Life in the So-Called Space Age

Life in the So-Called Space Age
Studio album by God Lives Underwater
Released March 24, 1998
Genre Industrial rock, electronic rock, techno
Length 72:32
Label A&M
Producer Gary Dobbins
God Lives Underwater chronology
Empty
(1995)Empty1995
Life in the So-Called Space Age
(1998)
Rearrange EP
(1998)Rearrange EP1998
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[2]

Life in the So-Called Space Age is the 1998 album released by God Lives Underwater and is their second full-length album. The title comes from the cover of the Depeche Mode album Black Celebration, where it appears in quotes on the back,[1] while the front cover features a distorted view of a skyscraper. The song "From Your Mouth" appeared in the 2000 film Gossip.

Track listing

All songs written by David Reilly and Jeff Turzo.

  1. "Intro" – 0:58
  2. "Rearrange" – 3:33
  3. "From Your Mouth" – 4:43
  4. "Can't Come Down" – 5:05
  5. "Alone Again" – 3:18
  6. "Behavior Modification" – 3:55
  7. "The Rush Is Loud" – 4:08
  8. "Dress Rehearsal for Reproduction" – 4:25
  9. "Happy?" – 5:13
  10. "Vapors" – 4:50
  11. "Medicated to the One I Love" – 32:24 (includes hidden tracks "Life In The So-Called Space Age" [25:52] and "Outro" [0:59])

Personnel

God Lives Underwater:

Reception

Ned Raggett of Allmusic wrote of their influences, "rather than simply cloning [Depeche Mode]'s own style in the fashion of bands like Camouflage, the integration of that approach with God Lives Underwater's own murky rock is even better than before."[1] Marc Weingarten of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Whether this is a Ween-like exercise in genre parody or an earnest effort is debatable, but either way, it's good weird fun."[2] Annie Marie Cruz of CMJ New Music Monthly called it "a tolerable album filled with nothing you haven't heard before".[3] Chuck Eddy of Spin wrote that the album uses less guitars than their previous releases and recommended it to fans of OK Computer, though he found it too lacking in aggression.[4]

Chart positions

Chart Peak Position
Heatseekers 6[5]
The Billboard 200 137[6]

References


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