"A Question of Time" | ||||
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Single by Depeche Mode | ||||
from the album Black Celebration | ||||
B-side | "Black Celebration" (live) | |||
Released | 11 August 1986 [1] | |||
Genre | Industrial, new wave | |||
Length | 4:04 (7" single version) 6:38 (12" version) | |||
Label | Mute | |||
Songwriter(s) | Martin L. Gore | |||
Producer(s) |
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Depeche Mode singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"A Question of Time" on YouTube |
"A Question of Time" is a song by the English electronic music band Depeche Mode, released on 11 August 1986 in the UK as the third and final single from their fifth studio album, Black Celebration , following the similarly titled "A Question of Lust".
It was a top 20 hit in several European countries.
Depeche Mode had entered the studio to record tracks for their album Black Celebration in November 1985, with recording of all album tracks starting at Westside Studios in London and final production and mixing moving to Hansa Studios in West Berlin by early 1986. [2]
Depeche Mode released Black Celebration in mid-March 1986, [3] and "A Question of Time" was the album's third and final single, released on 11 August 1986 by Mute Records in the US, Intercord Records in West Germany, and Sire Records in the US. [4]
In the UK, commercial releases included a 7", a 12" and a limited 12" vinyl single, given catalogue numbers 7BONG12, 12BONG12 and L12BONG12, respectively. [5] Mute also released the 7" and both 12" singles promotionally, [5] with a unique mix on the 7" release. [6] In West Germany, Intercord Records released initial pressings of the 7" on red vinyl with catalogue number INT 111.841, as well as 12" and limited 12" releases that mirrored the UK release. [7] In addition, Dischi Ricordi released a rare promotional 7" in Italy (catalogue number BONG12) that included a unique cover. [7] After Black Celebration's first two singles, "Stripped" and "A Question of Lust", both featured black as the dominant color of its cover art, the 12" releases of "A Question of Time" got "optimistic" white covers. [8]
Music producer Phil Harding remixed "A Question of Time" for the 12" single, and the B-side to both 12" releases were tracks recorded on 10 April 1986 in Birmingham, England, while the band was supporting the album with their Black Celebration Tour. [9]
The music video for "A Question of Time" is the first Depeche Mode video to be directed by Anton Corbijn. [10] Shot in black and white and inspired by road movies, the video marked the beginning of a relationship that allowed Depeche Mode to craft the image they wanted. [11] Said Alan Wilder later, "it wasn’t until Anton got involved in 1986, that we realised we could take more control over the cohesive image of the group." [11] Corbijn had photographed the band back in 1981 for NME , and they had approached him to direct some of their music videos earlier in their career, but Corbijn had turned them down, saying "I didn't like their music much. They were kind of a teen band, and I was into serious music back then." [10] Wilder appears a lot in the video, mostly because he was the only member of the band willing to get up early enough to make the video shoot and commit a day to it. [11] [12]
The video was later included on the video collection Strange , The Videos 86>98 , the DVD of The Best of Depeche Mode Volume 1 and on Video Singles Collection .
When reviewing the single, Lesley O'Toole of Record Mirror said the song is "not quite as alluring as 'A Question of Lust', but the rabid, sequenced throb is better programmed for radioland". [13]
Remixes of "A Question of Time" have appeared on various best-of compilations, The Singles 86–98 (1998) and Remixes 2: 81–11 (2011). Live versions appear on 101 (1989), and releases of Recording the Angel (2006) and Recording the Universe (2010).
All tracks written by Martin L. Gore.
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