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The Return of Dr. Octagon

Did you mean: The Return of Dr. Octagon (2006 Album by Dr. Octagon), Return of Dr. Octagon [Clean] (2007 Album by Dr. Octagon)

 
Album Review: The Return of Dr. Octagon
 

  • Artist: Dr. Octagon
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: June 27, 2006
  • Type: Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Rap

Review

Despite rumors that one of the few MCs to have taken the Hippocratic Oath had met his demise (in the opening track on the 1999 Dr. Dooom -- another Kool Keith creation -- album First Come, First Served), Dr. Octagon was, in fact, alive and though the actual events were unclear (they always are with aliens), while the Doctor was away, his unauthorized clones began moving throughout the galaxy with the purpose of destroying each world in it. (This entire story was revealed in an eight-episode online comic that marked the eight weeks prior to the release of the new album.) The clones were apparently controlled by a giant gorilla with malicious intentions, and it was only a matter of time until his pursuit to obliterate the universe and Dr. Octagon led him to our own planet. Simultaneously, but equally as grave, Earth's inhabitants were systematically destroying themselves with bad music. We desperately needed a savior! Luckily, not only was Dr. Octagon ready and willing, but this time -- unlike in Dr. Octagonecologyst, when the MC's concern was more on the "health" of the female body -- The Return of Dr. Octagon finds someone who's matured somewhat, whose focus has broadened, and who's truly worried about the state of humankind, both physically and musically; in short, someone who could truly save the world. What propels Dr. Octagon and his new album to the ranks of superhero isn't just the MC's new topical focus. It's the beats. Dr. Octagonecologyst showcased the sparse, slightly eerie work of Dan the Automator, leading to numerous collaborations and projects for the producer, and though assuredly Mr. Nakamura would have done a fantastic job again, Keith went with the three-man team One Watt Sun, who truly make the album erupt in crackling, electrified explosions of keyboards, processed guitars, horns, and turntables, knocking politely and then shoving its way into pop, dirty blues, rock, and R&B. There are few samples -- much is produced organically -- and the themes twist through and out of each other like dervishes wildly reaching some kind of esoteric, exalted spiritual plane. Lyrically, the album is as creative and innovative as what you would expect from someone who wrote a song called "Halfsharkalligatorhalfman," and it generally sticks to the motives for Dr. Octagon's return as the songs' themes. There are aliens, of course, like in "A Gorilla Driving a Pick-Up Truck," where electrified dusty blues licks blow like thunderclouds across the plains and Dr. Octagon's low, breathy voice tells the bizarre story of being chased by a huge primate and attempting to ward it off, but there are also as many, if not more, songs about man's own behavior toward himself and his environment. "Using material for Christmas, papers get printed/Trees may get extinct like the elephants," he says in "Trees," and though here listeners may just have to trust his abilities as an oracle, there's something about the way he says it that makes it seem absolutely believable. The Return of Dr. Octagon doesn't always make a lot of sense, but that's the beauty of it. It's a kind of concept album that concentrates more on the actual overall sound than the concepts. Its elements are all on the very edge of control, which is both exhilarating and terrifying at the same time; if it works, it could bring us to where we've never been, protect us from what may be, but if it fails, it could kill us all. And though perhaps we may have to wait for a new album to see if the gorilla wins in the end, for the moment it seems as if we're safe. ~ Marisa Brown, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Our Operators Are Masturbating Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (0:24)
Trees Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (2:46)
Aliens Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (2:54)
Ants Kool Keith, John Lindland, Dexter Fabay Kool Keith, DJ Dexter (3:01)
Don't Worry MZ Pop Music Kool Keith, John Lindland, April McClellan Kool Keith (0:32)
Perfect World Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (2:37)
The Turtle Skit Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (1:08)
Al Green Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (2:45)
A Gorilla Driving a Pick-Up Truck Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (3:35)
Got Any Kids? Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (0:23)
Doctor Octagon Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (2:58)
It's the Morning Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (2:48)
Jumpstart Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith (3:24)
Eat It Kool Keith, John Lindland Kool Keith, Princess Superstar (5:01)

