• Out of stock
    After releasing their debut album (I’m) Stranded to both critical and commercial success, The Saints followed up with the 1978 album Eternally Yours. The set features some of their most popular tracks to this day, including “Know Your Product”, “Private Affair”, and “This Perfect Day”. Eternally Yours is available as a limited edition of 1000 individually numbered copies on pink coloured vinyl and includes an insert. Label: Music On Vinyl, Parlophone Barcode: 8719262031524
  • New edition of the first ever official Dead Kennedys live album on stunning clear double vinyl presented in a gatefold sleeve! First ever official Dead Kennedys live album! A collection of previously unreleased live recordings from various performances between 1982 and 1986. Performers on all tracks: Jello Biafra – vocals, East Bay Ray – guitar, Klaus Flouride – bass & backing vocals, D. H. Peligro – drums & backing vocals. Superb sound recordings of the band performing classic tracks like: “Police Truck”, “Kill The Poor”, “Holiday In Cambodia”, “Moon Over Marin”, “California Uber Alles” and “MTV Get Off the Air”. Tracklist: A1 Introduction A2 Police Truck A3 Kill The Poor A4 Holiday In Cambodia B1 Moon Over Marin B2 California Uber Alles B3 MTV Get Off The Air C1 Too Drunk To Fuck C2 Goons Of Hazzard C3 This Could Be Anywhere C4 Forward To Death D1 I Am The Owl D2 Hell Nation D3 Riot Label: Audio Platter Barcode: 803341588233
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    Legendary first Oi Polloi recordings ever from 1984 now re-released limited to 500 copies. Four tracks including one of Oi Polloi’s best anthems ever “Boot down the door”. (Mad Butcher Records)  
  • Originally released back in 1987 on Roddy Moreno's Oi! records, this album contains some of their best material ever: 12 aggressive Killer-Anthems, hard and tight played: "Punx'n'Skins", "Scum","Commies and nazis". Like a smack in the face! Rabid, violent, kickin'! Reissue with original artwork. Label: Mad Butcher Records
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    UK five CD box set containing a quintet of original albums packaged in mini LP sleeves and housed in a slipcase. This set from the seminal Irish Punk band includes the albums Inflammable Material, Nobody's Heroes, Hanx! Go for It and Now Then. Warner. Label: Parlophone Barcode: 825646361663
  • This is a pretty good fanclub release that I've never seen around. All the songs are in chronological order and the insert shows all the original singles artwork. Tracks A1 & A2 originally from the Cough / Cool 7" Tracks A3 to A6 originally from the Bullet 7" Tracks A7 to A9 originally from the Horror Business 7" Tracks A10 to A12 originally from the Night Of The Living Dead 7" Tracks B13 to B14 originally from the Halloween 7" Tracks B15 & B17 originally from the 3 Hits From Hell 7" Tracks B18 to B20 originally from the Die Die My Darling 12" Track B21 from the unreleased Teenagers From Mars 7" Track B22 from the unreleased Who Killed Marilyn? 12" Track B23 from the Beware 12" (Fan Club/Unofficial Release) https://youtu.be/N__rhKw2UHU
  • Unofficial re-release their first LP from 1981. Glossy cover & 180g vinyl. Label: Dwed Wecords
  • Seminal record for any punk in UK, China or whatever you live, fucker!!!! The Partisans were formed in Wales south in 1978 with the original line-up of Phil Staton-voice, Rob "Spike" Harrington-guitar and backing vocals, Andy Lealand-second guitar, Mark "Shark" Harris-drums and Mark "Savage" Parsons-bass. This line-up will change after one year as Parsons and Staton left the band and Rob took the voice position and entering Louise Wright as bass player. Basically influenced by Sex Pistols, The Clash and Ramones, The Partisans started to cover those bands and playing some own sounds too. On September 1981 they released their first 7" under the label No Future Records, a fantastic single that helped the band to tour with the likes of Blitz, The Ejected and Peter and the Test Tube Babies. On May 1982 they released their second 7" and when 1983 arrived the band's debut LP was out. This debut LP is one of the seminal steps on British punk for sure, a record that still sound fresh and strong after 3o years. Label: Beat Generation
  • 2024 marks the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Ramones. This collection includes their earliest known studio recordings for Sire Records, many of which would be included in their paradigm-shifting 1976 debut, including "53rd and 3rd,' "Loudmouth," and "I Don't Wanna Walk Around With You" as well as handfuls of rare tracks. All tracks were, of course, produced by Tommy Ramone. Label: Warner Barcode: 0603497827619
