Peace and Love, Inc.
Peace and Love Inc. | ||||
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Studio album by Information Society | ||||
Released | October 26, 1992 | |||
Genre |
Synth-pop Latin freestyle | |||
Label |
Tommy Boy/Reprise/Warner Bros. Records 45093 | |||
Producer |
Paul Robb Kurt Harland Mike Thorne Eric Kupper Joey Beltram Karl Bartos | |||
Information Society chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Peace and Love Inc. is an album by the synth-pop band Information Society. The album received great critical reviews but the label did little to promote it. It was the least successful of the three albums released by Tommy Boy/Reprise and was the last Tommy Boy title to be distributed by major-label channels (WEA in this case), although Warner Bros. Records owned a stake in the label until 2002.
Track listing
- "Peace & Love, Inc." — 5:00
- "Going, Going, Gone" — 4:53
- "To the City" — 3:30
- "Made to Be Broken" — 4:25
- "Still Here" — 4:48
- "1,000,000 Watts of Love" — 4:22
- "Where Would I Be Without IBM" — 4:28
- "To Be Free" — 3:50
- "If It's Real" — 4:33
- "Crybaby" — 5:11
- "Where the I Divides" — 4:15
- "300bps N, 8, 1 (Terminal Mode or Ascii Download)"
All songs written by Paul Robb except for 5 and 11 written by Kurt Harland.
Line-up
Easter egg
The track "300bps N, 8, 1 (Terminal Mode Or Ascii Download)" is actually a text file encoded as modem tones. When decoded, the content is a tale by Kurt Harland about a bizarre but purportedly true event that took place when the band was playing in the city of Maringá, Brazil.
External links
- Kurt Harland comments on Peace & Love, Inc.
- "300bps N, 8, 1 (Terminal Mode Or Ascii Download)" decoded
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