Credits

Nilesh "Nilz" Patel (Mastering), Francois Tetaz (Mixing), Michael Tullberg (Photography), Argee Geronca (Design), April McClellan (Performer), April McClellan (Project Coordinator)
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Wikipedia: The Return of Dr. Octagon
Top
The Return of Dr. Octagon
The Return of Dr. Octagon cover
Studio album by Dr. Octagon
Released June 27, 2006
Genre Hip hop
Length 34:15
Label OCD International
Producer One-Watt Sun
Professional reviews
Kool Keith chronology
Project Polaroid
(2006)
The Return of Dr. Octagon
(2006)
Dr. Dooom 2
(2008)
Singles from The Return of Dr. Octagon
  1. "Aliens"
    Released: July 3, 2006
  2. "Trees"
    Released: 2006

The Return of Dr. Octagon is the tenth studio album by American rapper Keith Thornton, better known as Kool Keith. Released in the United States on June 27, 2006, it is his second studio album under the Dr. Octagon alias, following Dr. Octagonecologyst. The album revives the character of Dr. Octagon, who was killed off on Thornton's 1999 release First Come, First Served. Production for the album began in 2002 under the title The Return of Dr. Octagon with producer Fanatik J.

Thornton signed a contract with CMH Records to release the album. Following the wishes of Kool Keith, Fanatik J refused to authorize the release of The Return of Dr. Octagon project. The album's production was then completed by the One-Watt Sun production team based upon five completed vocal recordings and older unfinished recordings. Thornton had little involvement with the production of the album after One Watt Sun took control of the production. He later stated that it hurt his musical reputation.

The Return of Dr. Octagon received poor reviews from critics, and did not chart. Much criticism centered around One Watt Sun's production, which many felt fit neither Thornton's lyrical style nor the Dr. Octagon character.

Contents

Origins and recording

Keith Thornton, best known by the stage name Kool Keith,[1] released the album Dr. Octagonecologyst in 1996, under the name Dr. Octagon, produced by Dan "The Automator" Nakamura.[1] Thornton later expressed some frustration with the "Dr. Octagon" nickname, saying, "Octagon wasn't my life...I've done a lot of things that were totally around different things other than Octagon. Are some people just afraid to venture off into my life and see that I do other things which are great? I think people stuck me with something."[1] In 1999, Thornton released the album First Come, First Served, which featured a track in which the newly introduced character Dr. Doom murdered Dr. Octagon. Thornton had intended to move away from the Dr. Octagon character, but later decided to record another album under the Octagon name.[2][3]

In 2002, Thornton announced The Return of of Dr. Octagon, a proposed sequel to Dr. Octagonecologyst that would reintroduce the character.[3] Los Angeles-based producer Fanatik J was chosen by Kool Keith to write the music and produce the album.[4] Thornton himself took part in the production of early material for the project with Fanatik-J.[5]

Thornton signed a contract with CMH Records to release the album.[4]


Preceding the production of the album, Thornton told Rolling Stone that "this album is fine-tuned with instruments, deeper and more spaced out. The last one was cool, but I didn't like it because it wasn't funky. When I don't work on a project, it's not that funky. When I do work on it, it's funky, and it has soul to it...I'm proud of my funky sounds right now."[5] Fanatik J was named as the album's producer. Thornton stated that with Dr. Octagonecologyst, Thornton had given Nakamura his first successful album as a producer, and that with The Return of Dr. Octagon, he would "make another person and create another star."[5]

As production on the album was underway, Thornton had a falling out with Fanatik J over contract rights.[4] Thornton referred to Fanatik J as "greedy" and stated that "He went out of his level of producer's ranking. Maybe he thought he was an overnight Quincy Jones, that he was the Automator."[4] Fanatik J later engaged in a legal battle with CMH over a gross violation of his copyrighted materials. [4]

Following Fanatik J's disputes with the label, CMH contacted San Francisco-based producer John Lindland and Melbourne-based producers Simon Walbrook and Ben Green to produce material for the album. Lindland, Walbrook and Green began creating material for the album under the billing of One-Watt Sun.[4] Thornton was briefly involved with the project, recording vocals for three tracks: "Trees," "Ants," and "Aliens," based upon rough sonic themes created by the production team.[4] After Thornton had a falling out with the label over contractual terms, he gave the label recordings he had made two years previously, consisting of Thornton rapping and goofing off, in order to complete his contract. The album was completed without his involvement.[4]

