Showing posts with label Public Image Ltd.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public Image Ltd.. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 August 2024

Decade IV: 1986


Side 1 of a cassette compilation, recorded 8th April 1990.

 
Okay, so we're back with the OG Decade tapes that I compiled in 1990, a new decade and the end of my teens ahead, ten years of life-shaping music behind me.

Time to address the elephant in the room. You may have noticed from the track listing below and in the previous fortnight that the selection leans heavily on alternative, guitar-based music, and very little in the way of club or pop music. 

Yes, I will admit that as well as receiving my first proper Valentine's card and the same person agreeing to be my first proper girlfriend, I was beginning to tap into my inner Goth. I think I bought my first pair of winkle picker boots with shiny buckles around age 15. And the shirts. Oh, the shirts. My local Boots was also doing quite well out of my regular custom for hair gel and hairspray. Yep, I was quite the catch. I don't know what she was thinking.

Anyway, for all that, the parallel story of my teens was also my propensity for a pop song. My nascent record collection happily included the likes of Heaven 17, Bronski Beat, Erasure, Giorgio Moroder with Phil Oakey, Pet Shop Boys, Cameo, Madonna, Propaganda and so on. 

The reason why you're seeing little of that here is that, when I had the idea in 1990 of recording a themed series of mixtapes covering the 1980s, I already had the overarching title, Decade. I also had the thought that there would be a second, parallel series of more club/pop-oriented songs, acknowledging my love of the 12" single and called Decadance (sic). I never got around to recording any of the latter series, but maybe an idea to revisit here one day...

I will also add that whilst I enjoyed a bit of gnarly guitar, I despised Bon Jovi with a passion. No surprise that at school, I was in the minority, as the bobbins hair metallers were especially popular with my female friends. Thankfully, my girlfriend was an exception, in many ways but crucially in her indifference to the hirsute charms of Jon and the lads.

Scene set, here’s the mixtape.

Frankie Goes To Hollywood open up, though a band very much on the downward slide by 1986. I bought the single but more out of a weakening sense of loyalty and I didn't even bother with the accompanying album, Liverpool, at the time. And I echoed the howls of protest when an interview with comic writing legend Alan Moore on Channel 4's The Tube was abruptly cut short to segue to the video of Warriors (Of The Wasteland). It wasn't Frankie's fault of course, but they bore the brunt of my disgruntlement.

John Lydon had made a triumphant return with Public Image Ltd. and the single Rise, ahead of an album that depending on the format you bought was titled 'Album', 'Cassette' or 'Compact Disc' or 'untitled', if you want to be contrary. Co-produced with Bill Laswell, it's big on percussion, like the musical equivalent of a left hook from Mike Tyson (who became the youngest heavyweight champion in history in November 1986, fact fans). I love 'Album' for lots of reasons, and follow up single Home is one of them.

The Godfathers are next in line, matching Tyson's left hook with a piledriver to the head. I bought I Want Everything on 12" and played it loud. My mum understandably hated it. Tick.

I'm not sure my parents were fans of Gene Loves Jezebel but for all their backcombing, lipstick and chiffon, Sweetest Thing was a brilliant pop song. This is one brotherly reunion that isn't likely to happen until hell freezes over, though there's much to love in their early 80s albums. Sweetest Thing only got to #75 in the UK yet Discover reached #32, the only UK Top 40 album in their career.

A perhaps surprising return for Wall Of Voodoo, after their first appearance in 1983. Mexican Radio had a least been a minor hit (#64). Far Side Of Crazy failed to make even that much of an impression, despite the added appeal of 12" B-side Dance You F***ers (the label's censorship, not mine!). I didn't buy this first time around though I acquired Far Side Of Crazy when it was itself included as a B-side to follow single, a cover of The Beach Boys' Do It Again, which fared equally poorly with record buyers in general. Andy Prieboy was now lead singer and it's worth mentioning that former frontman Stan Ridgway had a #4 hit with Camouflage in July 1986. That must have stung a little.

Also on the comeback trail was Iggy Pop, aided and abetted yet again by David Bowie, with a phenomenally successful album, Blah Blah Blah, to boot. Cry For Love was the opening salvo and whilst Iggy enjoyed greater success with the follow up cover of Real Wild Child, I prefer this.
 
