• "Welcome To The Real World" was originally released by Link Records in 1988 with Steve Kent (their first guitar player) rejoining the band made up at that moment by Micky Fitz (vocals), Steve Whale (rhythm guitar), Mark Brennan (bass), and Micky Fairbairn (drums). The album features 12 great sing-a-long anthems in the finest tradition of late-'70s/early-'80s British punk with sharp and real lyrics that describe, staying away from cliches, the life of youth in the British working-class neighbourhoods. Full-color lyric insert featuring previously unseen photos of the band included. Now available again on limited clear vinyl. (Daily Records)
  • Buzzcocks’ seminal third album, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its original release.
    • Newly curated booklet featuring an essay from cultural commentator Jon Savage & previously unseen images
    • Packaged in its original Malcolm Garrett designed sleeve
    • Dispatched with ltd edition ‘Product’ carrier bag
    Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830012829
  • Buzzcocks’ seminal third album, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its original release.
    • Newly curated booklet featuring an essay from cultural commentator Jon Savage & previously unseen images
    • Packaged in its original Malcolm Garrett designed sleeve
    • Dispatched with ltd edition ‘Product’ carrier bag
    Comes with an MP3 and WAV download card. Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830012812
  • Out of stock
    Buzzcocks’ seminal first album, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its March 1978 release. Comes with newly curated 36 page booklet featuring an essay from cultural commentator Jon Savage & previously unseen images Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830012621
  • Out of stock
    Buzzcocks’ seminal first album, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its March 1978 release.
    • Newly curated booklet featuring an essay from cultural commentator Jon Savage & previously unseen images
    • Packaged in its original Malcolm Garrett designed sleeve
    Comes with an MP3 and WAV download card. Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830012614
  • Re-issue of Buzzcocks' 2006 studio album on stunning White vinyl! Buzzcocks – a band with a past, present, and a legacy they could never have imagined back in the heady punk rock days of 1976. 30 years later, still going strong, still doing it arguably better than anyone else, the godfathers of punk-pop were back with a new album, “flat-pack philosophy”, released 2006 “flat-pack philosophy” was Buzzcocks eighth studio album. In true punk rock fashion, and with superlative production by bassist Tony Barber, the album packs 14 songs into 36 minutes. Taking an urban guerrilla stance against the evils of the modern world, from Tesco self-service tills to the cult of Ikea, “flat-pack philosophy” proves that when you put the right creative personalities together, the magic manifests! Label: Audio Platter Barcode: 803341523944
  • Buzzcocks’ seminal second album, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its September 1978 release. Comes with newly curated 36 page booklet featuring an essay from cultural commentator Jon Savage & previously unseen images (Domino Records)
  • 2018 Remastered version. Buzzcocks’ seminal second album, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its September 1978 release.
    • Newly curated booklet featuring an essay from cultural commentator Jon Savage & previously unseen images
    • Double-sided insert replicated from the original 1978 LP
    • Packaged in its original Malcolm Garrett designed sleeve
    Comes with an MP3 and WAV download card. Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830012713
  • Buzzcocks’ career defining compilation Singles Going Steady, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its original release. Newly curated booklet featuring an essay from punk authority Clinton Heylin & previously unseen images. Domino 2019 CD reissue in 'mini-LP replica' packaging. The disc sits inside a rounded-corner inner sleeve. Features a 36-page glossy full-color booklet (with a spine) which includes 11 pages of liner notes and images of the front and back covers of all eight UK 7" singles. Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830012904
  • Out of stock
    Buzzcocks’ career defining compilation Singles Going Steady, lovingly restored and re-mastered from its original ¼ tapes for the first time since its original release.
