Homosapien

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (32 ratings)
Homosapien album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 68:53

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Brilliant, ahead of its time

McrIsRed

Loved this LP at the time, Produced with Martin Rushent before he did Dare with the Human League, but released afterwards. Phil Oakey has admitted that it would have stolen some of Dare's thunder if it had been released first. The title track is an electropop classic with a not very subliminal message, which at the time I missed completely!

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Breaking out of New Wave

EMUSIC-00B61BB2

When released in '81, this album seemed a heartless betrayal of the stripped down power pop principles of our beloved Buzzcocks. What was this synth-drenched "disco" s***? But, given a listen, Shelley's passion bursts forth on every track ... this pioneering album helped blaze the path for New Wave to expand into the "club" music explosion of New Order, Depeche Mode, etc. This is one of the true milestones of the 80's. Btw ... track 6 is mislabeled ... it is actually the churning "I Don't Know What It Is" not "I Don't Know What Love Is".

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At last !

jimka63

First solo album from ex- Buzzcocks' frontman . Re issued at last . Get this , there are some excellent songs here ...

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They Say All Music Guide

Homosapien was a super-sad event upon its release in 1981. Buzzcocks fans were aware that the songs were originally intended for the band’s fourth LP (even though some, such as the underground hit title track, had been composed before the band began) — a new work that was set to continue the intriguing, strange, yet powerful and incredible direction the group had taken on side two of late-1979′s A Different Kind of Tension, and its three (final) singles recorded in 1980. However, as Shelley settled into London’s Genetic studios with producer Martin Rushent to demo these tunes, something unexpected happened. Shelley and Rushent fell in love with the cheesier, one-man-and-a-boop-beep-boop drum machine demos in a time when electro-pop disco was taking over. Tired of the group’s sorry financial state, Shelley abruptly disbanded the band via an insensitive lawyers’ letter mailed to his bandmates. Homosapien’s release followed a few months later, before his fans’ shock had dissipated. It can now be listened to in a different light than the inconsolably sad emotions that originally surrounded it. Despite the utterly ridiculous, aforementioned “drum” sound, it’s the one Shelley solo effort worth investigating. Unlike XL1 and Heaven and the Sea, the wry, lovelorn pop songwriting inspiration is still with him. But more importantly, this is the only attempt by Shelley to retain the compressed, tight, hard production and vocals of his band work, despite the new genre and the predominance of a 12-string acoustic in favor of the old buzzsaw. More dance-pop than rock, Homosapien still straddles both fences enough to interest lovers of both genres. [Note: Five bonus tracks from XL1 are tacked on the Razor & Tie reissue, where the two Homosapien B-sides, "Keats' Song" and "Maxine," would have made more sense.] – Jack Rabid

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