Hunting High and Low is the debut studio album by the Norwegian synth-pop and new wave band a-ha, released on 1 June 1985 in the United States and 28 October 1985 in the United Kingdom by Warner Bros. Records.[1][2] Recorded primarily at Eel Pie Studios in Twickenham, London, the album was produced by Alan Tarney, with additional production on select tracks by Tony Mansfield and John Ratcliff.[3][4]The album features ten tracks, including the band's breakthrough single "Take on Me", which became a global number-one hit, as well as "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." and the title track "Hunting High and Low", both of which achieved significant commercial success.[5] Other singles released from the album include "Love Is Reason".[5] The record's sound blends synth-pop with elements of new wave and pop rock, showcasing the vocal range of lead singer Morten Harket, keyboards by Magne Furuholmen, and guitar work by Paul Waaktaar-Savoy.[4][6]Upon release, Hunting High and Low achieved strong chart performance, peaking at number 15 on the US Billboard 200[5] and number 2 on the UK Albums Chart, where it spent 81 weeks in the top 100.[7] It has been certified Platinum by the RIAA in the United States for sales of one million units as of 17 March 1986[8] and received multiple certifications internationally, reflecting its role in propelling a-ha to worldwide fame. The album's success, driven by innovative music videos and catchy melodies, established a-ha as one of the leading acts in 1980s synth-pop.[4]
Background
Band formation and early history
a-ha was formed in Oslo, Norway, in September 1982 by vocalist Morten Harket, keyboardist Magne Furuholmen, and guitarist Pål Waaktaar-Savoy.[9] Furuholmen and Waaktaar-Savoy, who had collaborated in local bands such as Bridges and Poem since their early teens, invited Harket to join after recognizing his vocal talent as a missing element in their project.[10][11] The trio drew inspiration from the burgeoning new wave and synth-pop scenes, citing influences including Depeche Mode and Duran Duran, which shaped their melodic, synthesizer-driven sound.[11]In late 1982, the band retreated to a log cabin by the OsloFjord to compose material for what would become their debut album, developing several songs during intensive sessions.[9] They adopted the name "a-ha," inspired by a lyrical phrase in Waaktaar-Savoy's notebook.[12] These early efforts focused on crafting pop-oriented tracks with electronic elements, reflecting the 1980s British music landscape they aspired to enter.[11]Seeking greater exposure, a-ha relocated to London in early 1983, where they submitted demos to industry contacts amid financial hardships.[10][13] After manager Terry Slater shopped their recordings, the band secured a deal with Warner Bros. Records UK later that year.[10] Their first live performance followed in August 1983, a showcase at Rendezvous Studios for potential label executives, marking their entry into the competitive London scene.[14][15]Throughout 1984, a-ha continued demoing extensively at Rendezvous Studios in Sydenham, producing material for multiple potential albums and experimenting with synthesizers like the Prophet-5.[11] Their debut single, the original version of "Take on Me," was released in October 1984 but achieved limited success, failing to chart significantly in the UK despite some radio play and internal label support.[11][12] This setback underscored the challenges they faced before refining their breakthrough sound.
