Gang Of Three




Yesterday, I woke up to find out that, as a consequence of an apparently random sequence of events, Andy Gill had died. Andy was the guitarist with the Gang Of Four ... one of the very few truly influential bands spawned by the UK post-punk revelation. Given that their initial heyday was forty years ago there may be some whippersnappers out there who have no idea that they existed. The first album is one of the most urgently important releases to have climbed out of my godforsaken xenophobic set of islands.

This is the Infinite Zero remastered CD edition that was re-released in 1995 and includes the original LP from 1979 and the full self-titled 12" from 1980. It's essential.



Dirt Behind The Daydream



This is the Strange Fruit CD from 1990 that brings together the three Peel Sessions recorded between 1979 and 1981. It's essential.

Dressed For The H-Bomb

6 comments:

Robert Gomez 3 February 2020 at 19:10  

R.I.P, Andy. Cheeseburger to go!

Plague 3 February 2020 at 23:20  

Entertainment is one of the greatest records ever made

Dante D 4 February 2020 at 01:51  

Dammit! And it's times exactly like this that millennials really bug me

northfieldhat 4 February 2020 at 18:51  

As essential as it is, and it is, Solid Gold is a miracle. So spare, yet so full. No overdubbed doubled guitars. So minimal. A dub album without all the effects. A masterpiece. I prefer the aggressive singles for "Outside the Trains..." but this album is so...

mat 13 4 February 2020 at 21:18  

He was still young... :(
R.I.P.