  • Out of stock
    Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables is the debut studio album by the American punk rock band Dead Kennedys. It was first released on September 2, 1980 through Cherry Red Records in the United Kingdom and later issued by Jello Biafra's own Alternative Tentacles label in the United States. The best selling and generally the most critically acclaimed album by Dead Kennedys, Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables has become a major staple of American punk. It is the only Dead Kennedys album to feature drummer Ted and guitarist 6025. The classic debut album on 180gm vinyl with restored original poster & two 7" sleeve replica prints. The poster contains lyrics. Label: Cherry Red Records Barcode: 5013929164017
  • Out of stock
    The legendary final concert with founding member Darby Crash, presented in its entirety for the first time ever Unique packaging in the vein of a punk fanzine, complete with a reproduction of the handwritten set list After The Germs’ snarling debut “Forming” helped usher in the West Coast punk scene in 1977, singer Darby Crash, guitarist Pat Smear, bassist Lorna Doom, and drummer Don Bolles returned two years later with (GI), an unrelenting onslaught of primal pounding and verbal venom that influenced a generation. But it was the group’s unhinged concerts. Includes fold-out poster and mini-fanzine. Limited / numbered to 1,970 LPs worldwide Recorded live at the Starwood, Dec. 3, 1980. Original Photography by Ann Summa, Gary Leonard. Original artwork by: Hackmart Inc. Vinyl release produced by Matt Block Mastered for vinyl by Levi Seitz at Black Belt Mastering Design: Steven Jurgensmeyer. Label: Run Out Groove, Slash, Rhino Records Barcode: 081227911416
  • Out of stock
    Big Boys were an American pioneering punk rock band who are credited with having helped to create and introduce skate punk as a new style of music, which became popular in the 1980s. They also were famous for bringing elements of funk into their hardcore punk style. Industry Standard (usually extended to Where's My Towel/Industry Standard) is debut studio LP. It was released in 1981 on vinyl through Wasted Talent Records, operated by members of the Judy's. The album's title and many of its themes were inspired by a growing dissatisfaction with elements of the Austin, Texas punk rock scene from which the Big Boys had spawned. Label: Touch and Go Barcode: 0036172107032
  • US Import. Death were a black power trio from Detroit who released a single in 1975 and pretty much disappeared after that. Inspired by the raw Rock 'N' Roll of the Stooges and MC5, the three brothers moved away from their Funk/R&B roots into a new realm.... for the Whole World to See features the two songs from the single ('Keep on Knocking' and 'Politicians in My Eyes') and five other tracks. MOS DEF SAYS: "These dudes were pre-Sex Pistols, pre-Bad Brains, pre-all that shit, and nobody knows about them. I don't understand how the world could forget them. You really should read up on the history of this Rock n' Roll artifact. A google search will help; something like "death band punk 1974"... The album reminds me of these bands: MC5, The Jam, Zero Boys, Early Police, RadioBirdMan - to name a few. If any of those bands are at your top 10, then this is a must have piece in your collection. NOTE: They are also selling it on vinyl on here!!! The story to this piece of work is very interesting not to mention inspiring to say the least. The songs? All are hits in my mind. I just wish there were more!" Label: Drag City Records Barcode: 781484038719
  • Out of stock
    Hyperactive Ramones-influenced cartoon punk rock from Los Angeles, 1979. One debut LP that made the history in the genre. Frantically fast and short versions of Black Sabbath's 'Paranoid', " the Monkees' "She," and Barry McGuire's "Eve of Destruction" along with a few unforgettable hits like 'You Make Me Ape (You Big Gorilla)' and 'Give It Back'. A must for all California Punk completists! Label: Survival Research Records Barcode: 0634438056720  
  • This early singles compilation was originally only released in Japan in 1984. The Puke N Vomit full-length builds on the '80s, Japanese-only version and compiles all the band's first four, self-released records: the "Complete Disorder" EP (1981), "Distortion To Deafness" 7" (1981), "Perdition" EP (1982), and the "Mental Disorder" EP (1983). Another Disorder album loaded with classic, raw, pissed-off, belligerent, '80s, UK punk. Label: Puke N Vomit Records
  • Out of stock
