- Sorry, this product cannot be purchased.
The Nation’s Most Central Location (Orange Vinyl)
Out of stock
The much-anticipated follow-up to ‘Districts, Roads, Open Space’. This, the fourth Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan album, sees Gordon Chapman-Fox explore the north-south divide and reflect on 40 years of broken ‘levelling up’ promises.
With eight tracks across 40 minutes, the album offers Gordon’s usual mix of mournful remorse and upbeat optimism. By now, however, there’s an underlying anger which burns through tracks such as London’s Moving Our Way and A Brighter And More Prosperous Future.
The track, Busway, is an optimistic ode to Runcorn’s unique bus route, connecting all communities and free from other traffic.
You may also like...
- Quick ViewRead more
Blitzed – Issue 16 (Magazine)
Blitzed
Issue 16 of the magazine that focuses on the influential music and art of the late 70’s & 80’s. Featuring Echo & The Bunnymen, Kate Bush, David Sylvian, New York Dolls and more.
- Quick ViewRead more
The Path (Vinyl)
Belbury Poly
…unmoored from time or place thanks to Hopper’s narrative style, Chandler’s rustic flutes and keys, Budd’s soulful psychedelic guitars and Jupp’s production and electronics. Released 4th August on heavyweight vinyl.
- Quick ViewRead more
The Pink Opaque (Vinyl)
Cocteau Twins
Re-issue of the band’s fifth studio album, originally released in 1988.
Day By Day (Vinyl)
White Flowers
Beginning to reverberate a monolithic sound of their own. Blue vinyl edition.
Fuse (Vinyl)
Cranes
The band’s first album, originally released as a cassette album in 1986. Black vinyl Limited Edition of 500.