N. Rhodes, prophet?
"....
the release on Monday of Nick Rhodes’s new experimental electronic
album Bored with Prozac and the Internet? in a collaboration with former
Duran Duran guitarist Warren Cuccurullo. Originally created in the
mid-90s for the Broadway stage as the music to a “bizarre TV soap
opera”, the tracks tell the tale of Cathy and Ray (named from the
cathode ray tube) and their two children Sassy and Snoop, a fame-hungry
family who give away their freedom to scientists in exchange for
reality-show fame.
"Bored was culled from a collection of tunes recorded when the band
were between day jobs. Using samples from such sources as The Outer
Limits and the British TV show Planet Fashion, TV Mania’s pastiche of
cool beats and melodic hooks proved surprisingly prescient.
"“It was innocently masquerading as an art-rock project, but there was
a deep concept behind it all,” Cuccurullo says. “We were envisioning a
world where a family would give up their day-to-day privacy and allow
their existence to be televised to the masses, and this was two years
before Truman showed and four years before Survivor. Now everyone is
giving away their most intimate details online and on reality TV.”
“In 1996 the internet was still in its infancy,” Rhodes adds. “I was
fascinated by communication and how things were becoming more instant
and this was decades before all the sites we have now to communicate in
different ways.”
"A few months after Rhodes and Cuccurullo finished recording Bored
with Prozac, a series called Big Brother hit the airwaves. “We looked at
each other in absolute disbelief,” Rhodes says. “It was an idea that
was in the ether at the time. We decided to lock it in the bottom drawer
whilst we changed the story.”"
(via Shapers of the Eighties)
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