Dreamtime (The Stranglers album)

Dreamtime is the ninth album released by The Stranglers in 1986.[2] The title track was inspired by a belief of the aboriginal peoples of Australia called Dreamtime.

Dreamtime
Studio album by
Released27 October 1986
RecordedMarch-April 1986
StudioSpaceward studios, Cambridge
GenreNew wave, post-punk
Length45:53
LabelEpic
ProducerMike Kemp and The Stranglers
The Stranglers chronology
Aural Sculpture
(1984)
Dreamtime
(1986)
10
(1990)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

The single "Always the Sun" single peaked at No. 30 in the UK Singles Chart.[3] Dreamtime itself reached No. 16 in the UK Albums Chart, the lowest charting studio album during Hugh Cornwell's recording tenure with the band (1977–90).[3]

Singles released in the UK for this album included "Nice In Nice" (peaked at No. 30), "Always The Sun", "Big In America" (peaked at No. 48) and "Shakin' Like A Leaf" (peaked at No. 58).[3] A fifth single was proposed by the record company, and a remixed version of the song "Was It You?" was recorded, but it was never released.

Track listing

All songs written by The Stranglers

  1. "Always the Sun" (4:51)
  2. "Dreamtime" (3:43)
  3. "Was It You?" (3:40)
  4. "You'll Always Reap What You Sow" (5:13)
  5. "Ghost Train" (5:04)
  6. "Nice in Nice" (4:03)
  7. "Big in America" (3:18)
  8. "Shakin' Like a Leaf" (2:36)
  9. "Mayan Skies" (3:56)
  10. "Too Precious" (6:44)

2001 CD bonus tracks

  1. "Since You Went Away" (2:53)
  2. "Norman Normal" (4:33)
  3. "Dry Day" (5:02)
  4. "Hitman" (4:21)
  5. "Was it You?" (7" Version) (2:57)
  6. "Burnham Beeches" (3:50)

Personnel

The Stranglers

Additional musicians

  • Alex Gifford - saxophone
  • Hilary Kops - trumpet
  • Martin Veysey - trumpet
  • B.J. Cole - pedal steel guitar
  • Simon Morton - additional percussion

Technical

  • Jean Luke Epstein - sleeve design
gollark: 4-letter unpronouncable-character-sequence domains are still cool, right?
gollark: I should really move osmarks.tk to a .net domain or something.
gollark: > it irks me so much that it is a .tk domain
gollark: It's a sentence fragment.
gollark: <@!261154480433659914> That what's a .tk domain?

References

  1. Ogg, Alex. "The Stranglers: Dreamtime at AllMusic. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  2. "The Stranglers – Dreamtime". Discogs.
  3. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London, England: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 535. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.