Recording and production
The recording of Hunting High and Low primarily involved producers Tony Mansfield, John Ratcliff, and Alan Tarney, with Tarney handling key tracks such as "Take on Me" and "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." after initial efforts stalled. Alan Tarney, an English producer and former member of the Tarney/Spencer Band, had established himself in the 1980s by working with prominent acts including Cliff Richard on the hit "We Don't Talk Anymore" (1979) and subsequent albums like Wired for Sound (1981), as well as Olivia Newton-John, emphasizing smooth synth integrations and polished pop arrangements.[16][15]Sessions began in June-July 1984 at Eel Pie Studios in Twickenham, London—owned by Pete Townshend and partially under construction at the time—with Mansfield overseeing most tracks, including "Train of Thought," "Hunting High and Low," and "The Blue Sky." Additional work occurred in early 1985 at RG Jones Studios in Wimbledon for revisions, particularly under Tarney, as the band refined material following the debut single's commercial disappointment. The process extended over several months, marked by delays that pushed completion into spring 1985.[15][17][4]Production techniques centered on synthesizers for the album's layered sound, notably the Roland Juno-60, which Tarney used to craft the distinctive arpeggiated riff in the re-recorded "Take on Me." Other instruments included the Yamaha DX7 for leads and bass, the Fairlight sampler for textures (limited to eight tracks in Mansfield's setup), and the Prophet-5 for pads; drums were often synthesized via LinnDrum or early MIDI setups. Vocals, led by Morten Harket, were multi-tracked using Neumann U47 and FET 47 microphones, then enhanced with early digital effects like Lexicon 224X reverb and AMS RMX16 delay to create the bright, expansive synth-pop aesthetic.[15][4]A pivotal event was the overhaul of "Take on Me," whose 1984 Mansfield-produced single had flopped in the UK; Tarney's early 1985 re-recording at RG Jones introduced the new Juno-60 synth riff and tighter arrangements, revitalizing the track for inclusion on the album. Challenges included prolonged sessions leading to band exhaustion, studio constraints at the under-construction Eel Pie facility, and budget pressures from Warner Bros. amid revisions, with Tarney's contributions reportedly exceeding initial allocations. Tensions arose during work on experimental tracks like "Train of Thought," where Mansfield's sampler-driven approach clashed with the band's demo-based preferences, requiring multiple remixes by Ratcliff.[15][4]
Composition
Musical style and influences
Hunting High and Low is primarily classified as a synth-pop album, incorporating elements of new wave, pop rock, and art pop.[18][4] This debut effort by a-ha stands in contrast to the band's subsequent releases, which shifted toward heavier rock influences in albums like Scoundrel Days and East of the Sun, West of the Moon.[19] The sound features slick, futuristic productions with oddball chord changes and diverse arrangements that build emotional arcs across its tracks.[4]The album's style draws from prominent 1980s synth acts such as Ultravox and Japan, evident in its synth-heavy textures and atmospheric depth.[4] Melodic pop songwriting influences, particularly from Sting, contribute to the sophisticated structure of its compositions.[4] Additionally, a distinctive Nordic melancholy permeates the music, reflecting the band's Norwegian heritage and infusing the tracks with a haunting emotional resonance.[20][21]Instrumentation centers on prominent synthesizers like the Prophet-5, alongside drum machines, the Fairlight sampler, and early guitar synth experiments that add layered textures.[4] Morten Harket's soaring falsetto vocals elevate the choruses to anthemic heights, blending seamlessly with synthesized drums and keyboard-driven melodies.[22] These elements create a polished yet evocative sonic palette.Comprising 10 tracks that mix upbeat singles with introspective ballads, the album runs for a concise 37:11.[23] Its ethereal production crafts expansive soundscapes that mirror a thematic "hunting high and low" pursuit, enhancing the overall sense of searching and introspection.[4]
Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Hunting High and Low were primarily crafted by guitarist Paul Waaktaar-Savoy, who composed the majority of the music and contributed key lyrical elements, with keyboardist Magne Furuholmen adding poetic depth and vocalist Morten Harket influencing phrasing through his interpretive delivery.[24][4] The album's central themes revolve around romantic longing and an existential search for connection, often framed through metaphors of pursuit and emotional volatility, capturing the highs and lows of human relationships. This is exemplified in the title track, where the phrase "hunting high and low" symbolizes the relentless, often futile quest for elusive love, blending personal vulnerability with a sense of grand, introspective yearning reflective of Scandinavian emotional restraint.[25] Subtle nods to Norwegian landscapes appear in the imagery of isolation and vastness, evoking the moody, introspective terrain of the band's homeland.[24]Specific tracks further illustrate these motifs without delving into overt narrative complexity. "Take on Me" portrays a tale of ardent pursuit, where the protagonist's determination to bridge emotional distances mirrors the album's broader theme of chasing intangible bonds, evolving from Waaktaar-Savoy's early riff-based sketches into a streamlined expression of romantic urgency.[4] In contrast, "The Sun Always Shines on TV" addresses the duality of fame and inner turmoil, contrasting outward success with private emotional shadows, as Harket's soaring vocals amplify the tension between visibility and solitude.[24] Other songs, such as "Here I Stand and Face the Rain," infuse gothic melancholy with lines suggesting dread of an uncertain future, underscoring the album's undercurrent of existential unease.[25]The lyrics evolved significantly from initial demos, where abstract, poetic fragments—often starting on acoustic guitar—were refined into accessible pop narratives during the band's 1983–1984 London sessions, transforming raw emotional seeds into polished, relatable stories under the influence of synth-pop's concise structures.[4] This development aligned with the cultural context of 1980s youth alienation, as the Norwegian trio's relocation to London amid a sparse domestic music scene channeled feelings of displacement and ambition into synth-driven expressions of longing, resonating with a generation navigating global pop's glossy yet isolating era.[24][25]
