the first album of the next stage in The Human Leagueâs evolution â and its eleven tracks, which sound like classic League but are as modern as the finest 21st century chart pop. âNever Let Me Goâ is an ecstatic album opener, the Auto-tuned vocals bringing to mind Cheryl Cole if sheâd been brought up on Kraftwerk and Moroder as well as Richard X and Xenomania. The phased chorus - âNo. Donât. Go.â â is awesome, effortlessly straddling the high street and the art-house, the Leagueâs stock-in-trade. The first single on an album of potential singles is âNight Peopleâ, another outrageously catchy burst of suburban disco pop with some of the urban nocturnal drama of âSound Of The Crowdâ, the girlsâ voices as ever giving the lie to the idea that you have to bellow and blare to emote. âSkyâ paints a picture every bit as evocative as your favourite acoustic troubadour and shows what a great songwriter Philip Oakey is. âGot To Doâ manages to be, as per the League since day one, weird and utterly irresistible with its reference to âstartled simiansâ harking back to the âsericultureâ of âBeing Boiledâ. âDo you turn left, do you turn right, back to your bed or into the night?â croons Philip. âWake me, shake me, just let me know.â Every lyric, every hook, has been designed for maximum impact. Even the titles â âSingle Mindedâ, âElectric Shockâ - are immediate and striking. As ever, there is brightness here, with a feeling of danger encroaching on the dancefloor. Above all âCredoâ has the energy and sense of purpose of a group of particularly astute and skilled twenty somethings with something to prove about their desire to combine pop song mores with the latest electronics.
âThe League have always been into other areas of culture and using bits of Clockwork Orange and JG Ballard, sci-fi and stuff,â says Philip of the lyrics on âCredoâ and some of the references in them. âAnd there has always been something a bit nasty and crude in our music, a quality that I think some of our records lacked and which we tried hard to bring to âCredoâ â other electronic groups have a little bit of shine, their records are a bit shimmery and polished and intricate, and that doesnât suit us. Weâve got to be a bit primitiveâ.
âWe donât like people being too clever with our stuff or too polished because weâve never been about that,â contends Joanne.
âBut,â adds Philip, âour main aim for âCredoâ wasnât literate lyrics or anything like that. We just wanted it to be catchy, accessible, with good tunes and good riffs, and for everything at every stage to be as memorable as possible.â
âCredoâ is part of that particular pop lineage that goes from Bowie, Roxy and Kraftwerk to Donna Summer, Chic and Michael Jackson to Lady Gaga, Usher and Girls Aloud. Supremely infectious chart pop music, only with the League you get an extra subversive âxâ factor.
âPop to us has always meant âmusic that youâve not heard beforeâ,â he asserts. âNow itâs just Saturday night entertainment.â
âWe sat for a whole morning with loads of Lady Gaga and Usher records, comparing drums for loudness,â explains Susan. âI was saying the drums on âCredoâ needed to be really loud!â
âCredoâ manages to makes itself heard above the brashest state-of-the-art pop productions. It brings some of that primitive essence to the milieu, as well as The Human Leagueâs unique quality of apartness.
âWeâre peculiar,â says Susan, utterly unabashed. âPeople think pop music is X Factor and S Club 7 and weâre still hankering after a Roxy-Bowie-Donna Summer-Chic version of pop. We donât fit in. People donât quite appreciate how strange we are. There are three of us, two of whom have never written a song and are pretty average singers, plus weâve got a lead singer who doesnât consider himself a singer at all and canât play any instruments very well. And yet we still think of ourselves as a pop group, not arty-farty or weird. If a market research group got hold of us, theyâd change absolutely everything! And yet it works. We shouldnât have gone on this long as we have â we should have âgone rockâ by now, like Depeche Mode, Simple Minds and U2 did. But weâre still a pop group.â
Not just a pop group â possibly the last great pop group. Believe.
source: www.thehumanleague.co.uk