The Divine Invasion (album) explained

The Divine Invasion
Type:studio
Artist:Electro Assassin
Cover:Electro Assassin - The Divine Invasion.jpg
Length:68:25
Label:Synthetic Symphony/Cyber-Tec
Prev Title:Bioculture
Prev Year:1993

The Divine Invasion is the third studio album by Electro Assassin, released on September 26, 1995 by Synthetic Symphony and Cyber-Tec Records.[1] [2] [3]

Reception

AllMusic awarded The Divine Invasion three out of five possible stars. Sonic Boom said "the musical growth exhibited by Electro Assassin within the last several years has been nothing less than astonishing" and "They have forsaken the inane samples and pointless lyrics of previous albums and focused their new work entirely on a dark cyberculture concept which has become immensely popular recently."[4]

Personnel

Adapted from The Divine Invasion liner notes.[5]

Electro Assassin

Production and design

Release history

RegionDateLabelFormatCatalog
United States1995Synthetic Symphony/Cyber-TecCDSPV 084-61252CD/C-TEC2
Fifth Colvmn9868-63203

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: John . Bush . [{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=mn0000137996/biography|pure_url=yes}} Electro Assassin ]. . September 5, 2020.
  2. Thessalonians: The Black Field . . Mike Gunderloy . 1994 . 52 . 3 . September 5, 2020.
  3. Electro Assassin . . Sonic Options Network . 1995 . 60-65 . 126.
  4. Chris . Christian . Electro Assassin: The Divine Invasion . Sonic Boom . October 1995 . 3 . 8 . September 5, 2020.
  5. The Divine Invasion . The Divine Invasion (album) . . 1996 . booklet . . Hannover, Germany.