Release and promotion
Singles and music videos
The first single from the album, "Love Is Reason," was released in Norway on April 1, 1985, and in the Philippines, though it did not receive a music video or international promotion. The lead single from Hunting High and Low, "Take on Me", was initially released in October 1984 as a non-album track in Norway, but following lackluster international response, a re-recorded version tied to the album was issued in early 1985, with major market releases occurring in September for the UK and July for the US, before peaking in October 1985.[26] This re-release featured B-sides such as "Love Is Reason" on 7" vinyl formats and extended mixes on 12" versions, with international variations including picture sleeves and limited-edition pressings.[26] The second single, "The Sun Always Shines on T.V.", followed on December 16, 1985, primarily in 7" and 12" vinyl formats, backed by the non-album track "Driftwood" and offering extended 7-minute mixes internationally.[27] The title track "Hunting High and Low" served as the third and final single, released on June 2, 1986, in 7" vinyl with orchestral overdubs exclusive to the single version, alongside 12" editions featuring remixes and B-sides like "Events in Nature"; early CD single formats also emerged for select markets by this time.In terms of chart performance, "Take on Me" achieved No. 1 on both the UK Singles Chart and the US Billboard Hot 100, holding the top spot in the UK for two weeks starting October 13, 1985, and in the US for one week on October 19, 1985.[28][29] "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." reached No. 1 in the UK for two weeks in March 1986 and peaked at No. 20 on the US Billboard Hot 100. While "Hunting High and Low" charted modestly at No. 5 in the UK and No. 15 in the US, it marked the album's closing promotional push.[30]The music videos played a pivotal role in the singles' success, particularly for "Take on Me", directed by Steve Barron and featuring groundbreaking rotoscoping animation that blended live-action footage with hand-drawn pencil-sketch sequences, requiring approximately 3,000 frames traced over 16 weeks (four months) of production at a cost of around $250,000 (1985 dollars)—exceptional for a 1985 music video.[31][32] This innovative visual earned six MTV Video Music Awards in 1986, including Best New Artist in a Video, Best Concept Video, and Most Experimental Video.[33] In contrast, the "Hunting High and Low" video, directed by Steve Barron, adopted a straightforward live-action concept, filmed in black-and-white with the band performing amid abstract scenic backdrops to evoke the song's themes of searching and longing, without extensive effects.[34] "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." featured a narrative-driven live-action clip emphasizing emotional performance, aligning with the album's synth-pop aesthetic.[35]
Marketing and tour
The album Hunting High and Low was initially released on June 1, 1985, by Warner Bros. Records in the United States and Norway, followed by a rollout in the United Kingdom and Europe on October 28, 1985. Warner Bros. employed a multifaceted promotional strategy centered on visual media to capitalize on the band's emerging synth-pop appeal, with a strong emphasis on music videos aired heavily on MTV, particularly the groundbreaking animated/live-action clip for "Take on Me," which propelled the album's visibility in key markets. The label also secured multiple television appearances on the BBC's Top of the Pops, including performances of "Take on Me" in October and November 1985, as well as "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." in early 1986, enhancing exposure to UK audiences during the album's European launch. Album artwork featured stark, polaroid-style black-and-white photography of the band by Just Loomis, capturing them in candid, everyday settings to convey an accessible yet enigmatic image that aligned with the record's introspective themes.Promotional efforts extended to press tours across Europe and North America in late 1985 and throughout 1986, including a high-profile world tour press conference in London on April 10, 1986, where the band announced their upcoming itinerary. These activities were complemented by tie-ins with home video releases, such as the 1986 laser disc compilation Hunting High and Low, which bundled music videos and live footage to extend the album's reach beyond radio and TV. The strategy effectively bridged the gap between the album's staggered releases, building momentum through synchronized media pushes that highlighted the band's polished visuals and Morten Harket's soaring vocals.The Hunting High and Low era culminated in the band's 1986–1987 World Tour, comprising 171 shows across Europe, North America, Asia, Australia, and Japan, marking their most extensive live campaign to date. The setlist heavily featured tracks from the album, with staples like "Take on Me," "Hunting High and Low," "Train of Thought," and "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." performed at nearly every concert, often accounting for over half the runtime in an approximately 80-minute show. Notable stops included multiple dates in major venues such as London's Hammersmith Odeon in December 1986, where the band delivered high-energy renditions emphasizing their synth-driven sound and Harket's dynamic stage presence, solidifying their transition from studio act to global touring entity.