Music

Production

Many critics felt that the album's production was inferior to that of Dr. Octagonecologyst.[6] KutMasta Kurt, a frequent collaborator with Thornton, disliked the album's production, stating "The Dr. Octagon character was rapping over sounds that were dark and sinister, but they turned the album into this dancey electro-pop. A lot of it had this Euro-dance feel, and I was like, 'Wait a second, not only did they change the music, they changed it into something [to which] I couldn't relate.'" KutMasta Kurt also recounts a conversation with Thornton on a European flight in December 2006, in which Thornton stated that The Return of Dr. Octagon does not sound like a Dr. Octagon album.[1] Thornton himself said that he liked the album's production, but that the album hurt his reputation as a musician.[4] According to Thornton, "I'm not mad. But I don't repeat words when I rap. They cooked up some electronic stuff, you know, WORD! WORD! WORD! making me sound like triple people. It's interesting."[4]

Storyline and lyrical themes

Although Thornton's vocals were largely edited without his involvement, a background story for the album was created by the label and published in a series of eight segments,[7] each revealing a new chapter and featuring an exclusive remix by the likes of Prefuse 73, Aesop Rock, Kid Loco, Spank Rock and others.[8] The remixers appear in the story as "interpreters" hired to decipher the meaning of each remixed song, reportedly sent in a package to the offices of OCD.[9][10]

The story begins three weeks after OCD received the package. Still unable to decode its meaning, the record company receives a phone call from an unknown source, tracked to Los Angeles, New York, Australia and Saturn.[11] The caller claims to have received the same package five years ago and that it had brought destruction and chaos upon his society, and warns that they are coming after Octagon.[11]

OCD then receives a message from a hacker identifying himself as Cassettes Won't Listen, who states that eight years ago, himself and five friends were abducted by aliens, tortured, cloned, and kept in isolation. The last survivor was killed by one of the clones, whom Cassettes Won't Listen then went underground to fight.[12] Cassettes Won't Listen reveals that Dr. Octagon was imprisoned in the cell next to him, as "a prime candidate to study all things regarding grills, pills and bills".[12] Octagon was cloned: his clones have been sent out to destroy the universe.[12]

Rob Sonic learns that the clones were created by a giant gorilla driving a pickup truck, who intends to steal the package to prevent the world from hearing Octagon's message, allowing him to destroy the Earth.[13] The story concludes with the remixers and OCD's staff escaping with the package on Kid Loco's plane. An intern briefly sees a figure standing on OCD's rooftop, wearing a lab coat with a stethoscope around his neck, holding the head of "some black hairy creature" in his hand.[14]

PopMatters writer Michael Frauenhofer wrote that "Dr. Octagon’s lyrics on this album typically appear to be unconnected, but over the course of each track can be seen building around a general theme, be it conservation, societal conformity, American militarism, or, yes, his characteristic fascination with sex."[15]

According to Allmusic reviewer Marisa Brown, Dr. Octagon has matured and his focus has broadened since Dr. Octagonecologyst, in which the character focused largely on sex. Brown writes that Octagon is now "truly worried about the state of humankind, both physically and musically; in short, someone who could truly save the world".[7] Brown also states that while the album focuses on science fiction and abstract themes, "there are also as many, if not more, songs about man's own behavior toward himself and his environment."[7]

Frauenhofer referred to "Trees" as "a definite highlight" in which "the doctor drops his trademark off-kilter raps on, surprisingly, environmentalism."[15] Pitchfork Media's Tom Breihan wrote that the song "Ants" compares "the humans infesting Earth to ants in a colony, enthused and disgusted at once".[6] Frauenhofer, describing the song "Eat It," wrote that Princess Superstar "constantly references sex" while Dr. Octagon "confusingly interjects with his complaints about how women only want to go out and talk and eat", but Frauenhofer states that the sexual content of the album's lyrics is not as explicit as previous Thornton albums, such as Sex Style.[15] Dallas Observer writer Geoff Johnston described the song as being "as profane as one would hope for."[16]

Singles and music videos

"Aliens" was released as the first single from the album.[17] A remix of "Aliens" by British drum and bass producer Sub Focus was chosen as compilation of the month in the May 2006 issue of Mixmag.[17] Music videos were produced for the singles "Aliens" and "Trees", in which Thornton did not appear.[4] The music video for "Trees" was produced as a public service announcement for MTV's "Break the Addiction" campaign, as well as a promo video for the album.[18]