I mentioned earlier that Bronski Beat didn't make it into this series, though Jimmy Somerville's next project does. I thought The Communards was a brilliant next step and the musical partnership with Richard Coles produced some fabulous music, politically charged pop, beautifully arranged and sung, with incisive, insightful lyrics. Disenchanted is perhaps the prime example of this. It could be taken as an update or reflection on Smalltown Boy, though it's many other things too. And that wonderful descending piano chord at the bridge. A shame that The Communards are generally remembered for their 80s revival of disco classics. All hits and all good, but they were so, so much more than that.

Depeche Mode began the second phase of their career in 1986, following the mega-selling Singles 81-85 compilation. Many of my classmates referred to them as 'Depress Mode', though my friend Ady and I were increasingly committed to this new direction. 1986 would bring the Black Celebration album and my first ever live gig, seeing Dave and the lads at the Colston Hall in Bristol. I loved lead single Stripped and I bought the 5-track 12" single without having heard a note of the song. I didn't need to. Still hits the spot, four decades on.

My first proper girlfriend and I shared a love of Talk Talk. The Colour Of Spring and it's attendant singles came out as our young romance was blossoming and so the music inevitably became very special for us both. To be truthful, Give It Up was 'our song' - sadly prescient, given that our relationship lasted mere months - yet I have had an enduring love for Living In Another World as it's arguably the least Talk Talk-like song that they ever recorded. And I love it for that.

After committing the crime of not including either E=MC² or Medicine Show in my 1985 mixtape - all the more unforgivable, as This Is Big Audio Dynamite was one of my favourite albums of that year - here they are at last. C'mon Every Beatbox was released to announce the arrival of second album, No. 10, Upping Street. It's a cracking single, from it's familiar riff on Eddie Cochran's C'mon Everybody, to Sam Sever's deft editing and scratching, to Mick Jones and Don Letts' superb trade offs. The 12" version is even better, even if my vinyl rip is sounding to my ragged ears like it might be running a tad too fast....

My second crime is the paucity of Julian Cope in this series. Apart from his appearance with The Teardrop Explodes in 1981, this side marks the first sample from Julian's solo career. Though what an example! World Shut Your Mouth had been demo'd but never finished before the Teardrops, er, imploded. It then provided the title of Julian's first album in 1984 though omitting the song itself.

World Shut Your Mouth finally saw the light of day at summer's end in 1986, the song beefed up by US producer Ed Stasium, famed for his work with Ramones, and with a remix 12" by fellow Americans Trouble Funk. This was a different Cope for sure: sexy, pouting, leather clad; though the climbing frame mike stand was a sure sign that he was still bonkers as ever. The Saint Julian album also proved to be a huge success (#11 in the UK) and for a brief moment, the world did shut its mouth and pay attention. 

Another hugely underrated and underappreciated act is It's Immaterial. Driving Away From Home had been a surprise Top 20 hit in April 1986 and the record label reasonably thought that Ed's Funky Diner, a flop single in 1985 yet an equally brilliant and quirky song, deserved another shot. 
 
As before, Ed's Funky Diner was given the full format treatment: 7", 7" double pack with an extra single, 12", limited edition remix 12". It did better than before, though by better I mean a peak of #65. Their debut album got a few places higher and that was the end of the band as a chart-troubling entity. Thankfully, despite a series of unfortunate events in the intervening decades, It's Immaterial are actively recording and releasing music in the 21st century and the world is a better place for it.
 
1) Warriors (Of The Wasteland) (Single Version): Frankie Goes To Hollywood
2) Home (Single Version): Public Image Ltd.
3) I Want Everything (Single Version): The Godfathers
4) Sweetest Thing (Album Version): Gene Loves Jezebel
5) Far Side Of Crazy (Remix): Wall Of Voodoo
6) Cry For Love (7 Inch Edit): Iggy Pop
7) Disenchanted (Album Version): The Communards
8) Stripped (Single Version): Depeche Mode
9) Living In Another World (Single Version): Talk Talk
10) C'mon Every Beatbox (Extended Vocal Version): Big Audio Dynamite
11) World Shut Your Mouth (Album Version): Julian Cope
12) Ed's Funky Diner (Album Version): It's Immaterial
 
Side One (46:19) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday, 16 March 2024

Our Children Shall Rise Up Against Us Because We Are The Ones To Blame

Don't worry, there hasn't been a revolt at Casa K. Instead, here's some agit from the late 1970s, embracing punk, post-punk, post-modern, post-Mott and stick-it-in-your-pipe-and-smoke-it sounds from 15 of the best.

