Broadcast and the Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age - Broadcast & The Focus Group

Broadcast and the Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age

Broadcast & The Focus Group

  • Genre: Alternative
  • Release Date: 2009-09-22
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 23

  • ℗ 2009 Warp Records

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Intro / Magnetic Tales 0:38 USD 1.29
2
The Be Colony 4:31 USD 1.29
3
How Do You Get Along Sir? 1:10 USD 1.29
4
Will You Read Me 1:20 USD 1.29
5
Reception / Group Therapy 1:20 USD 1.29
6
A Quiet Moment 0:58 USD 1.29
7
"I See, So I See So" 2:08 USD 1.29
8
You Must Wake 1:35 USD 1.29
9
One Million Years Ago 2:16 USD 1.29
10
A Seancing Song 2:19 USD 1.29
11
Oh You Chatterbox 1:24 USD 1.29
12
Drug Party 1:28 USD 1.29
13
"Libra, the Mirror's Minor Sel 2:45 USD 1.29
14
Love's Long Listen-In 1:47 USD 1.29
15
We Are After All Here 2:32 USD 1.29
16
A Medium's High 2:29 USD 1.29
17
Ritual / Looking In 4:20 USD 1.29
18
Make My Sleep His Song 2:41 USD 1.29
19
Royal Chant 2:14 USD 1.29
20
What I Saw 1:02 USD 1.29
21
Let It Begin / Oh Joy 3:28 USD 1.29
22
Round and Round and Round 1:39 USD 1.29
23
The Be Colony / Dashing Home / 2:30 USD 1.29
Broadcast and the Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age - Broadcast & The Focus Group
Cover Album Broadcast and the Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age - Broadcast & The Focus Group

Reviews

  • Great Album!
    5
    By Kyle P.
    Miss you baby! Thank You for the child I pretend I had with you my love
  • A new favorite.
    5
    By ChampagneSequins
    I'm really happy about this collaboration!
  • This album cannot really be described with words.
    4
    By rrobie
    I ponder how many people wanted to kill themselves while listening to this. That is a sign for a introspectively psychedelic album, or something like that. One long complete listen makes for one good trip. Interesting album, and if you want something new buy it.
  • Excellent Psychedelic Spin-Off for Broadcast
    5
    By trevno
    I've become a huge fan of 60s and 70s psychedelia mostly through the experimentation of bands like Future Sound of London's side project Amorphous Androgynous, but I have been a fan of Broadcast since the late 90s. This recording takes their sound in a new direction, collaborating and twisting it into almost an alternate soundtrack for films like The Wicker Man. The sparse instrumentation, chanting, and degraded film loops truly give you the feeling of being trapped in a low budget Hammer horror film. It is haunting, and at the same time beautiful. I hope the new Broadcast full-length album will reflect some of this, as they have needed a fresh infusion to their sound for a while now.
  • Not really a follow-up to Tender Buttons
    3
    By Mames
    If you were a big fan of the more modern-sounding synth-based songs on Tender Buttons, you might be disappointed by this album. This is definitely a return to their 60s psychedelia style that colored the albums before Tender Buttons. It's kinda frustrating like the b-side collection, Future Crayon-- you see 23 tracks of Broadcast before you, yet, there may as well be 3 tracks on the album, one of them being a 30 minute instrumental. It's not bad, a lot of it pretty awesome, actually. I just find myself less attached to these kinds of experiments these days. I listen, enjoy, but it may be months before I listen to it again... Take my opinion with a grain of salt, I'm completely biased towards Tender Buttons, it's one of my favorites of all time.
  • Better then LSD.
    5
    By whoisloganryan
    This album gives me chills from start to finish. I cant believe i didnt know about these people sooner.
  • Amazing
    5
    By nanook
    Broadcast has always been and will always been my favorite band. Cant wait to see them live in October. Love you Trish...