    • Newly curated booklet featuring an essay from punk authority Clinton Heylin & previously unseen images
    • Packaged in its original Malcolm Garrett designed sleeve
    Comes with an MP3 and WAV download card. Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830012911
  • Previewed in April with the limited edition single ‘Senses Out of Control’, the new Buzzcocks album is finally unveiled – their first new studio offering since ‘The Way’ in 2014! The legendary Manchester punk band need little introduction. Back in 1977, they gave birth to a generation of independent labels with their debut EP ‘Spiral Scratch’. Thereafter, their melodic punk-pop proved irresistible, leading to hit singles and three landmark albums. They broke up in 1981 but reunited in 1989 and have been going steady ever since. Sadly, singer Pete Shelley passed away in 2018 but founder member and the band’s other singer/songwriter Steve Diggle has kept the flag flying. During the COVID pandemic, Steve and co. (Chris Remington on bass, Danny Farrant on drums) busied themselves with recording ‘Sonics In The Soul’. Recorded at Studio 7in London, the album was co- produced by Steve himself with Laurence Loveless. Label: Cherry Red Barcode: 5013929185739
  • Previewed in April with the limited edition single ‘Senses Out of Control’, the new Buzzcocks album is finally unveiled – their first new studio offering since ‘The Way’ in 2014! The legendary Manchester punk band need little introduction. Back in 1977, they gave birth to a generation of independent labels with their debut EP ‘Spiral Scratch’. Thereafter, their melodic punk-pop proved irresistible, leading to hit singles and three landmark albums. They broke up in 1981 but reunited in 1989 and have been going steady ever since. Sadly, singer Pete Shelley passed away in 2018 but founder member and the band’s other singer/songwriter Steve Diggle has kept the flag flying. During the COVID pandemic, Steve and co. (Chris Remington on bass, Danny Farrant on drums) busied themselves with recording ‘Sonics In The Soul’. Recorded at Studio 7in London, the album was co- produced by Steve himself with Laurence Loveless. Label: Cherry Red Barcode: 5013929185715
  • Re-issue of Buzzcocks' 9th studio album 'The Way' on stunning CLEAR vinyl! It was their first album since 2006 and ninth overall, Shelley and Diggle delivered their patented fuzzed out melodies with traces of surf rock, hard rock and influences from both Ramones and The Beatles. Shelley’s voice sounded great, especially considering his age, and the hooks and riff heavy sounds are a great reminder of the legacy these legends are still cultivating. This clear vinyl is surely a must-have for any Buzzcocks fan collection! Label: Audio Platter Barcode: 803341523968
  • Time's Up is a reissue of Buzzcocks' 1976 album of demos, recorded with founder & singer Howard Devoto and originally released as a bootleg. In 1981, with disco medleys of former pop hits like “Stars on 45” climbing the charts around the world, a cluster of British punk rockers recorded their own medley of old favorites. The Friendly Hopefuls’ Tribute to the Punks of ’76 begins with the standard looped clap track and a slick, professional-sounding chorus singing: “Hey hey/Remember that day / In 1976 / When the music scene was boring / Until along came - this!” And the guitar riff from the Buzzcocks’ “Boredom” kicks in. Spiral Scratch - the four-song debut EP on which “Boredom” appeared - was a revelation. British punk rock was brand new at that point: when Spiral Scratch was released on January 29, 1977, the Sex Pistols’ “Anarchy in the U.K.” was barely two months old, the Damned, the Vibrators, and the Stranglers had some singles out, and that was it. All those bands were signed to at-least-sort-of-legitimate record labels. Meanwhile, the Buzzcocks scraped together the funds to have 1000 copies of Spiral Scratch pressed themselves, and called their otherwise nonexistent label New Hormones. The masterminds behind the band at that point - singer/guitarist Howard Devoto and guitarist Pete Shelley - weren’t Londoners like the earliest wave of UK punks. They were from unfashionable Manchester, a couple of hours’ train ride north. In the fall of 1975, Devoto and Shelley read about the Sex Pistols, traveled down to London to see them, and came back inspired to start a band of their own. The Buzzcocks’ first complete set was opening for the second of two legendary Pistols shows in Manchester during the summer of 1976. Time’s Up - initially a bootleg in 1978, and officially released in 1991 - is an invaluable document. It's the demo Buzzcocks recorded on October 18, 1976 - all snarls, yelps, and distortion, while also sounding entirely joyful. They revel in rock bands’ newly-won right to present themselves as mean and aggressive and