    The Varukers was one of the first groups of the UK 82 movement - the second generation of punk rock that took the spirit of '77 and merged it with the incessant beat of NWOBHM - responsible for creating UK hardcore. Heavily inspired by Discharge, The Varukers released three 7"s in the early '80s before this, their first and most definitive album, came out in 1983 on the legendary Riot City Records (Vice Squad, Abrasive Wheels, Chaos U.K.). Back in print on LP thanks to Radiation Reissues, "Bloodsuckers" is one of the definitive pieces of early UK hardcore, full of Sabbath-inspired guitar work, pounding rhythms and aggressive, anarchistic lyrical content. Label: Audio Platter Barcode: 0803341524392
  • Out of stock
    Live at the Deaf Club is a live album released by the Dead Kennedys in 2004 and had a limited edition re-release 2013 in the UK on Let Them Eat Vinyl. The actual performance took place at the San Francisco Deaf Club on March 3, 1979. The performance was unique in that this was the last time their rhythm guitarist 6025 performed with them. It also includes original drummer Ted, later replaced in February 1981 by D.H. Peligro. Also, the song "Gaslight" and their covers of "Back in the U.S.S.R." and "Have I the Right" are not found on any other DK album (The Deaf Club recordings of "Short Songs" and "Straight A's" are featured on the compilation album Give Me Convenience Or Give Me Death and the hard-to-find Can You Hear Me? Music From The Deaf Club along with "Police Truck"). "Back in Rhodesia" is an early version of "When Ya Get Drafted" with a different chorus than the final version. "Kill the Poor" is also a "disco" version minus the introduction. SIDE A 1. Introduction By DJ Johnny Walker 2. Kill The Poor (Disco Version) 3. Back In Rhodesia 4. Man With The Dogs 5. Gaslight 6. California UberAlles 7. Ill In The Head SIDE B 8. Straight A's 9. Short Songs 10. Holiday In Cambodia 11. Police Truck 12. Forward To Death 13. Have I The Right? 14. Back In The U.S.S.R. 15. Viva Las Vegas Label: Audio Platter Barcode: 0803341588226 https://youtu.be/cUYAMxZ9bMg
  • Out of stock
    A live document recorded in Toronto – Larry's Hideaway – Canada 1983. Featuring the “Warning” Line up of Cal – Vocals, Garry – Drums, Rainy – Bass and Pooch Guitar. Killer track list and remastered by Jon Mitchell at Outhouse studios. SIDE A: 1. Warning 3:03 / 2. Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing 1:22 / 3. The Nightmare Continues 1:44 / 4. Where There Is A Will There Is A Way 1:53 / 5. Never Again 2:03 / 6. Anger Burning 2:23 / 7. The Blood Runs Red 1:25 SIDE B: 8. Born To Die In The Gutter 2:30 / 9. Protest And Survive 2:43 / 10. In Defence Of Our Future 2:12 / 11. State Violence State Control 2:57 / 12. The Price Of Silence 2:16 / 13. The More I See 1:56 / 14. Decontrol 3:37 Label: Audio Platter Barcode: 0803341567207
  • Understand? is the fourth album by Chicago punk legends band Naked Raygun, released in 1989 through Caroline Records. After the visceral energy of their debut, 'Throb Throb', and the subtle refinement displayed on 'Jettison', the Chicago hardcore label rejecters did little to aid their claim with the brawny, scrappy 'Understand?' Packed with an onslaught of riffs, pummelling d-beat blasts and gang vocals galore, while rife with unkempt cynicism and aggression on the anthemic anti-social title-track or the snapshot of 'The Sniper Song,' Naked Raygun would only further cement their status as punk all timers on this seminal fourth record. Label: Audio PLatter Barcode: 0803341523876
  • If the Misfits were one of the greatest punk bands then Walk Among Us released in 1982 is perhaps one of the greatest records in punk history. While Static Age and Earth AD showcased a band searching for an identity like a vampire for its next victim, Walk Among Us is almost sheer perfection. With a solidified lineup, fully grown-out devillocks (the Misfits trademark long spike of hair in the front) and the stabilizing presence of the somewhat pedestrian but agile arthur googy on drums, uber-misfit Glenn Danzig was finally able to match his zombie-elvis to a worthy musical foil. From the manic opening of 20 Eyes to the monster football chorus of Braineaters, there is nothing less than a sublime moment on this album from start to finish. Astro Zombies or I Turned into a Martian sound like songs to raise the dead by. a special bonus is perhaps the tenderest love song to decapitation (Skulls) in recent memory. Label: Miss999/Unofficial
