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Closed Captioned Radio
1998 studio album by The Bogmen From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Closed Captioned Radio is the second album by the American alternative rock band the Bogmen, released in 1998.[2][3] It sold around 10,000 copies.[4] The band broke up after its release, in part due to the effects of alcoholism.[5]
The album's first single was "Mexico".[6]
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Production
The album was produced by Bill Laswell, Godfrey Diamond, and the band.[7][8][6]
Critical reception
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Billboard determined that the album projects "a decadent, dissonant vibe reminiscent of David Bowie's late-'70s and early-'80s work, as well as of the cabaret music of 1920s Berlin."[12] The Austin American-Statesman thought that "this band is not an easy listen because they're so stylistically all-over-the-place that you never fall into the comfort zone that good pop music provides."[13] The San Diego Union-Tribune declared: "One moment, the music is a seamless blend of flute-filled melodies contrasted with electronic rhythms and triumphant, echoing chants; the next, all too bizarre noises, pounding drumbeats and distorted instruments beckon one to turn this Radio off (or shoot it)."[11]
The Baltimore Sun stated that "the band's sound—mid-period David Bowie with a healthy dose of David Byrne—isn't quite like anything else out there."[10] Newsday concluded that "like a latter-day Wall of Voodoo, The Bogmen layer poetry about everyday madness over quirky rhythms."[14] The Columbus Dispatch deemed the album "a melodic form of heavy metal resonant with faintly sinister themes ... Bill Laswell's production puts an added emphasis on the sextet's rhythm section."[15]
AllMusic wrote: "Influenced by such diverse global sources as Middle Eastern rhythms and Far East textures, the group's alt-rock aesthetic takes on intriguing new dimensions."[9]
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Track listing
- "Failing Systems"
- "Speedfreak Lullaby"
- "Mexico"
- "Highway of Shame"
- "Mad Larry"
- "Extended Family"
- "Every Man Is an Orphan"
- "Dark Waltz"
- "Sloth"
- "The Cows Ain't Comin' Home Tonight"
- "Seadog"
- "Closed Captioned Radio"
- "You Are My Destiny"
References
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