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Furious Angels

Furious Angels
FuriousAngelsCover.jpg
Studio album by Rob Dougan
Released Disc 1: July 2002
Disc 2: June 2003
Recorded 1995, 1998–2002
Genre 21st-century classical, electronica
Length Disc 1: 71:10
Disc 2: 53:43
Label UK: BMG, Cheeky
US: Warner Bros., Reprise
Producer Rob Dougan
Rob Dougan chronology
Furious Angels
(2003)
The 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time Sessions
(2015)The 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time Sessions2015
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
About.com 5/5 stars
Kludge 7/10
Q 4/5 stars
Uncut 4/5 stars

Furious Angels is the debut album by Rob Dougan, released in June 2002 in the United Kingdom and in July 2003 in the United States and Europe. It was nominated for the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package.

Furious Angels was originally released as a single-disc album (14 tracks for its world edition, 15 for its home UK edition) dominated by vocal tracks. It was then rereleased as a two-disc album, disc one featuring all 15 songs and disc two featuring 10 instrumental versions of the vocal songs from the first disc, as well as two music videos; there's also been a special-edition set adding a booklet of lyrics and photographs. The album was written, produced and mainly financed by Rob Dougan himself, rather than a studio, with funds generally raised through the licensing of tracks from the album to film and television.

A 2003 article in The Guardian noted:

Rob Dougan is a rather odd musician. He says he's not particularly interested in music, for a start. His most famous track, Clubbed to Death, is dance music that you could never dance to. He has written for both Matrix films, but doesn't seem to think much of what he did for those either. He spent six years working on his orchestral solo album, Furious Angels, which could either be an epic work of panoramic genius or a gargantuan monument to his ego, with strings—it's hard to tell. And he has just been asked to remix some Frank Sinatra tracks, even though he thinks remixes are a waste of time.

The introduction to "Clubbed to Death" is taken directly from the main theme of Edward Elgar's "Enigma Variations". The orchestral part of "Clubbed to Death 2" (only on the UK version of the album) is built around Frédéric Chopin's "Prelude No. 4 in E-minor" (from Preludes, opus 28).

Some tracks from the album have been licensed for use in feature films, advertising, and television, including the Matrix film series and the Top Gear television show. The song "Furious Angels" is used by the Los Angeles Lakers to introduce visiting teams. The instrumental version of this song also appears in the opening sequence of the video game Grand Prix 3. Several shows in the Law & Order franchise use tracks from Furious Angels as an opening credits theme for UK airings: "I'm Not Driving Anymore" is used by Law & Order and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and "There's Only Me" is used by Law & Order: Criminal Intent.


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