British Lions formed from the ashes of Mott The Hoople (via Mott) with John Fiddler (Medicine Head) taking front of stage. One More Chance To Run was their debut single and the opening track of their eponymous first album.

Quite a few self-titled debut albums featured here, now that I think about it, taking in The Clash, Tubeway Army, Squeeze, The B-52's, The Pretenders and (almost) Public Image Ltd. and Talking Heads.
 
A first appearance here for Sham 69 with - what else? - Hersham Boys and inevitable returns from Siouxsie & The Banshees, Magazine, Associates and The Jam

The closing song - and inspiration for today's post title - is We Are All Prostitutes, the blistering debut single by Bristol's own The Pop Group
 
It's been nearly a year since Mark Stewart tragically left us, so much to say in 1979 and so much still to say when he passed on in 2023. This one's for Mark and anyone who has spoken up and called out wrong doing.

Even so, our children shall rise up against us because we are the ones to blame.
 
1) One More Chance To Run: British Lions (1977)
2) What's My Name: The Clash (1977)
3) Hersham Boys (Long Version By Jimmy Pursey & Peter Wilson): Sham 69 (1979)
4) Poppy Day (John Peel Session): Siouxsie & The Banshees (1979) 
5) My Shadow In Vain: Tubeway Army (1978)
6) Attack: Public Image Ltd. (1978)
7) The Light Pours Out Of Me (Album Version By John Leckie): Magazine (1978)
8) Boys Keep Swinging (Cover of David Bowie): Associates (1979)
9) Sex Master: Squeeze (1978)
10) Marooned: Wire (1978)
11) Don't Worry About The Government: Talking Heads (1977)
12) 6060-842: The B-52's (1979)
13) News Of The World: The Jam (1978)
14) Brass In Pocket: The Pretenders (1979)
15) We Are All Prostitutes (Single Version By Dennis Bovell): The Pop Group (1979) 
 
We Are The Ones To Blame (46:05) (KF) (Mega)
 

We Are All Prostitutes

We are all prostitutes
Everyone has their price
We are all prostitutes
Everyone has their price
Everyone
 
And you too will learn to live the lie
And you too will learn to live the lie
And you too will learn to live the lie
Everyone has their price
 
Aggression
Competition
Ambition
Consumer fascism
Consumer fascism
 
We are all prostitutes
Everyone has their price
We are all prostitutes
Everyone has their price
Everyone
 
Capitalism is the most barbaric of all religions
 
Department stores are our new cathedrals
Department stores are our new cathedrals
Our cars are martyrs to the cause
Our cars are martyrs to the cause
 
Our children shall rise up against us
Our children shall rise up against us
Because
Because we are the ones to blame
Because we are the ones to blame
Because
Because
They will give us a new name, we shall be
Hypocrites
Hypocrites
Hypocrites
Hypocrites
Hypocrites
Hypocrites

Sunday, 14 January 2024

Dear Annie

Celebrating Annie Nightingale, 1st April 1940 to 11th January 2024.

When I heard the sad news that Annie had passed at the age of 83 following a short illness, I didn't immediately post about it. To be honest, it was a real shock, I'd admittedly not followed Annie's continuing broadcasts in recent years but she seemed like she was immortal, that husky voice continuing to emanate over the airwaves forever. 

I was floored by Janice Long's death in December 2021 and Annie's has also hit me hard. When reflecting on Janice at the time, I wrote that "I probably listened to [her] more than John Peel on Radio 1 as a teen, mainly because her evening show slot usually coincided with doing homework or otherwise avoiding my family in my bedroom." This was even more applicable to Annie, whose request show followed the Top 40 countdown on Sunday nights.

I continued to listen to Annie as the powers that be moved her time slot further and further back, so that (at least, as far as I recall), her show became essential post-club listening.

I discovered so much music, new and old, via Annie Nightingale and I think my eclectic collection is testament to her own unabated passion for new genres and styles. Annie was also a reason to watch The Old Grey Whistle Test on BBC2. Bands that might otherwise have stuck two fingers up to the show and presenter Whispering Bob Harris were more amenable to appear when she was presenting.
 
