Klinik – Time
Label: | Antler-Subway – AS 5040 |
---|---|
Format: | Vinyl, LP, Album |
Country: | Belgium |
Released: | |
Genre: | Electronic |
Style: | EBM, Industrial |
Tracklist
Other Side | |||
A1 | Suffer In Silence | 4:30 | |
A2 | Someone Somewhere | 4:13 | |
A3 | Obsession (LP Version) | 5:02 | |
A4 | Under The House | 3:40 | |
This Side | |||
B5 | Time | 5:48 | |
B6 | Touch Your Skin | 6:07 | |
B7 | Dead Meat | 5:20 |
Companies, etc.
- Distributed By – Play It Again, Sam!
- Published By – BE'S Songs
- Recorded At – The Lab (8)
- Mixed At – The Lab (8)
- Mastered At – The Lab (8)
Credits
- Lyrics By – Dirk Ivens
- Performer [All Instruments Played By] – Marc Verhaeghen
- Photography By [Pictures], Sleeve [Sleeve Design] – Sabine Voss
- Recorded By, Mixed By, Mastered By [Digitally] – Klinik
- Typography [Lettering] – Guy Drieghe D.*
- Written-By [All Songs By] – Dirk Ivens, Marc Verhaeghen
Notes
Published by BE's Songs 1990.
Made in Belgium.
Made in Belgium.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Barcode (Text): 5 413443 504014
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, etched): AS 5040-A1
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, etched): AS 5040-B1
- Rights Society: SABAM
- Label Code: LC 6971
Other Versions (2)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time (CD, Album) | Antler-Subway, Antler-Subway | AS 5040CD, AS 5040 | Europe | 1991 | |||
New Submission | Time (LP, Album, Test Pressing) | Antler-Subway | AS 5040 | Belgium | 1991 |
Recommendations
Reviews
- Under the House is in my opinion the one that aged the best of this bunch, very fun to mix with dubstep. In fact, one could argue this is a proto-dubstep tune.
- A controversial album, released when the duo had already disbanded and the Klinik moniker had passed into the hands of the solo Marc Verhaegen. The sound is not as good as we were used to listen from them, and some songs, especially "Under The House", "Time" and "Touch Your Skin", sound like incomplete drafts. Moreover, Dirk Ivens' vocals are mastered very low, and are therefore not clearly audible in most passages. Nonetheless, this LP is worth just for three denied Klinik classics such as "Someone Somewhere", "Dead Meat" and "Obsession", the latter in this more industrial, violent and noisy "LP Version", far superior to the one appeared on the "Black Leather" 12". Don't start with this if you don't have anything by The Klinik, go directly to "Plague", "Face To Face" and "Melting Close + Sabotage", but then come back and give a try to this lost album.