Release

OCD International was created as an imprint of CMH to release the material.[4] On October 12, 2004, a bootleg consisting of unrelated material was released under the title Dr. Octagon Part 2 by Real Talk Records. It was discontinued by court order.[19]

On June 27, 2006, OCD International released One-Watt Sun's material under the title The Return of Dr. Octagon in the United States on compact disc, although the completed work more closely resembled a remix album than what Thornton had originally intended.[4] In the United Kingdom, the CMH-completed album was released by Buttercuts Records on compact disc and vinyl.[20][21]

CMH distributor World's Fair promoted The Return of Dr. Octagon as the official sequel to Dr. Octagonecologyst, and claimed that Thornton would tour in support of the album.[4] Early news stories reported by outlets such as The Guardian, MTV2, MySpace, Remix Magazine, and The Washington Post endorsed the label's claims.[4] Internet rumors began to spread that the album had been released without Thornton's authorization.[22] In August, Thornton performed under the Dr. Octagon billing, but did not promote the album.[22] According to Thornton, "This ain't the record I did. It was totally new music. I was really pissed off about people wanting me to go out and tour and do these songs."[4] OCD originally intended to ship 50,000 units during the first year, but halted the plan due to the poor reception of the album.[4]

In September, Thornton stated that he had not received royalties from CMH Records.[4] According to Thornton, "I hope they're sending them. You have another interview if they don't send me a check. Honestly, with the next single, I want them to leave me a sparkling diamond."[4]

Reception

Metacritic, which compiles reviews from a wide range of critics, gives the album a score of 61%, denoting generally favorable reviews.[23] The album did not chart.[24]

The earliest reviews of the album, published by the LA Weekly and Newsweek, were positive.[4][25] Rolling Stone critic Christian Hoard wrote that "Octagon's verses often feel unfocused and random, but when he bears down he can be mesmerizing, channeling his quick-tongued rhymes with streetwise brassiness and cosmic vibrations."[26] Allmusic reviewer Marisa Brown wrote that the album "doesn't always make a lot of sense, but that's the beauty of it. It's a kind of concept album that concentrates more on the actual overall sound than the concepts. Its elements are all on the very edge of control, which is both exhilarating and terrifying at the same time; if it works, it could bring us to where we've never been, protect us from what may be, but if it fails, it could kill us all."[7] Hip Hop DX reviewer B. Love wrote, "This is Kool Keith's best album in years—arguably even better than his classic Octagonecologyst—and marks a fine return to form for one of rap music's most distinctive and original talents."[27]

Other reviews were mixed. Pitchfork Media's Tom Breihan wrote that "Keith himself is responsible for all of the album's good moments. Even when he's in unhinged-rant mode, Keith's imagery often remains lucid. And so the album's best song is "Ants," where he comes off frantic but omnipotent...It's dense and fascinating stuff, a tantalizing glimpse of what might've happened if Keith hadn't treated the reemergence of his most popular persona like an easy payday."[6] PopMatters writer Michael Frauenhofer wrote that "The Return of Dr. Octagon is still better than anything Kool Keith's done in a little while, but apart from its best tracks, it's not close to the level of his finest work of the past, and it doesn't really build much on the legend of Dr. Octagon, which still rests most firmly on the good doctor's debut."[28]

Negative reviews came from Billboard writer Ron Hart and Michael Pollock of Prefix magazine. Hart wrote that "Kool Keith has dropped nothing but disappointment and at an alarmingly steady rate."[29] Pollock wrote that "Despite all the stupid records he's put out before, The Return of Dr. Octagon is the first one that plunges wholly into self-parody. He's now a fully realized clown, a prop, a joke and, most disappointingly, a sub-par rapper whose forced ideas and personality obstacles have devolved into flimsy, uninspired character sketches."[30]

Dan the Automator criticized the release, stating "That wasn't a Dr. Octagon record. Dr. Octagon is me, Kool Keith, and Q-Bert. The label didn't have the legal right to use the name, but I didn't want to get involved in a legal battle...Keith's my man, just trying to make a little bit of money."[31] KutMasta Kurt stated that Thornton was reluctant to perform songs from the album, because the lyrics did not fit the music.[1] John Lindland, who co-produced the final album under the name One-Watt Sun, stated in defense of the album, "People say it's a fake. We don't have that feeling. We think that those are great tracks. It wasn't about remixing anything. They were our ideas, and Keith went on grooves that we sent to LA."[4] In response to Fanatik J's criticism of the album, One Watt Sun referred to him as being disgruntled as a result of the label discarding his music. According to Lindland, "If we were him, we'd have [a] beef too".[4]