  • The first solo album by the then former Adolescents guitar player Rikk Agnew, produced by Thom Wilson and originally released in 1982. Agnew played guitar, bass, drums, keyboards and even sang on this Orange County, CA punk classic that features one of the best punk rock songs ever written, "O.C. Life." This is for you, Fullerton. It was produced by Agnew, and co-produced by the then-Adolescents producer Thom Wilson. Agnew played all the instruments on the album. The band D.I., which Agnew joined in 1983, included cover versions of the songs "O.C. Life", and "Falling Out" from this album for their debut album, Ancient Artifacts, which was released in 1985. Label: Frontier Records Barcode: 018663100920
  • Out of stock

    RAMONES | acid eaters | LP

    21.00 incl. tax
    Acid Eaters is the thirteenth studio album by American punk rock band Ramones. Released in 1993, towards the end of the Ramones' career, the album is the band's first and only album entirely composed of covers. Acid Eaters forms a musical tribute to the Ramones' favorite artists of the 1960s and highlights the influences the Ramones took from garage rock bands like the Seeds and the Amboy Dukes, as well as from popular bands such as the Beach Boys, the Who and the Rolling Stones (all of whom are covered on this album). (Myebika Records/Unofficial Release)
  • Big Boys were an American pioneering punk rock band who are credited with having helped to create and introduce skate punk as a new style of music, which became popular in the 1980s. They also were famous for bringing elements of funk into their hardcore punk style. They’ve long done things differently in Austin, Texas, and the take on hardcore pioneered by one of the city’s sons, Big Boys, in the early 80s was no exception. Where peers Scratch Acid, The Dicks, and MDC pursued hardcore or art-punk angularity, Big Boys were mixing furious hardcore with loose-limbed funk and tight pop, all the while penning lyrics that struck a blend between punk ideology, angsty alienation, and goofy humor. It was delivered via 7”s, EPs, a split LP, compilations, three studio albums, and the live DIY shows that were audience participation-fueled free-for-alls. The idea was for fans to leave feeling like they were part of the band. Originally released on the Wasted Talent label and reissued last year by Modern Classics Recordings, 1981’s debut album Where’s My Towel was inspired by the group’s growing dissatisfaction with their part in the release of Live At Raul’s. Returning with Lullabies Help The Brain Grow two years later, they were still striking out at situations around them. The opening track, “We Got Your Money” is a sort of rally cry to the misunderstandings of their scene and to the fraternity boys and girls that came to gawk or cause trouble: “And to all you frat boys/We got your money in our hands!” they shouted gleefully. Song titles including “We’re Not In It To Lose,” “Fight Back,” and “Assault” proved that the gloves were off. Produced by Spot, legendary in-house producer at SST Records, Lullabies is an album that caught the band in ever-turbulent mode, switching drummers through the recording from Fred Schultz to Rey Washam – the fourth person to occupy the stool for vocalist Randy “Biscuit” Turner, guitarist Tim Kerr, and bassist Chris Gates. The album found the band testing the boundaries of their wide-ranging sound, with double-quick thrashers like “Lesson” and double-funky jams like “Funk Off” (helped along by the brass of the Fun Fun Fun 12" horn section). Kerr took lead vocals on two tracks, and on “Sound On Sound,” they combine his languid delivery and pendulum bass in a way that must have pricked the ears of a young Steven Malkmus. With features in the earliest issues of Thrasher Magazine and coveted spots on their influential Skate Rock tape comps, Big Boys were the first band to be labeled “skate rock,” the nascent version of the world-conquering skate punk of the late 1980s and 1990s. Now, Light In The Attic’s Modern Classics Recordings imprint is bringing their pioneering music to a new audience. Following the 2013 re-release of Where’s My Towel / Industry Standard, 2014 saw reissues of both Lullabies Help The Brain Grow and the following year’s No Matter How Long The Line Is At The Cafeteria, There’s Always A Seat, which brought the band’s story to a close. Famously, the Big Boys would end shows with the foursome shouting, “OK y’all, go start your own band.” Their message was inclusion – and action. Start a band, write a zine, participate. So what are you waiting for? Listen to this record. Label: Touch and Go Barcode: 0036172107131
