Track Listing
(All discographical information pertains to UK releases only)
- 7"
- ZTT / ZTAS 26
"animal fur/animal smell"
- "Watching the Wildlife" – 3:50
- "The Waves" – 3:02
- 12"
- ZTT / 12 ZTAS 26
- "Watching the Wildlife" (hotter) – 9:02
- "Wildlife Bit 1" - :38
- "Wildlife Bit 2" - :37
- "Watching the Wildlife" (voiceless) – 3:49
- "The Waves" – 3:02
- 12"
- ZTT / 12 ZTAX 26
- "Watching the Wildlife" (movement 2) – 7:12
- "Wildlife Bit 3" – 6:24
- "Wildlife Bit 4" – 4:20
- "The Waves" – 3:02
- "Movement 2" is a mainly instrumental mix, featuring a unique orchestration of the song by arranger David Bedford.
- "Wildlife Bit 3" is an extended mix by engineer Robert Kraushaar.
- "Wildilife Bit 4" is an instrumental mix without drums, guitar or bass, showcasing the orchestral arrangement.
- 12"
- ZTT / 12 ZTE 26
"Beobachtungen im Wilden Leben" (roughly translated as "Observations in the wild life")
- "Beobachtungen im Wilden Leben" (Die Letzten Tage der Menschheit Mix) (use a condom) – 10:16
- "Wildlife Bit 1" - :38
- "Wildlife Bit 2" - :37
- "Watching the Wildlife" (voiceless) – 3:49
- "The Waves" – 3:02
- "Die letzten tage der menschheit mix" ('The last days of mankind mix') was deceptively listed as mixed by Klaus Schulze, which got ZTT into trouble with Schulze. It was actually mixed by Paul Morley, and features samples from an AIDS phoneline.
- MC
- ZTT / CTIS 26
- "Watching the Wildlife" (Bit 4) – 4:26
- "Watching the Wildlife" (Hotter) – 9:09
- "The Waves" – 3:02
- "Wildlife Bit 1" - :38
- "Wildlife Bit 2" - :37
- "Watching the Wildlife" (Bit 3) – 6:26
- Although the tracks were listed on the sleeve with unique titles ("Orchestral Wildlife", "The Condom Mix" etc.), they are in fact the same tracks that appeared on the first two 12" singles.
- This cassette single was included on the 2011 deluxe reissue of the album Liverpool, with a reordered tracklisting.
Read more about this topic: Watching The Wildlife
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“It is remarkable how easily and insensibly we fall into a particular route, and make a beaten track for ourselves. I had not lived there a week before my feet wore a path from my door to the pond-side; and though it is five or six years since I trod it, it is still quite distinct. It is true, I fear, that others may have fallen into it, and so helped to keep it open.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)