to say "fuck" out loud. Devoto sings as if Johnny Rotten is the only other vocalist he’s ever heard, and always seems about to break into giggles. “You tear me up, you bloody swine!” he yells with adenoidal delight. “Orgasm Addict,” which they’d re-record as a single a year later, isn’t quite fully formed yet, but Devoto’s rhymes about stained jeans, as well as his whining gasps, were genuinely transgressive for their moment. The band is still finding its feet on Time’s Up, especially as teenage drummer John Maher slowed down the tempo every time he attempted to play a fill. Still, they worked out how to vigorously shove their songs forward. The two covers that were part of their live set at the time revealed a bit about where Buzzcocks were coming from: A sped-up version of the Troggs’ “I Can’t Control Myself” anticipates the love of popcraft that would shortly surface in their own songs and a heavily rewritten take on Captain Beefheart’s “I Love You, You Big Dummy” (which Devoto would take with him to his subsequent band Magazine) hints at the odder, artier side of their later records. Two months after the Time’s Up demos, they re-recorded four of those songs with producer Martin Hannett as Spiral Scratch. A few more weeks of practice had done wonders for the Buzzcocks’ sound: now they were fast, strong and acrobatically tight. They powered through “Breakdown” in two minutes flat and started to sound more like themselves than like the Pistols or the Ramones. In fact, the Ramones would ape the two-note guitar solo gag in “Boredom” for their own on “I Wanna Be Sedated.” The great joke of Devoto’s performance here is that, on the first record by a new band at the vanguard of a new musical movement, he presents himself as utterly over everything—including punk in general. “I’m already a has-been,” he sneers. “You know the scene is - very humdrum!” He wasn't kidding because less than a week after Spiral Scratch’s release, Devoto quit the Buzzcocks, and Shelley took his place as the band’s frontman. By the time they stopped re-pressing the EP in the summer of 1977, Buzzcocks had sold 16,000 copies of it. In its way, Spiral Scratch was at least as important to punk as the Sex Pistols’ rise, because it was the first record of its kind to erase the axioms that the art and business of pop music were necessarily separate, and that a band could never be important until it signed to a “real” record label. Buzzcocks said fuck it and decided to just do it themselves. Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830011228
  • Time's Up is a reissue of Buzzcocks' 1976 album of demos, recorded with founder & singer Howard Devoto and originally released as a bootleg. In 1981, with disco medleys of former pop hits like “Stars on 45” climbing the charts around the world, a cluster of British punk rockers recorded their own medley of old favorites. The Friendly Hopefuls’ Tribute to the Punks of ’76 begins with the standard looped clap track and a slick, professional-sounding chorus singing: “Hey hey/Remember that day / In 1976 / When the music scene was boring / Until along came - this!” And the guitar riff from the Buzzcocks’ “Boredom” kicks in. Spiral Scratch - the four-song debut EP on which “Boredom” appeared - was a revelation. British punk rock was brand new at that point: when Spiral Scratch was released on January 29, 1977, the Sex Pistols’ “Anarchy in the U.K.” was barely two months old, the Damned, the Vibrators, and the Stranglers had some singles out, and that was it. All those bands were signed to at-least-sort-of-legitimate record labels. Meanwhile, the Buzzcocks scraped together the funds to have 1000 copies of Spiral Scratch pressed themselves, and called their otherwise nonexistent label New Hormones. The masterminds behind the band at that point - singer/guitarist Howard Devoto and guitarist Pete Shelley - weren’t Londoners like the earliest wave of UK punks. They were from unfashionable Manchester, a couple of hours’ train ride north. In the fall of 1975, Devoto and Shelley read about the Sex Pistols, traveled down to London to see them, and came back inspired to start a band of their own. The Buzzcocks’ first complete set was opening for the second of two legendary Pistols shows in Manchester during the summer of 1976. Time’s Up - initially a bootleg in 1978, and officially released in 1991 - is an invaluable document. It's the demo Buzzcocks recorded on October 18, 1976 - all snarls, yelps, and distortion, while also sounding entirely joyful. They revel in rock bands’ newly-won right to present themselves as mean and aggressive and to say "fuck" out loud. Devoto sings as if Johnny Rotten is the only other vocalist he’s ever heard, and always seems about to break into giggles. “You tear me up, you bloody swine!” he yells with adenoidal delight. “Orgasm