Hydra

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (32 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 41:08

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AMBUSH!!!!!!!!!

oneofsix1958

WELL.... IT was... AN ambush(that is) this.... in MY opinion is the best Toto CD - song for song. Tracks 5 and 7 ROCK.....Tracks 1 and 2 are infectious and 99 is hot...will ALWAYS be hot(Barbara Feldon.) THIS 'id be the one I'd get to represent the band. There are BETTER Toto songs, but not better albums......

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I had fond memories of this

pixelologist

...but it doesn't hold up as well as I would have liked. In college I played this album to death. Love, love, LOOOVVVVED it. I still like it though more for the fact that it was so much a part of my life back then than for any intrinsic musical value. Toto don't ever go for broke...they never seem to break a musical sweat. I still think that many of these compositions are fairly strong and they're certainly imbued with a healthy dose of atmosphere but Toto never actually ROCKS. And ultimately, that's what dooms this set.

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They Say All Media Guide

If Toto’s musical advantage was that, since its members continued to play on many of the successful records made in L.A., its own music was popular almost by definition, its disadvantage was that it made little attempt to seek an individual musical signature — a particular style, say, or a distinctive singer (Bobby Kimball was not it) who could make its records immediately identifiable. “Hold the Line” had been a big hit, but who did it? Boston? Foreigner? As a result, Toto was less well positioned than most to come off a big debut album with the follow-up, and Hydra was unusually dependent on its leadoff single, “99.” Maybe it was a tribute to the female lead on the old Get Smart TV show, but many listeners didn’t get a song with a chorus that went, “Oh, 99, I love you,” and the single stalled in the bottom half of the Top 40. The album went gold on momentum, but the songs, however well-played, simply were not distinctive enough to consolidate the success Toto had achieved with its debut album. – William Ruhlmann

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