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Modulate (album)
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===Overview=== ''Modulate'' is an electronic<ref name=TACreview/> and [[power pop]] album,<ref name=CMJMonthlyreview>Kleinsak 2002, p. 56</ref> which evoked the sound of [[New Order (band)|New Order]];<ref name=NATNreview/> it takes its name from a lyric in "Comeonstrong".<ref name=PMreview/> Chris Larry of ''[[CMJ New Music Report]]'' compared it to the work of [[Erasure (duo)|Erasure]] with the [[1980s in music|1980s-esque]] keyboards, "elements of [[house music]] and an overall, [[Industrial music|industrialized]] sci-fi sound".<ref name=CMJReportreview>Larry 2002, p. 11</ref> Mould said he was against [[disco]] and electronic music when those styles emerged at the end of the [[1970s in music|1970s]], only for him to change his mind: "Now, 25 years later, I'm looking at it, going, 'This is really interesting.{{single double}}<ref name=Outinterview/> ''[[City Pages]]'' reviewer Peter S. Scholtes said it "mirrors the strengths and weaknesses" of ''[[Good News for Modern Man (album)|Good News for Modern Man]]'' (1999) by former Hüsker Dü bandmate [[Grant Hart]].<ref>{{cite web|date=March 27, 2002|title=Minneapolis Music - Bob Mould: Modulate| work=[[City Pages]]|author=Scholtes, Peter S.|url=http://www.citypages.com/2002-03-27/music/bob-mould-modulate/|access-date=July 3, 2023| url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080801105504/http://www.citypages.com/2002-03-27/music/bob-mould-modulate/| archive-date=August 1, 2008}}</ref> ''[[God Is in the TV]]'' writer Humphrey Fordham suggested that the [[drum and bass]] and [[trip hop]] track "Megamanic" from ''The Last Dog and Pony Show'' laid the groundwork for ''Modulate'', comparing the album to other releases that saw legacy acts "going out on a limb", such as ''[[Don Juan's Reckless Daughter]]'' (1977) by [[Joni Mitchell]] and ''[[Trans (album)|Trans]]'' (1983) by [[Neil Young]].<ref name=GIITTVDistortionreview>{{cite web|url=https://www.godisinthetvzine.co.uk/2021/01/26/bob-mould-distortion-1996-2007-demon-records/|title=Bob Mould: Distortion 1996 – 2007 (Demon Records)|work=[[God Is in the TV]]|author=Fordham, Humphrey|date=January 26, 2021|access-date=June 30, 2023}}</ref> Jon Wurster of ''[[Indy Week]]'' pointed out Mould's [[Bob Mould (album)|1996 self-titled album]] for its employment of [[drum machine]]s, in addition to highlighting "Megamanic" for it being Mould's initial foray into electronic music.<ref name=IWreview/> [[AllMusic]] reviewer [[Stephen Thomas Erlewine]] commented that the tracks were presented differently from Mould's other works: "they're insular, one-man creations (even more so than Workbook), as that man tries to expand his art by grappling with new technologies and trends and a whole bunch of electronic instruments and computers".<ref name=AMreview/> ''[[PopMatters]]'' contributor Gary Glauber mentioned that Mould's "pop sensibility remains—only it’s a palette of vocoder, distortion, loops, samples, and other noise tricks from which he paints his sound pictures now", adding that it "does not totally abandon the past; occasional strains of that familiar Mould guitar sound are evident".<ref name=PMreview/> ''[[The Austin Chronicle]]'' writer Dan Oko remarked that it delivered an electronic sound with "synthetic vocals that owe more to Daft Punk and Madonna than his SST heyday".<ref name=TACreview/> Glauber noted that the tracks that feature the "electronic effects seem curiously concentrated" on the album's first half; after this, Mould's previous guitar sound returns with "Slay / Sway" and "The Receipt",<ref name=PMreview/> recalling the material by Sugar.<ref name=NATNreview/> Mould said he wanted to make an artistic statement by putting the electronic-focused songs on the first half.<ref name=IWreview>{{cite web|url=https://indyweek.com/music/features/mould-ulate/|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20200921191426/https://indyweek.com/music/features/mould-ulate/|title=Mould-ulate|work=[[Indy Week]]|author=Wurster, Jon|date=April 17, 2002|archivedate=September 21, 2020|access-date=July 4, 2023}}</ref>
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