Don't Be Afraid (album)

"White Roses" redirects here. For the intellectual resistance group during Nazi Germany, see White Rose.
Don't Be Afraid
Studio album by Information Society
Released September 23, 1997
Genre Industrial
Electronic
Length 59:46
Label Cleopatra Records
Producer Kurt Harland
Fred Maher
Steven Seibold
Information Society chronology
Peace and Love, Inc.
(1992)
Don't Be Afraid
(1997)
InSoc Recombinant
(1999)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Don't Be Afraid is a 1997 industrial / electronic album by Information Society. It saw a dramatic change in creative direction from the pop stylings of Information Society's earlier work to a darker sound with prominent themes of paranoia and disaffection with modern life. The sound of Don't Be Afraid is most similar to the late 1990s dark industrial work of Gary Numan.

The album was created as a solo effort by Information Society frontman Kurt Harland. After the breakup of the band in the mid-1990s, Harland decided to retain the band name for this album. In 2006, the band reunited (with Harland initially opting out, before rejoining in 2007) and reassumed the name.

Track listing

All tracks written by Kurt Harland, except where noted. 

No. Title Length
1. "Empty 3.0"   8:32
2. "Closing In 2.0"   8:11
3. "On The Outside 2.1"   6:46
4. "Ending World 1.1"   5:31
5. "Seek300 2.11"   4:29
6. "The Sky Away 2.0"   3:59
7. "Are 'Friends' Electric? 2.0" (Gary Numan) 5:41
8. "Ozar Midrashim 1.1"   6:52
9. "The Ridge 1.1"   8:41
10. "White Roses 1.1 (300 8-N-1 Terminal Mode Or ASCII Download)" (modem noise) 0:56
Don't Be Afraid V.1.3 rerelease
No. Title Length
10. "White Roses 1.0"   7:59
11. "Kebabträume 1.0" (Robert Görl) 5:23

"White Roses"

The 10th track on Don't Be Afraid is titled "White Roses" and sounds as 55 seconds of modem noise. When decoded, text data is displayed revealing clues for of an Internet scavenger hunt of sorts to collect 16 separate ARJ-compressed, password-protected files which add up to the completed "White Roses song" in WAV format. Most of the pieces are now lost, due to hosting being taken down.

The song itself is a dark synth and acoustic guitar piece lasting over seven minutes whose main theme is depression and internal identity crisis. The website Spacemutiny has a page of information related to this hunt and an MP3 download of the complete song.

Alternative releases

Personnel

Production

Use in media

Three songs were used in video games that had soundtracks composed by Kurt Harland.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.