Dr. Dooom 2, Thornton's 2008 follow-up to First Come, First Served, was produced in response to The Return of Dr. Octagon.[1] According to Thornton, "I'm one of those artists that people take my music without my consent. People love to snatch my music and do things on their own. You got people that put me on beats I never rapped on. I just feel that it's a bad thing."[1]

Track listing

# Title Time Performer(s)
1 "Our Operators Are Masturbating" 0:24 Kool Keith
2 "Trees" 2:46 Kool Keith
3 "Aliens" 2:54 Kool Keith
4 "Ants" 3:01 Kool Keith
DJ Dexter
5 "Don't Worry Mz Pop Music" 0:32 Kool Keith
6 "Perfect World" 2:37 Kool Keith
7 "The Turtle Skit" 1:08 Kool Keith
8 "Al Green" 2:45 Kool Keith & Fanatik-J Productions
9 "A Gorilla Driving a Pick Up Truck" 3:35 Kool Keith & Fanatik-J Productions
10 "Got Any Kids?" 0:23 Kool Keith
11 "Doctor Octagon" 2:58 Kool Keith & Fanatik-J Productions
12 "It's The Morning" 2:48 Kool Keith & Fanatik-J Productions
13 "Jumpstart" 3:24 Kool Keith & Fanatik-J Productions
14 "Eat It" 5:01 Kool Keith
Princess Superstar

Personnel

The following people contributed to The Return of Dr. Octagon:[32]

Musicians

Additional personnel

 Fanatik-J Productions-Vocal Recording & Engineering 
  • One Watt Sun — songwriting, production, mixing
  • Mike Letho — mixing
  • Nilesh "Nilz" Patel — mastering
  • Tomáš Sochůrek — additional mixing
  • Francois Tetaz — additional mixing
  • Argee Geronca — artwork design
  • Brent Wadden — artwork design
  • Mario Campos — artwork design
  • Michael Tullberg — photography