  • Big Boys were an American pioneering punk rock band who are credited with having helped to create and introduce skate punk as a new style of music, which became popular in the 1980s. They also were famous for bringing elements of funk into their hardcore punk style. Active for five years in the early 1980s, the Big Boys mixed furious hardcore with loose-limbed funk and tight pop structures, all the while penning lyrics that struck a blend between punk ideology, angsty alienation and clever humor. They were, in the memory of Minor Threat frontman Ian MacKaye, “Enormous men, decorated jump suits, a horn section, 200 friends onstage singing and dancing.” They were Big Boys by name and by nature – and they had a big effect on US punk culture. When the prevailing trend was for playing hard and fast, this Austin, Texas four-piece played loose and funky. Their cult recordings struck a blend between punk ideology and clever humor, just as the band both railed against and celebrated the hardcore community that bore them. Released at the time of their split in 1985 and now reissued by Modern Classics Recordings, the group’s final album, No Matter How Long the Line Is At the Cafeteria, There’s Always a Seat finds Big Boys continuing to innovate, even including the sound of turntable scratching on Common Beat, a sound rarely heard outside of hip-hop at the time. Songs like “Which Way To Go” and “Narrow View” echo their boredom and anger with the changing hardcore scene, while “I Do Care” and “What’s The Word” illustrate the band’s positive outlook for things to come. With features in the earliest issues of Thrasher Magazine and coveted spots on their influential Skate Rock tape comps, Big Boys were the first band to be labeled “skate rock”, the nascent version of the world-conquering skate punk of the late ‘80s and ’90s. Now, Light In The Attic imprint Modern Classics Recordings is bringing the music of these pioneers to a new audience. Following the 2013 re-release of debut Where’s My Towel / Industry Standard, 2014 saw reissues of second album Lullabies Help The Brain Grow alongside this final record. Just as the album flirts between expressions of boredom and anger and funk jams that declare “Life is just a party” (”What’s The Word"), Big Boys were a mess of contradictions. On stage, openness was key and they became famous for encouraging the audience to get involved: “We’re the band, you’re the band,” they would say. But as a four-piece, their relationships began to fray as is not uncommon with many bands on long tours. After five short years and many recordings, the Big Boys went separate ways. “We never really decided to ‘break up’, it just happened,” said Kerr. “We had been on a two month tour, and it got to be exactly like being in a station wagon with mom and dad with your brother and sisters… lots of tension and everything.” Along with an appearance in the documentary American Hardcore and these new reissues, the band’s legacy continues in current bands, like Fidlar, Wavves, and The Orwells, and in the mark they made on Austin, Texas, which, in tribute to the band, adopted the name of their song, “Fun Fun Fun” for an annual arts/music festival. Keep Austin weird? Big Boys made Austin weird. Label: Touch and Go Barcode: 0036172107230
  • Puke n Vomit Records presents a reissue of Pure Hell sole full-length album, recorded in 1978 but not released until 2006. In 1974, on the streets of Philadelphia, a band unlike any other was formed. They called themselves Pretty Poison. They had a sound so ahead of its time that the music industry was not yet ready for it. They coupled the punk sound of the New York bands of the time with a harder, faster heavy metal edge unheard before. Their unique sound was a result of Kenny Gordon's berserk choreography and Preston Morris's needling guitar riffs, while Steel and Spider added synchronized barrage with no nonsense execution to the arsenal. Inspired by the famous fuel-altered dragster, they changed their name to Pure Hell in 1975. Soon after, they moved to New York City where they played with bands like the New York Dolls, Sid Vicious, Wayne County and the Electric Chairs, The Dead Boys, The Stimulators, Richard Hell, The Germs, The Nuns, The Cramps and more. In 1978 Pure Hell headlined a tour of the UK, with bands like the UK Subs, Wilko Johnson, Vermilion & the Aces and more opening for them. While in the UK, their only original record was released. It was a single released by their manager Curtis Knight on his label, Golden Sphinx Records. The songs on the single were "These Boots Were Made for Walking" and "No Rules." The single charted in the top 40 charts in the UK. During the same year, a full length album was recorded but was never released. It did not surface again for 28 years. Label: Puke n Vomit Records

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