Addict,” which they’d re-record as a single a year later, isn’t quite fully formed yet, but Devoto’s rhymes about stained jeans, as well as his whining gasps, were genuinely transgressive for their moment. The band is still finding its feet on Time’s Up, especially as teenage drummer John Maher slowed down the tempo every time he attempted to play a fill. Still, they worked out how to vigorously shove their songs forward. The two covers that were part of their live set at the time revealed a bit about where Buzzcocks were coming from: A sped-up version of the Troggs’ “I Can’t Control Myself” anticipates the love of popcraft that would shortly surface in their own songs and a heavily rewritten take on Captain Beefheart’s “I Love You, You Big Dummy” (which Devoto would take with him to his subsequent band Magazine) hints at the odder, artier side of their later records. Two months after the Time’s Up demos, they re-recorded four of those songs with producer Martin Hannett as Spiral Scratch. A few more weeks of practice had done wonders for the Buzzcocks’ sound: now they were fast, strong and acrobatically tight. They powered through “Breakdown” in two minutes flat and started to sound more like themselves than like the Pistols or the Ramones. In fact, the Ramones would ape the two-note guitar solo gag in “Boredom” for their own on “I Wanna Be Sedated.” The great joke of Devoto’s performance here is that, on the first record by a new band at the vanguard of a new musical movement, he presents himself as utterly over everything—including punk in general. “I’m already a has-been,” he sneers. “You know the scene is - very humdrum!” He wasn't kidding because less than a week after Spiral Scratch’s release, Devoto quit the Buzzcocks, and Shelley took his place as the band’s frontman. By the time they stopped re-pressing the EP in the summer of 1977, Buzzcocks had sold 16,000 copies of it. In its way, Spiral Scratch was at least as important to punk as the Sex Pistols’ rise, because it was the first record of its kind to erase the axioms that the art and business of pop music were necessarily separate, and that a band could never be important until it signed to a “real” record label. Buzzcocks said fuck it and decided to just do it themselves. Label: Domino Records Barcode: 0887830011211
  • Out of stock
    Finally the Chaos UK 100% Punk Rock in the Air / Earslaughter LP is out ! It features a compilation of classic tracks from the legendary Bristol punk band. Side A was recorded in 1985 for a split LP with Extreme Noise Terror, side B is a long time sold out mini-album from 1993. Tracks from both sides rightfully belong to the top of UK punk rock ! Limited to 300 copies in Black & 200 in Black White Splatter ! (Punk N Loud Records)
  • Finally the Chaos UK 100% Punk Rock in the Air / Earslaughter LP is out ! It features a compilation of classic tracks from the legendary Bristol punk band. Side A was recorded in 1985 for a split LP with Extreme Noise Terror, side B is a long time sold out mini-album from 1993. Tracks from both sides rightfully belong to the top of UK punk rock ! Limited to 300 copies in Black & 200 in Black White Splatter ! (Punk N Loud Records)
  • Out of stock
    One of the most legendary and longest lasting of English anarcho-punk acts, Chaos UK was formed in the southwest fishing port town of Portishead, near Bristol, in 1979, their lightning-speed protest anthems leading to top-ranking status internationally, most especially in Japan, where they influenced a range of emerging local hardcore bands. This compilation gathers the best of their Japan singles issued in the 1990s and early 2000s, including the ‘King For A Day,’ ‘Kanpai,’ ‘Making Half A Killing’ and ‘The Dangerous Study’ EPs, as well as bonus tracks culled from the Punk’s Not Dead compilation. Absolutely essential Chaos! TRACKLIST SIDE A For Adolfs Only Bone Idol Brain Bomb King For A Day Outta My Brain Marvellous Ramraid Student Police Story C. Rap SIDE B Society Ain't Got A Clue Through With You Speed Chunderer 2000 Lies This Song Has Been Genetically Modified T.P.F.P. Travis-ty Gone & Forgotten Label: Radiation Reissues - RRS185 Barcode: 8055515233377
  • Originally released on the small "Children Of The Revolution" label back in 1984, Short Sharp Shock is Chaos UK's own masterpiece, and their first 12" recorded with the classic Mower/Chuck/Gabba/Chaos line up. Up there along with Discharge's Hear Nothing, See Nothing, Say Nothing and Disorder's 1984 Under the Scalpel Blade, straight out of the holy trinity of British 80's punk: angry, pissed and out of tune like it always should have sounded. Label: Radiation Records Barcode: 8055515233421
