Cringe (album)

Cringe is a compilation album by Clay People, released in 1995 by Out of Line. It compiles most of the band's second album The Iron Icon with remixes and two tracks from the debut.

Cringe
Compilation album by
Clay People
Released1995 (1995)
Recorded1993 (1993) – 1995 (1995)
StudioTrack in the Box
(Baltimore, MD)
GenreIndustrial metal, alternative metal
Length64:10
LabelOut of Line
Clay People chronology
The Iron Icon
(1995)
Cringe
(1995)
Strange Day
(1996)

Track listing

All tracks are written by Clay People, except "Paranoid" by Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi, Ozzy Osbourne and Bill Ward.

No.TitleFrom album (date)Length
1."Pariah" (Uncensored) 4:30
2."Palegod"The Iron Icon (1995)4:08
3."Nothing"Firetribe (1993)3:54
4."Lethargic"The Iron Icon (1995)3:57
5."We Are All Sick"The Iron Icon (1995)4:22
6."Deadman" (Robin Graves Mix) 4:28
7."Rusted Iron Turning Wheel"The Iron Icon (1995)5:41
8."Spit" (Edit)The Iron Icon (1995)3:34
9."Victims"The Iron Icon (1995)3:48
10."Paranoid" (Black Sabbath cover)Shut Up Kitty (1993)3:38
11."Lethargic" (Moonday Remix) 3:53
12."We Are All Sick" (Criminal Remix) 5:52
13."Pariah" (Plow Encroach Mix) 4:58
14."Shroud"Firetribe (1993)3:42
15."Pariah" (Clean Radio Edit) 3:45

Personnel

Adapted from the Cringe liner notes.[1]

Clay People

Additional musicians

Production and design

  • Chase – art direction
  • Van Christie production, recording and mixing (4, 5, 7-9)
  • James Galas illustrations
  • Jason McNinch – production, recording and mixing (4, 5, 7-9)
  • Jeff Motch design
  • Mud – mastering
  • Adam Yoffe – production, recording and mixing (4, 5, 7-9)

Release history

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United States 1995 Out of Line CD OUT 002
gollark: Also, my phone (~2 years old) has a USB-C port which cables randomly come loose from now.
gollark: I'd prefer the ability to swap out batteries over waterproofing.
gollark: I have a long wishlist for phones, but I think the most important thing is actual replaceable parts.
gollark: It's weird, because back in 2017 or so I think most phones, or at least a lot of them, had removable batteries. Now basically none do.
gollark: That's good. We need phones which can actually be repaired. Ideally swappable USB-C ports, screens and batteries with actual standards for multiple phones.

References

  1. Cringe (booklet). Clay People. San Diego, California: Out of Line. 1995.CS1 maint: others (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.