Critical reception
Initial reviews
Upon its release in 1985, Hunting High and Low received mixed reviews from critics, who praised its melodic hooks and production while critiquing its earnest pop sensibility. Robert Christgau of The Village Voice awarded the album a C- grade, writing: "Quite aware that I don't qualify as a pubescent female, I tried to be understanding. It's not their fault they're blond, after all—they're Norwegian. But though they'd clearly have been better off raised closer to the blues—in Wales, say—the gutturals of fellow Scandinavians from Gasolin' to the Nomads suggest that their precious Yes-gone-Europop accents are chosen freely. Over music they probably exerted less control."[36]In the UK, Record Mirror critic Lesley O'Toole highlighted the album's commercial viability, observing that it had already succeeded in the US and could do the same in Britain, though she emphasized its appeal to teenagers with the line, "The latest combo for teenies to wet their knickers over waste no time in launching their strategic assault on the British LP charts."[37]
Retrospective assessments
In the 21st century, Hunting High and Low has been reevaluated as a foundational synth-pop album, with critics emphasizing its sophisticated production and emotional depth beyond its initial commercial hits. A 2025 feature in Classic Pop Magazine hailed it as "one of the finest synth-pop albums of all time," crediting its futuristic sound, oddball chord changes, and diverse arrangements for standing up remarkably well after four decades, bolstered by over 10 million global sales and the billion-plus YouTube views for "Take on Me."[4] Likewise, a 2022 analysis in Post-Punk Monk positioned the album as a late-blooming exemplar of synthpop, praising Morten Harket's soaring falsetto and the synth-laden Europop that captured the era's exuberance while transcending it.[22]The 2015 30th anniversary super deluxe edition amplified this appreciation through enhanced remastering and bonus content, including demos and rare mixes that revealed the album's evolution. Icon Fetch lauded the production team's efforts, noting that the remixes imparted a "freshness that few records of that era possess," allowing tracks like the title song to shine as gorgeous ballads with restrained yet powerful vocals.[38]Cryptic Rock's contemporaneous review echoed this, describing the album as romantic, nostalgic, and haunting, with its synthesizer-driven melodies and orchestral flourishes challenging the "one-hit wonder" narrative and underscoring a-ha's youthful creativity.[39]Cultural and musicological discussions have spotlighted the album's visual innovations, particularly the rotoscoping animation in the "Take on Me" video, which blended live-action with hand-drawn sketches to create a pioneering hybrid style. Approximately 3,000 frames were rotoscoped in this labor-intensive technique, which revolutionized music video aesthetics and influenced later works in film and animation by merging reality with fantasy in emotionally resonant ways.[40][41]Podcasts and band interviews from 2022 to 2025 have delved into the album's introspective themes, often framing its lyrics as explorations of longing and emotional vulnerability tied to mental health. A June 2025 episode of the Sound Museumpodcast, marking the 40th anniversary, analyzed tracks like "Hunting High and Low" for their depictions of searching amid isolation, connecting them to broader discussions of melancholy in synthpop.[42] In a contemporaneous American Songwriter interview, the band reflected on this "dark, melancholic" undercurrent, with members attributing it to their Norwegian heritage while affirming the album's role in articulating personal and emotional highs and lows.[24]Contemporary consensus regards Hunting High and Low as a-ha's definitive statement, with retrospective acclaim reflecting its lasting influence and highlighting its blend of pop accessibility and artistic ambition.
