Thinkman

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Best Adventures 00:00 Tools
The Formula 00:00 Tools
The Ecstasy Of Free Thought 00:00 Tools
Legend 04:36 Tools
The Days Of A Champion 00:00 Tools
The Conflict 00:00 Tools
There Shines Our Promised Land 00:00 Tools
The Challenge 00:00 Tools
Watchman, Walkman, Thinkman 00:00 Tools
Come To Your Rescue 00:00 Tools
Bad Angel 04:51 Tools
Hard Hat Zone 04:44 Tools
Never A Tear 00:00 Tools
Dance Yourself Sane 00:00 Tools
Who's Winning The Human Race? 00:00 Tools
Voices In Local Time 00:00 Tools
Walking On My Shadow's Head 00:00 Tools
Mother Nature's Angry 04:01 Tools
Slow Game 04:44 Tools
Will-Power 00:00 Tools
November Whale 00:00 Tools
Act Of Love 00:00 Tools
Unite It, Don't Divide It 00:00 Tools
Take Them to the Traitors' Gate 00:00 Tools
Think About It 00:00 Tools
Exploring This World (Without Moving Too Much) 03:23 Tools
The A To Z Of You And Me 00:00 Tools
Life Is A Full Time Occupation 00:00 Tools
Live Is a Full Time Occupation 00:00 Tools
The Formula (Interpolated Version) 00:00 Tools
Watchman Walkman Thinkman 00:00 Tools
Hard Hat Zone (Long Version) 00:00 Tools
The Formula (extended) 00:00 Tools
The Formular 00:00 Tools
Best Adventures (Maxi Remix) 00:00 Tools
Excerpt From The Big Lie 00:00 Tools
Will Power 00:00 Tools
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Thinkman was an electro-pop-rock band of the late 1980s and early 1990s which acted as a vehicle for singer/songwriter/producer Rupert Hine. Their first appearance was on the soundtrack to Savage Steve Holland's first feature film "Better Off Dead". Thinkman was conceived about a year before as a 'front' for producer Rupert Hine following his three solo albums in the first half of the 1980s. The three other band members that appeared with Hine both on their videos and limited live performances were actors. Rupert Hine and his collaborator, Jeannette-Thérese Obstoj, had originally planned a feature film that coincided with Rupert Hine's signing to Island Records. In the original script here were some 40 Thinkman in total, and their role was that of media terrorists. Reportedly the budget spiraled and it was felt prudent to put the movie on hold and start by releasing the 'soundtrack' first. The album was called 'The Formula' and it became one of Rupert Hine's best-sellers. Whilst the actors made no appearance on the album, Jamie West-Oram from The Fixx and Stewart Copeland from The Police did. Guest vocals on the title track from one of Rupert Hine's favorite artists at the time, Lisa Dalbello, from Canada. The second album, 'Life is a Full Time Occupation', was released two years later. Accompanied by the same actors for both visuals and promotion, the album was a hybrid between the modd of 'The Formula' and a 'dance' energy arrangement. The lyrical content was also split between the 'media-terrorist' songs and something altogether lighter. The third and final album, 'Hard Hat Zone', took several further steps away from the origins of the band and became effectively a Rupert Hine solo album. Though one video was made with the same cast, the 'look' no longer worked. Lyrically, the songs were mostly reflective of environmental issues from the title track's reference to the state of the planet to an ode to the plight of the whales entitled 'November Whale'. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.