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Downs, David (November 21, 2008). "Kool Keith and KutMasta Kurt". The A.V. Club. http://www.avclub.com/articles/kool-keith-and-kutmasta-kurt,14335/. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  2. ^ Huey, Steve. "Review of First Come, First Served". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:6jd5vwpia92k. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  3. ^ a b Goodman, Abbey (April 5, 2002). "All The Voices In Kool Keith's Head Working On New Albums". MTV News. http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1453279/20020405/kool_keith.jhtml?headlines=true. Retrieved on 13 December 2008. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Downs, David (September 27, 2006). "Kool Keith CD Scam Exposed". East Bay Express. http://www.eastbayexpress.com/ebx/PrintFriendly?oid=291467. Retrieved on 25 January 2009. 
  5. ^ a b c Moayeri, Lily (July 23, 2002). "Kool Keith Revives Dr. Octagon". Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/koolkeith/articles/story/5934820/kool_keith_revives_dr_octagon. Retrieved on 25 January 2009. 
  6. ^ a b c Breihan, Tom (June 28, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Pitchfork Media. http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/37108/Dr_Octagon_The_Return_of_Dr_Octagon. Retrieved on 2008-09-06. 
  7. ^ a b c d Brown, Marisa. "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Allmusic. http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:hzfpxqydld6e~T1. Retrieved on 2008-09-06. 
  8. ^ "In Brief: Keith Richards, Sonic Youth, Ray LaMontagne and More". Rolling Stone. May 1, 2006. http://www.rollingstone.com/news/inbrief/story/10191406/keith_richards_sonic_youth_ray_lamontagne_and_more. Retrieved on 27 January 2009. 
  9. ^ "The Return of Dr. Octagon – Remix Campaign Week 1". usounds le internacional. http://www.usounds.com/mt/archives/000805.html. Retrieved on 2009-02-11. 
  10. ^ "Dr Octagon Decipher Series Chapter 2: "Al Greazy"". usounds le internacional. http://www.usounds.com/mt/archives/000813.html. Retrieved on 2009-02-11. 
  11. ^ a b "Dr Octagon Decipher Series Part 3". usounds le internacional. http://www.usounds.com/mt/archives/000817.html. Retrieved on 2009-02-11. 
  12. ^ a b c "Dr Octagon Decipher Series Part 5". usounds le internacional. http://www.usounds.com/mt/archives/000832.html. Retrieved on 2009-02-11. 
  13. ^ "Dr Octagon Decipher Series Part 7". usounds le internacional. http://www.usounds.com/mt/archives/000841.html. Retrieved on 2009-02-11. 
  14. ^ "Dr Octagon Decipher Series - The Final Chapter". usounds le internacional. http://www.usounds.com/mt/archives/000848.html. Retrieved on 2009-02-11. 
  15. ^ a b c Frauenhofer, Michael (June 29, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". PopMatters. http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/dr-octagon-the-return-of-dr-octagon/. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  16. ^ Johnston, Geoff (June 29, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Dallas Observer. http://www.dallasobserver.com/2006-06-29/music/dr-octagon/. Retrieved on 27 January 2009. 
  17. ^ a b "Mix Mag singles out "Aliens" Sub-Focus Remix". CMH Records. May 9, 2006. http://www.thereturnofdroctagon.com/web/zzzpage.asp?pgs=news&id=142. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  18. ^ "MTV Shooting Full Length Video for Huge Environmental Campaign.". CMH Records. August 26, 2006. http://www.thereturnofdroctagon.com/web/zzzpage.asp?pgs=news&id=176. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  19. ^ Cooper, Sean (2003). "Kool Keith". All Music Guide to Hip-Hop: The Definitive Guide to Rap & Hip-hop. Backbeat Books. pp. 267–268. ISBN 0879307595. 
  20. ^ "Release information for The Return Of Dr. Octagon (LP)". Discogs. http://www.discogs.com/Dr-Octagon-The-Return-Of-Dr-Octagon/release/839152. Retrieved on 2009-03-02. 
  21. ^ "Release information for The Return of Dr. Octagon (CD)". Discogs. http://www.discogs.com/Dr-Octagon-The-Return-Of-Dr-Octagon/release/1370572. Retrieved on 2009-03-02. 
  22. ^ a b Godfrey, Sarah (August 26, 2006). "Kool Keith's Bits & Pieces". The Washington Post. p. C08. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/25/AR2006082501297.html. Retrieved on 19 January 2009. 
  23. ^ "The Return Of Dr. Octagon". Metacritic. http://www.metacritic.com/music/artists/droctagon/returnofdroctagon. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  24. ^ "Artist chart history for Dr. Octagon". Billboard. http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/retrieve_chart_history.do?model.chartFormatGroupName=Albums&model.vnuArtistId=154785&model.vnuAlbumId=776362. Retrieved on 2009-01-25. 
  25. ^ Baiker, Brian (July 19, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Newsweek. http://www.thereturnofdroctagon.com/web/zzzpage.asp?pgs=review&id=32. Retrieved on 26 January 2009. 
  26. ^ Hoard, Christian (June 26, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/album/10658130/the_return_of_dr_octagon. Retrieved on 2009-01-25. 
  27. ^ B. Love (July 7, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Hip Hop DX. http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/reviews/id.660/title.dr-octagon-the-return-of-dr-octagon. Retrieved on 2009-01-25. 
  28. ^ Frauenhofer, Michael (June 29, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". PopMatters. http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/dr-octagon-the-return-of-dr-octagon/. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  29. ^ Hart, Ron (July 11, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Billboard. http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/reviews/album_review_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002803298. Retrieved on 2009-01-25. 
  30. ^ Pollock, Michael (June 29, 2006). "Review of The Return of Dr. Octagon". Prefix. http://www.prefixmag.com/reviews/dr-octagon/the-return-of-dr-octagon/15241/. Retrieved on 2009-01-27. 
  31. ^ Downs, David (October 25, 2006). "Dashed Hoop Dreams". East Bay Express. http://www.eastbayexpress.com/music/dashed_hoop_dreams/Content?oid=291777. Retrieved on 25 January 2009. 
  32. ^ "Dr. Octagon - The Return Of Dr. Octagon". Discogs. http://www.discogs.com/Dr-Octagon-The-Return-Of-Dr-Octagon/release/1370572. Retrieved on 2009-02-11. 

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