Commercial performance
Chart performance
_Hunting High and Low achieved significant commercial success upon release, topping the charts in the band's native Norway and reaching high positions across multiple international markets. It debuted at number 1 on the Norwegian Albums Chart in 1985, where it spent eight weeks at the summit and a total of 38 weeks in the top 10. In the United Kingdom, the album peaked at number 2 on the Official Albums Chart in 1985, accumulating 81 weeks on the chart overall, including 18 consecutive weeks in the top 10, bolstered by the success of the "Take on Me" music video. The album's international breakthrough was further evidenced by its entry onto charts in over 15 countries, demonstrating a-ha's global appeal during the mid-1980s synth-pop era.[43][7][44]The following table summarizes the album's peak positions on select national weekly album charts:
On year-end charts, Hunting High and Low ranked at number 7 in the UK for 1986, reflecting sustained sales into the following year, and number 73 on the US Billboard 200 year-end chart for the same period. In Norway, the album maintains an enduring legacy, frequently appearing on all-time best-selling lists due to its cultural significance and long-term popularity. The album experienced re-entries on the UK chart in subsequent years, including brief returns in 1987, 1995, and 2015, underscoring its lasting draw. No significant chart activity occurred in 2024 or 2025, though streaming platforms like Spotify have contributed to ongoing revivals of its tracks in recent years.[45][46][43][7]
Sales and certifications
Hunting High and Low has sold over 10 million copies worldwide, establishing it as a-ha's best-selling album and a cornerstone of 1980s synth-pop commercial success.[47] In the United States, the album achieved sales of approximately 1 million units, earning a Platinumcertification from the RIAA in 1986 following a significant sales boost driven by heavy MTV rotation of the "Take on Me" music video.[48] The record's performance was particularly dominant in Europe, where it accounted for the majority of its global sales, exceeding 8 million units across the region by the early 2000s.[47]The album received numerous international certifications reflecting its strong regional appeal. In the United Kingdom, it was certified 3× Platinum by the BPI in 1992 for shipments of 900,000 copies, underscoring its enduring popularity in the British market.[49] Norway, the band's home country, awarded it Platinum status by IFPI Norway, while Germany granted 3× Gold certification for 750,000 units in 2005 and Australia recognized it with Gold status for 35,000 shipments via ARIA.[47] No additional physical certifications have been issued since 2015, though digital and streaming equivalents have contributed to ongoing revenue; as of November 2025, the album's tracks have amassed over 3 billion plays on platforms like Spotify, with key singles such as "Take on Me" exceeding 2.5 billion streams individually.[50]
These figures highlight the album's initial surge in 1986, fueled by MTV exposure, which propelled physical sales before the shift to digital formats in the 2010s revitalized its reach without new traditional certifications.[48]
Track listing and editions
Original track listing
The original edition of Hunting High and Low, released on vinyl and cassette in 1985, features ten tracks divided across two sides, with a total running time of approximately 37 minutes. All compositions are credited to the band's members—Morten Harket, Magne Furuholmen, and Pål Waaktaar—with most penned by Waaktaar alone or in collaboration. The track listing below reflects the standard international release.[51]
The album Hunting High and Low has seen several reissues and remastering efforts since its original 1985 release, primarily through Warner Bros. Records and its subsidiary Rhino Entertainment, aimed at enhancing audio quality and including previously unreleased material.[52]In 2010, Rhino released a deluxe edition as a two-CD set, featuring a remastered version of the original album on the first disc, with the remastering handled by George Marino at Sterling Sound. The second disc compiled B-sides, extended mixes, and instrumental versions from the era, such as the extended version of the title track and the instrumental take of "Take on Me."