  • Chaos UK, along with bands like Discharge, G.B.H. and Disorder, revolutionized UK hardcore punk. Tracks A1 - B1 "Chaos U.K. LP" (1983) Tracks B2 - B5 "Burning Britain" EP (1982) Tracks B6 - B8 "Loud Political & Uncompromising" 7'' (1982) Tracklist: A1 Selfish Few A2 Fashion Change A3 You’ll Never Own Me A4 The End Is Nigh A5 Victimised A6 Parental Love A7 Leech A8 Chaos A9 Mentally Insane A10 Urban Guerrilla B1 Farmyard Boogie B2 Four Minute Warning B3 Kill Your Baby B4 Army B5 Victimised (Single Version) B6 No Security B7 What About A Future B8 Hypocrite B9 Senseless Conflict Label: Audio Platter Barcode: 803341524286
  • Before embracing punk through the influence of bands like the Damned, UK Subs frontman Charlie Harper was active in pub rock groups, so when he decided to cut his debut solo album for Flicknife Records in 1981, he returned to classic rock ‘n’ roll and R&B, cutting an enjoyable covers album with fellow Subs Steve Slack and Pete Davies in tow. Tune in to this long lost gem to catch the other side of Charlie, who delivers one-off takes of Hendrix’s ‘Hey Joe,’ the Doors’ Light My Fire, the Velvets’ ‘Femme Fatale’ and Muddy Waters’ ‘Hoochie Coochie Man,’ among others. All UK Subs fans take note: your hero’s alter-ego awaits! Label: Radiation Reissues Barcode: 8055515235906
  • Out of stock
    14 track compilation from Swiss punk and bubblegum indie pop band Chin-Chin. This compilation features the unreleased four track Janice Long Session recorded for the BBC from 1988 which includes songs only heard on the broadcast plus tracks from the Stop Your Crying! 12” from 1986 a selection from the classic Sound of the Westway LP from 1985 and two tracks from the We Don’t Wanna Be Prisoners 7” from 1984. Formed in 1982 in Biel Switzerland Chin-Chin are a group that sits perfectly next to the Ramones, 60’s Girl Groups, The Shop Assistants and Blondie. The sound is instant urgent and with choruses that stick in your head for days, weeks and years. The songs are perfectly produced and have aged like a fine wine. The LP comes with an insert featuring photos handouts and archive. Label: Sealed Records
  • Out of stock
    Speed Kills is the debut full length from London's loudest breakout band Chubby and the Gang. Beginning as a humble pipe dream of West London electrician Charlie Manning, who spent years finding his way through the London punk and hardcore scene, the album is the manifestation of a musical mind marinating in hard punk, pub rock, blues, and doo-wop. From the sneering eternity of "All Along the Uxbridge Road," to the Hammond Organ smeared "Bruce Grove Bullies" -- the songs will have you reaching for your London A to Z and trying your hardest not to spill your pint. Finding a new home on Partisan Records, Speed Kills has been remastered at West London’s Metropolis Studios and features a previously unreleased track “Union Dues”. Label: Partisan Records
  • West London five-piece Chubby and the Gang are balanced by two energies – a casual “fuck it” on one side, an active “fuck off” on the other. For every moment of punk imperfection, there’s an intricate flurry of detail. For every enraged statement about modern life as war, there’s a lyric like “Hello heartbreak, my old friend” that catches you off guard. Made up of musicians from across the consistently thriving and criminally overlooked UK hardcore scene (ft. The Chisel, Big Cheese and more), Chubby and the Gang marinate its characteristic speed and sick-of-it-all energy in a mixture of 50s pop sounds. The result is a prickly take on the older, more melodic genres that punk derives from, chewing them up and spitting them out into something mangled but revitalised. Fronted by Charlie Manning Walker (aka Chubby Charles) and backed by Tom ‘Razor’ Hardwick, Meg Brooks Mills, Ethan Stahl and Joe McMahon (aka the Gang), the band tell stories of modern London. Label: Partisan Records Barcode: 720841219859
  • 2024 sees the release of Cock Sparrer’s eighth studio album, Hand On Heart. The release of new material from this legendary band is always an event, a celebration, and an addition to the canon of classic punk rock. After over 50 years as one of the most influential punk bands on the planet, this album may just be their final word…although they thought the same of 2017’s Forever, and it turned out there was still lots more to say after all! The 10 tracks that comprise Hand on Heart will thrill the Cock Sparrer faithful with their iconic, anthemic sound, but the band still has surprises and new tricks up their sleeves, including a string arrangement by Simon Dobson (Bring Me The Horizon / Mike Oldfield) that lends a touch of class to the affair. With production overseen by James Bragg & guitarist Daryl Smith, as well as mastering by Grammy-winning engineer Kevin Tuffy, the lads sound better than ever, and for once, more of the budget went into the studio than down the pub! Label: Randale

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