• > Home
  • > Artists
  • > God Lives Underwater
  • > Albums
  • > Life In The So-Called Space Age
  • God Lives Underwater

    God Lives Underwater

    Life In The So-Called Space Age

    God Lives Underwater - Life In The So-Called Space Age

    03/24/1998


    Sorry, this item is not available from ARTISTdirect.

    Bookmark and Share

    All Music Guide Review

    If it wasn't clear enough before, God Lives Underwater fully nailed their colors to the Depeche Mode fan mast in 1998 with not one but two nods to that band's astonishing Black Celebration album. Besides covering "Fly on the Windscreen" for the Music for the Masses tribute album, the group named its full new album after the slogan found in Black Celebration's artwork. Unsurprisingly the record itself had that connection in the music as well -- "Rearrange," the first full track after a brief introduction, has a synth line that's just as obviously in debt to Depeche as the closing synth break on Nine Inch Nails' "Closer," say. None of this is to belittle the album; if anything, rather than simply cloning Depeche'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. "Alone Again," possibly a thematic sequel to the debut EP's "Lonely Again," though it doesn't immediately sound like it, plays down the guitars in favors of the beats and wiry, edgy keyboard lines, a balance repeated to even more haunting effect on "Happy?," with its acoustic guitar-touched intro and distanced, echoed feeling. Many other songs similarly let the electronics take the fore, while more than once the band fully drop the guitars entirely in favor of melancholy soundscapes and melodies, though nearly often with the band's own brand of full-bodied rock/funk rhythms. Reilly's singing is much less forced than before (and it should be noted he's never tried to simply ape David Gahan, likely due to his higher register), while more explicit hip-hop approaches (scratching, not just breakbeats and loops) add further to the overall flavor. One of the odder but more enjoyable tracks, "The Rush Is Loud," explicitly talks about the songwriting and recording process against a rough electro/industrial arrangement, Reilly's hushed singing an interesting contrast to the music. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

    Life In The So-Called Space Age Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 1
  • Intro
  • :59
  • Sound Clip for Intro from Life In The So-Called Space Age


  • 2
  • Rearrange
  • 3:33
  • Sound Clip for Rearrange from Life In The So-Called Space Age


  • 5
  • Alone Again
  • 3:18
  • Sound Clip for Alone Again from Life In The So-Called Space Age


  • 9
  • Happy?
  • 5:13
  • Sound Clip for Happy? from Life In The So-Called Space Age


  • 10
  • Vapors
  • 4:50
  • Sound Clip for Vapors from Life In The So-Called Space Age


  • Credits of Life In The So-Called Space Age



    MP3 Downloads

    What's Hot from ARTISTdirect