[53][54]The 30th anniversary in 2015 marked a major expansion with Rhino's Super Deluxe Edition, a four-CD and one-DVD box set that included a newly remastered album on CD1 using the 2015 master. CD2 offered 11 rough mixes and demos, including an early version of "Take on Me" from 1984 sessions; CD3 gathered single edits, remixes, and B-sides like "Events in Nature" and "Dorothy"; while CD4 presented alternate early mixes of the full album. The DVD contained the original album in 5.1 surround sound, music videos, and live footage. This edition was also issued in a six-LP vinylbox set format in 2023, preserving the same content on 180-gram vinyl with a 64-page booklet. A standard remastered CD and hi-res digital versions (up to 24-bit/96 kHz) were released concurrently for broader accessibility.[52][55][56]In 2019, Rhino followed with an Expanded Edition, a more affordable four-CD set replicating the audio content of the 2015 Super Deluxe without the DVD or packaging extras, positioned as a budget-friendly reissue of the anniversary material.[57]The remastered tracks from these editions have been the basis for streaming availability on platforms like Apple Music and Spotify since around 2015, with no distinct 2020 remaster identified but ongoing digital updates maintaining the 2015 audio standard. In 2025, Rhino issued a limited-edition 1LP vinyl of Hunting High and Low – The 1984 Demos for Record Store Day, featuring crystal clear vinyl of nine early demo recordings from the album's formative sessions, limited to 7,250 copies worldwide. This release complemented prior demo content from the anniversary sets. Additionally, the album appeared in broader a-ha compilations, such as the 2019 deluxe reissues of later works that referenced early career material.[23][58]
Personnel and credits
Band members
The band a-ha, formed in 1982 as a trio, handled all primary performances on their debut albumHunting High and Low, recorded during 1985 sessions at studios including Eel Pie in London, with no additional permanent members contributing to the core lineup.[51][18]Morten Harket served as the lead and backing vocalist across all tracks, delivering the album's signature high-range melodies and harmonies.[51][18]Magne Furuholmen played keyboards on the album, providing the synth-pop foundation, while also contributing backing vocals.[51][18]Paul Waaktaar-Savoy (also known as Pål Waaktaar) performed guitars throughout, adding rhythmic and melodic layers, and provided backing vocals to support the vocal arrangements.[51][18]
Production and additional contributors
The production of Hunting High and Low involved a team of producers handling different tracks, with Tony Mansfield credited as the primary producer for most of the album, including "Train of Thought," "Hunting High and Low," "The Blue Sky," "Living a Boy's Adventure Tale," "And You Tell Me," "Here I Stand and Face the Rain."[59]Alan Tarney produced the tracks "Take On Me" and "The Sun Always Shines on T.V."[59] John Ratcliff, in collaboration with the band, produced "Love Is Reason."[59] Mixing duties were primarily undertaken by John Ratcliff and a-ha across several tracks.[51]Additional contributors included session musician Claire Jarvis, who provided oboe on "Living a Boy's Adventure Tale," adding an organic texture to the synth-pop arrangement.[22] String arrangements for the single version of "Hunting High and Low" were composed by Anne Dudley, though the album version relied more heavily on synthesizers.The album's visual elements were overseen by art director Jeffrey Kent Ayeroff and designer Jeri McManus, with photography by Just Loomis capturing the band's images in a raw, collage-style aesthetic.[51] Mastering was handled by Bobby Hata.[51] Reissues of the album, including the 2015 deluxe edition and 2023 super deluxe box set, retained the core production without significant alterations to the original mixes, though some included remasters and bonus content.[60]
Legacy and impact
Cultural influence
The music video for "Take On Me," the lead single from Hunting High and Low, marked a pivotal breakthrough on MTV, where its heavy rotation propelled the album to international prominence in 1985. Directed by Steve Barron and featuring innovative rotoscoping techniques that blended live-action footage with hand-drawn pencil-sketch animation, the video revolutionized music visuals by creating a seamless hybrid format that captivated audiences and set new standards for narrative-driven promotion.[61][62] This approach not only earned the video eight MTV Video Music Award nominations, including Video of the Year, but also influenced subsequent hybrid live/animation formats in music videos, such as a-ha's own follow-up "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." and later projects like Gorillaz's animated band interactions with real-world elements.