As with Janice Long, this is another of those selections that doesn't begin to do justice to the breadth of Annie Nightingale's indefatigable love of music. More so, given that her career spanned six decades. 

I've cheekily lifted some of Annie's OGWT intros to link some of the music on this selection. The opening extract was from the show broadcast on 14th February 1981, featuring The Sound (well, it was them or Camel) and a three-song set including the magnificent Sense Of Purpose, included here.
 
I should say that only one song, by The Selecter, is an actual performance from The Old Grey Whistle Test. The rest are album and single versions, a remix here and there including one by Annie herself and some deep cuts from The Teardrop Explodes, The Crystal Method, Public Image Ltd., T.Power and Primal Scream remixed by Andrew Weatherall.
 
Big In Japan by Alphaville made the cut as it was the first song on a request show from 1985 that TSKC1984 taped off the radio and posted on You Tube. You can listen to the entire show in all it's hissy glory here, with another from Hollowe'en 1984 here.
 
I've also drawn inspiration from the three albums that Annie compiled in 1996, 2007 and 2015: Annie On One, Annie Nightingale Presents Y4K and Masterpiece. My selection ends, as Annie On One does, with Flowered Up's magnum opus and finest moment, Weekender, which I first heard on her show in 1992. 

I'll happily confess that I was in love with Annie: that voice; the effortless cool that set her miles apart from her contemporary (male) DJs on TV; the sheer rock 'n' roll-ness of her being. Actually, scratch 'was' for 'am'. 
 
In the many, many tributes in the past few days, Annie Nightingale has been rightly described as a trailblazer, a pioneer, one-of-a-kind. Annie was all of that to me. She was also a wonderful person and my favourite radio DJ ever.

Thank you, Annie, you were the best.
 
1) Old Grey Whistle Test (BBC2 Continuity Announcement & Introduction): Annie Nightingale (1981) 
2) Sense Of Purpose: The Sound (1981)
3) Liberation (12" Version): T.Power (1995)
4) Old Grey Whistle Test (Introduction: The Teardrop Explodes): Annie Nightingale (1982) 
5) Colours Fly Away (Live @ Club Zoo, Liverpool): The Teardrop Explodes (1981)
6) This Was The Sound (Adam Freeland & Sebi Spanks Remix): K-Swing + Beber (2007)
7) Come Back Clean (Annie Nightingale + Far Too Loud Remix): The Crystal Method ft. Emily Haines (2009)
8) Big In Japan (7" Version): Alphaville (1984)
9) Old Grey Whistle Test (Introduction: Japan): Annie Nightingale (1982) 
10) Ghosts (Single Version): Japan (1982)
11) Old Grey Whistle Test (Introduction: Public Image Ltd.): Annie Nightingale (1980)
12) Poptones (John Peel Session): Public Image Ltd. (1979)
13) Don't Fight It, Feel It (Scat Mix By Andrew Weatherall & Hugo Nicolson): Primal Scream ft. Denise Johnson (1991)
14) Duel (Album Version): Propaganda (1985)
15) Old Grey Whistle Test (Introduction: The Selecter): Annie Nightingale (1980)
16) Murder (Live on Old Grey Whistle Test, BBC2 TV): The Selecter (1980)
17) Cheft El Khof: Orange Blossom (2004)
18) Grey Clouds: The Orb ft. Alan Parker, Urban Warrior (2007)
19) Weekender (Full Length Version): Flowered Up (1992)

Dear Annie (1:15:17) (KF) (Mega)

Sunday, 11 December 2022

Sandwich Bars & Barbed Wire

Cassette compilation recorded 5th October 1986, which I think makes it the oldest surviving C90 in my DIY collection. Strangely enough, I couldn't seem to manage to stretch a compilation over two sides. Side 2 was dedicated to a slight rejig of Prefab Sprout's Steve McQueen, adopting the amended (and lawsuit-dodging) name used fot the album's release in the USA.

So, what was 15 year old me listening to? Well, the first two were more of a nod to my friend Stuart, who was a huge fan of U2. I didn't own any of their albums at the time but I had Sunday Bloody Sunday on an import 12" single. 
 
The Bridge by Cactus World News originally appeared on U2's Mother Records label, so again would have been of interest. I had the subsequent reissue on MCA Records, I suspect as part of a hard sell from Dave at Sound Seekers as I ended up with the 12" single and the limited edition 7" with free 2-track cassette. The original mixtape featured the album/single version but the running time was so short that I've swapped it here for the 12" remix.

