Human's Lib

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Nothing can match the greatness of Howard Jones' haircut, which displayed a peculiar early-'80s combo of mop-top and spikes that was so simply wrong it could hardly have been mistaken for anything else. His first (and best) album doesn't have the monolithic sterility of his biggest hits ("Things Can Only Get Better"--the woah-woah-woah song--and "No One Is to Blame," which featured Phil Collins). It's also got some of Jones' catchiest numbers, including the charmingly simple "New Song" and "What s Love." It's all of an era, of course, but let it herein be noted that Jones was singing "I don't want to be hip and cool/I don't want to play by the rules" (from "New Song") well before Nirvana and Beck turned such sentiments into a "revolution." --Keven McAlester

Music Review:

  1. In the City
  2. Just [#2] [CD-single] [Import]
  3. King of America
  4. Ladies' Love Oracle
  5. Land Air Sea
  6. Learn to Fly, Pt. 1 [CD-single] [Import]
  7. Liberation Songs to Benefit PETA
  8. Live and Rare [Live]
  9. Live Forever [CD-single]
  10. Live Jam [Live]

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Compass and Companion

Chadwick: Symphony No.2/Symphonic Sketches

Great Organ Builders of America: A Retrospective Volume 8

Music: Sleep of Reason [Import]

Everyday [CD-single] [Import]

Final Fantasy: Potion - Relaxin' With Final Fantasy [Soundtrack] [Import]

Coleccion, Vol. 1 [Enhanced] [Import]

First Day of My Life [CD-single]

Best of the 70's: Hits of 1973

Copland: Music for Films

Every Breath You Take: Classics

Down the Old Plank Road: The Nashville Sessions

Cosas Mias [Import]

Free Us Colored Kids

Six Ate