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"Dark Entries"
Single by Bauhaus
ReleasedJanuary 1980
Genre
Length3:52
Label
Songwriter(s) Peter Murphy
Daniel Ash
Kevin Haskins
David J
Bauhaus singles chronology
" Bela Lugosi's Dead"
(1979)
"Dark Entries"
(1980)
" Terror Couple Kill Colonel"
(1980)

"Dark Entries" is a song by the English gothic rock band Bauhaus, released as a stand-alone single in January 1980 by Axis (an early name for 4AD) and later issued on 4AD and Beggars Banquet. [1] It features the 1944 painting Sleeping Venus by Paul Delvaux as cover art. [2]

Content

Dave Thompson of AllMusic noted that the "Dark Entries" was outside of the band's normal reputation, being "far punkier" and played at a "breakneck pace". A storm of feedback and percussion starts the song, continuing for 45 seconds before vocalist Peter Murphy "finally unveils one of his most breathless vocals". [1]

Release

The single was released six times, the first in January 1980 on Axis with the catalogue number AXIS 3. [3] When Axis realized that there was another company claiming that name, it changed the label's name to 4AD. [4] The single was reissued in February 1980 on Beggars Banquet (BEG 37) and later in several editions on 4AD (BEG 37 and AD 3).

Legacy

In a feature for The Quietus, Mick Mercer included "Dark Entries" at No. 4 on his list of "The Thirty Best Goth Records of All Time". [5]

The band Hole used the song's main riff for their song "Mrs. Jones" on their first album, Pretty on the Inside (1991).

The band Preoccupations released a cover of "Dark Entries" as the penultimate track of their debut EP, Cassette (2013).

"Dark Entries" was featured on an episode of Superman & Lois.

Track listing

  1. "Dark Entries (single edit)" - 3:52
  2. "Untitled"

References

  1. ^ a b Thompson, Dave. "Dark Entries by Bahaus Song Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 19 November 2014.
  2. ^ "Art-house noir -". 9 November 2012.
  3. ^ "Båuhåus* - Dark Entries".
  4. ^ "4AD: The 'pure' label behind Pixies and Cocteau Twins". 10 October 2013.
  5. ^ Mercer, Mick; Doran, John (April 6, 2009). "The Quietus | Features | The Thirty Best Goth Records of All Time". The Quietus. Retrieved June 27, 2016.

External links