Little needs to be said about Perfect Skin by Lloyd Cole & The Commotions. Simply one of the best singles of the 1980s from one of the best albums of the 1980s. I still get a joy from listening to it, nearly 40 years on.
 
I rescued the 7" single of Shakespeare's Sister by The Smiths from the ex-chart bargain bin at Woolworths. Worth the (reduced) price alone for the cover picture of Pat Phoenix alone, but a killer A- and B-side. 
 
Another slight tweak here, as the cassette originally featured the NME Version of Uncomplicated by Elvis Costello & The Attractions, from a cover mounted 7" single. I do still have it somewhere but I haven't got around to ripping it to MP3. Instead I've included the album version which I don't think is all that different, to be honest. 
 
Kick Over The Statues was also from a cover mounted 7" single, this time from the premiere issue of short-lived music magazine, The Hit. This was probably my first introduction to Redskins, although I would also have seen them on TV, on Channel 4's The Tube.  This song inevitably resurfaced when the statue of Edward Colston in Bristol was pulled down and dumped into the Harbour water in 2020.
 
A brace of Liverpool bands produced by Ian Broudie. First up, The Icicle Works with Understanding Jane. I became obsessed with the band after buying their Seven Singles Deep collection. This was another Sound Seekers special purchase, as I recall. I got the 7" single with a free 7" single featuring two live songs and then the 5-track 'cassingle', with three more live songs. I managed to resist the temptation to buy the 12" single with an exclusive cover of Van Morrison. Understanding Jane is not the band's finest moment but the song gained an added resonance a few years later when I fell in love with a woman called Jane and it became one of 'our' songs.
 
The second Broudie production is of course Echo & The Bunnymen, with the brilliant The Back Of Love. At the time, I only owned their 'greatest hits' collection Songs To Learn & Sing, which I played constantly. It hasn't aged a bit.
 
Beggars Banquet seemed to be a label that had an inadvertent draw on me: the aforementioned The Icicle Works, The Cult, The Fall, Gary Numan; The Go-Betweens would come to me years later. And then these two: Gene Loves Jezebel and Bauhaus. I almost certainly encountered both in my brother's record collection, but then I'd also bought the One Pound Ninety-Nine various artists compilation, 12 songs for the bargain price of (you guessed it) £1.99.
 
I've previously written about buying the Bauhaus collection 1979-1983 and the first Gene Loves Jezebel album I bought was Discover, which came with a free live album, Glad To Be Alive. It's a patchy album but Sweetest Thing is a highlight. I'd liked All We Ever Wanted Was Everything by Bauhaus since I first heard it on my brother's copy of The Sky's Gone Out and it's still up there for me.
 
The final three songs are a rather odd bit of sequencing. I suspect I had lost a grip on my timings at this point and was just looking for songs to fill the remaining space with less of a care about whether they fit with the rest of the compilation...!
 
I had Public Image Ltd.'s 1986 album on vinyl, so it was titled Album. The title changed to reflect the format, i.e. Cassette and Compact Disc. I also had the 12" single of Home, which also featured the album version of Round as a B-side. It's a good song (and album), albeit with a 'heavy' production characteristic of the time. 
 
The same can be said of Tears For Fears and Chris Hughes, with their huge, none-more-Eighties commercial smash Songs From The Big Chair. Broken was a recycled B-side that was used on the album to sandwich Head Over Heels. When the latter was released as a single, the same approach was adopted for the 12" single's Preacher Mix. The mixtape used the opening segment of Broken, Roland Orzabal doing a pretty ropey Martin Luther King impression, the rest of the song thankfully remaining instrumental. I've less love for Tears For Fears than I had in the early to mid Eighties and this track is definitely out of place on this compilation.
 
To bring things back to a suitable finish, The Jesus & Mary Chain crash in with Taste Of Cindy. This featured along with Redskins, The Style Council and Simply Red on The Hit magazine freebie 7" single and it was some years later before I bought Psychocandy, and a considerable time after I'd seen them live in concert, which seems bizarre in retrospect. A great song, over and done in one hundred seconds. 'Nuff said.
 
