
Clinic announce new album 'Fantasy Island' for October 22nd
22nd July 2021
Today, Clinic announce their ninth studio album Fantasy Island, due October 22nd via Domino. A vibrant and eclectic LP, over twelve tracks, the Grammy-nominated North West-based duo transport us to tropical climes.
Alongside the album announcement, Clinic are also pleased to share the title track “Fantasy Island” with a video directed by Emily Evans. The band say about the single: “Get out of your tree tonight with Clinic's new electro-rockabilly shebang.”
Fantasy Island was recorded in an old studio on Merseyside during the summer of 2019, with good vibrations seeping into the grooves, “Clinic look to a brighter future,” reveal the band in a soundbite. Their last album, 2019’s Wheeltappers and Shunters, found the band satirising British culture and wallowing in sleazy Seventies nostalgia. This time they are embracing the “the idea of looking at the future and the different ways it can unfold”, with their most electronic and pop record to date.
Referencing H.G. Wells’ Things to Come, Marshall McLuhan’s The Medium is the Massage and Sombrero Fallout by Richard Brautigan, the themes Clinic explore on this album are time, music and entertainment. In a (coco) nutshell, Clinic have gone funky disco, broadening their sonic palette with the addition of several new gadgets including an electronic acid bass machine, a 1970s cocktail rhythm unit, a Casio digital horn and space drum. This gear comes to the fore in the centrepiece of Fantasy Island, the incredible “Refractions (In the Rain)”, which nods to the Human League with its strident synthesizer lines and danceable beats, with the groovy, swaggering menace that Clinic always bring to the party.
Elsewhere on the album, Clinic cover Ann Peebles’s “I Can’t Stand The Rain” in a delirious manner. “It’s a tin of fruit cocktail,” says one of the band, and there is definitely a lighter, more escapist mood to Fantasy Island. As well as the Human League, other musical influences on the album include Fun Boy Three, Kid Creole and the Coconuts and early 1980s pop music, but also Italian Cosmic disco mix tapes and primitive busker elements, such as the Memphis Jug Band and old blues music, which balance the sound and give Fantasy Island its raw energy. Only Clinic are capable of pulling these disparate references together to make a cohesive, thrilling whole with mixing duties handled by Claudius Mittendorfer (Parquet Courts, Neon Indian).
Clinic are also heading out on their first live tour since 2012 later this year.
2021 live datesWednesday 1st September - Patterns, Brighton
Thursday 2nd September – Exchange, Bristol
Monday 6th September - Hare and Hounds, Birmingham
Tuesday 7th September – Moth Club, London
Friday 10th September – Yes, Manchester
Clinic Fantasy Island
Album | 22nd October 2021
Referencing
H.G. Wells’ Things to Come, Marshall McLuhan’s The Medium is the
Massage and Sombrero Fallout by Richard Brautigan, the themes Clinic
explore on Fantasy Island are time, music and entertainment. In a (coco)
nutshell, Clinic have gone funky disco, broadening their sonic palette
with the addition of several new gadgets including an electronic acid
bass machine, a 1970s cocktail rhythm unit, a Casio digital horn and
space drum.
Referencing
H.G. Wells’ Things to Come, Marshall McLuhan’s The Medium is the
Massage and Sombrero Fallout by Richard Brautigan, the themes Clinic
explore on Fantasy Island are time, music and entertainment. In a (coco)
nutshell, Clinic have gone funky disco, broadening their sonic palette
with the addition of several new gadgets including an electronic acid
bass machine, a 1970s cocktail rhythm unit, a Casio digital horn and
space drum.