[63][64]The album and its singles have permeated pop culture as enduring symbols of 1980s nostalgia, frequently referenced in media that evoke the era's synth-driven exuberance. Tracks from Hunting High and Low, particularly "Take On Me," appeared in film soundtracks during the 2000s, including a ska-punk cover by Reel Big Fish in the comedy BASEketball (1998), which extended the song's reach into genre-blending cinema. The video's distinctive animation has inspired memes and parodies online, reinforcing its status as an iconic touchstone for retro aesthetics in digital humor and fan recreations.[65]On a global scale, Hunting High and Low significantly boosted Norwegian music export by establishing a-ha as the country's most successful international act, paving the way for subsequent Scandinavian artists to achieve worldwide recognition through synth-pop's polished accessibility.[66] The album's melodic synth structures contributed to the 2010s revival of synth-pop, with modern bands like CHVRCHES drawing from 1980s influences such as a-ha's emotive electronic soundscapes to craft their indie-electronic hits.[67]In the 2020s, "Take On Me" experienced renewed virality on platforms like TikTok through user-generated dances, covers, and nostalgic edits that introduced the track to younger generations, amplifying the album's legacy amid ongoing social media trends. The album's success also shaped industry practices, particularly at Warner Bros., where executives employed experimental marketing strategies—such as pre-single video distribution to clubs and TV—to launch non-American acts internationally, using Hunting High and Low as a model for global pop promotion. For the album's 40th anniversary, a-ha continued selective festival appearances, maintaining live performances of its material at events like the 2022 Hollywood Bowl show as part of broader summer tours.[68][69][70]
Reappraisals and covers
In the years following its release, Hunting High and Low has received renewed attention through various reappraisals by the band members. During a 2015 interview marking the album's 30th anniversary, guitarist Pål Waaktaar-Savoy reflected on the record as capturing the band's "youthful energy and ambition," noting how its synth-pop sound represented their early experimentation with melody and production.[71] In a 2024 discussion tied to a deluxe reissue, Waaktaar-Savoy described the album's title track as a pivotal moment where the group refined their songwriting, emphasizing its emotional depth as a "searching" anthem that still resonates personally.[11] A 2021 documentary, a-ha: The Movie, includes archival footage and interviews from 2022 promotions where vocalist Morten Harket and keyboardist Magne Furuholmen discuss the album's role in defining their career, highlighting its blend of vulnerability and pop accessibility as enduring strengths.[72]The album's songs have inspired numerous covers, particularly "Take on Me," which has been reinterpreted across genres. In 2019, Weezer released a faithful yet rock-infused cover on their Teal Album, complete with a music video homage featuring actor Finn Wolfhard recreating elements of the original's iconic rotoscoped animation, paying tribute to the song's visual legacy.[73] During a-ha's 2017 MTV Unplugged – Summer Solstice performances, the band themselves offered orchestral arrangements of tracks like "Take on Me" and "Hunting High and Low," stripping back the synths for intimate, string-enhanced versions that emphasized the melodies' timeless quality. In hip-hop, the iconic riff from "Take on Me" was sampled by Pitbull featuring Christina Aguilera in their 2013 hit "Feel This Moment," integrating the synth hook into an EDM-infused dance track that introduced the melody to a new generation.[74]Legacy events have further celebrated the album in the 21st century. To mark the 35th anniversary, a-ha launched the Hunting High and Low tour in 2019, performing the full album live; delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic, it resumed in 2022 with dates across Europe, South America, and the US, including a headline show at the Hollywood Bowl where fans noted the setlist's nostalgic draw.[75] Fan communities have contributed through recreations, such as amateur video tributes mimicking the original "Take On Me" sketchbook aesthetic, shared widely on platforms during the tour's promotion.[76] In the streaming era, modern remixes have emerged, including a 2025 nu-disco edit of "Hunting High and Low" by DJ Paulinho Cunha, which updates the track's atmospheric synths for contemporary dance floors.[77] As of 2025, celebrations for the album's 40th anniversary include a Record Store Day vinyl release of its 1984 demos, limited to 7,250 units on crystal clear vinyl and featuring early versions of key tracks like the title song.[78][79]