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Telemetry of a Fallen Angel

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Telemetry of a Fallen Angel
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 1996
Genre
The Crüxshadows chronology
...Night Crawls In
(1993)
Telemetry of a Fallen Angel
(1996)
Until the Voices Fade...
(1999)

Telemetry of a Fallen Angel is the second studio album by the American dark wave band the Crüxshadows, released in January 1996.[1]

Track listing

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No.TitleLength
1."Descension"0:58
2."Monsters"4:46
3."Jackal-Head"6:32
4."Prometheus"1:11
5."Clerestory"4:48
6."Walk Away"8:09
7."Miss Fortune Returns"0:50
8."My World"5:24
9."Fallen Angel"0:45
10."Hanged Man"5:40
11."Purgatory"1:48
12."Marilyn, My Bitterness"5:53
13."Daedelus Flight... Icarus Falls"1:21
14."Satellite"5:51
15."Marilyn, My Bitterness (2.0 Radio Edit)"5:20

Versions

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There are four different versions of this album:

  • The first version was released in 1995 under their own label, Black Widow Music.
  • The second version was released in 1996 under the label, Nesak International.
  • The third version was released in 1998 under the label, Dancing Ferret Discs.
  • The fourth and last version was released in 2004. All of the songs were remastered and there was a bonus track included: Marilyn, my Bitterness V2.0 Radio Edit.

Critical reception

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A reviewer for Keyboard wrote that Telemetry of a Fallen Angel "crosses over into the realm of concept album, detailing the travels of an extraterrestrial probe. The tone is persistently dark, with a restless intellectual bent creeping underneath it all. However, this is not a goth retread. The sounds blend into a single, highly polished sheen; rhythms bounce along energetically, and everything moves along purposefully."[2][full citation needed] Daniel Rubin of The Philadelphia Inquirer called the album "Passionate yet accessible, with lyrics that evoke myths ancient and modern."[3]

Personnel

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References

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  1. ^ "Today in Tallahassee". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. January 16, 1996. p. 2A. Retrieved May 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ "Telemetry of a Fallen Angel". Keyboard. Vol. 24. 1998. p. 124. Retrieved July 31, 2023 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Rubin, Daniel (October 25, 1998). "The Joys of Sorrow". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. p. F14. Retrieved May 11, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.