1) Sunday Bloody Sunday (Album Version): U2 (1983)
2) The Bridge (12" Remix): Cactus World News (1986)
3) Perfect Skin (Album Version): Lloyd Cole & The Commotions (1984)
4) Shakespeare's Sister (Single Version): The Smiths (1985)
5) Uncomplicated (Album Version): Elvis Costello & The Attractions (1986)
6) Kick Over The Statues (Ramsey McKinnock Mix): Redskins (1985)
7) Understanding Jane (Album Version): The Icicle Works (1986)
8) The Back Of Love (Album Version): Echo & The Bunnymen (1982)
9) Sweetest Thing (Album Version): Gene Loves Jezebel (1986)
10) All We Ever Wanted Was Everything: Bauhaus (1982)
11) Round: Public Image Ltd. (1986)
12) Broken (Preacher Mix): Tears For Fears (1985)
13) Taste Of Cindy (Album Version): The Jesus & Mary Chain (1985)

1982: The Back Of Love EP: 8
1982: The Sky's Gone Out: 10
1983: War: 1
1984: Rattlesnakes: 3
1985: Head Over Heels EP: 12 
1985: Psychocandy: 13
1985: Shakespeare's Sister EP: 4
1985: The Hit RED Hot EP: 6 
1986: Album: 11
1986: Blood & Chocolate: 5
1986: Discover: 9
1986: The Bridge EP: 2
1986: Understanding Jane EP: 7

Sandwich Bars & Barbed Wire (45:15) (Box) (Mega)

Sunday, 13 November 2022

Like Ground Up Diamonds Fired Through A High Pressure Hose

Celebrating Keith Levene, 18th July 1957 to 11th November 2022.

I returned home yesterday afternoon to news of Keith Levene's passing, sad news in what has been a pretty awful week, both in respect of losses to music and life in general.

I've pulled this post and selection together early on Sunday morning, so I'm still processing how much Keith Levene meant to me and I can't find words to articulate this better than the hundreds of posts, Tweets and tributes that I've read in the past 12 hours or so. 
 
From the first time I heard Public Image by PiL in the mid-1980s through to his reunion with Jah Wobble on 2020's A Very British Coup, Keith Levene has featured on so much of the music that has influenced and shaped my interest and fuelled my passion, whether on guitar, keyboards, as a songwriter, collaborator or occasionally singer.

Keith Levene's guitar playing was like something transmitted from another universe. Andy Bell described it beautifully in his Tweet tribute, my clumsy paraphrase providing the title for today's selection.
 
As with pretty much all of my cobbled-together-at-short-notice selections, the ten songs featured don't begin to do justice to the breadth and sheer jaw-dropping wonder of Keith Levine's contribution to music. I've inadvertently not included anything from the 1990s and 2000s, so the selection is roughly split 50/50 into 1970s/80s and 21st century music. There's a lot missing that I would have liked to include but it would have made for a 4-hour plus selection! Instead, here's just under an hour of music to celebrate a true genius.

RIP Keith.
 
1) Dark Matter (Keith Levene Remix): The Membranes (2016)
2) No Birds Do Sing: Public Image Ltd. (1979)
3) Yin & Yang: Jah Wobble & Keith Levene (2012)
4) Gang War: Mark Stewart ft. Lee 'Scratch' Perry & Keith Levene (2012)
5) Bit Of Prague Comp: Keith Levene (2014)
6) A Very British Coup (Video Edit): Jah Wobble ft. Keith Levene, Richard Dudanski, Mark Stewart & Youth (2020)
7) Nuclear Zulu (Album Version By Adrian Sherwood): New Age Steppers (1981)
8) Beef (Album Version By Adrian Sherwood): Gary Clail / On-U Sound System ft. Bim Sherman, Jah Wobble & Keith Levene (1989)
9) Wish: Cowboys International ft. Keith Levene (1979)
10) Haile Unlikely By The Electric Dread / Unlikely Pub: Don Letts, Stratetime Keith, Steel Leg, Jah Wobble (1978)

1978: Steel Leg v The Electric Dread EP: 10
1979: Metal Box: 2
1979: The Original Sin: 9
1981: Action Battlefield: 7
1989: End Of The Century Party: 8
2012: The Politics Of Envy: 4
2012: Yin & Yang: 3
2014: CZ2014: 5
2016: Inner Space/Outer Space: 1
2020: A Very British Coup EP: 6

Like Ground Up Diamonds Fired Through A High Pressure Hose (52:49) (Box) (Mega)