other titles...

sleaford mods

West End Girls

limited 12" - £12.99 | Buy
The East Midlands men play havoc with those West End Girls, cuffing the anti-Thatcher sentiment into an equally dystopian era of Tory misrule.
sleaford mods

UK Grim

limited white lp - £21.99 | Buy
cd - £12.99 | Buy
As the Nottingham duo's most dancefloor-friendly release to date, ‘UK GRIM’ is an urgent and sage-like look at life, living and the gritty reali...
sleaford mods

Spare Ribs

LP - £21.99 | Buy
cd - £11.99 | Buy
If you’re feeling the least bit politically jaded, this album is going to chime the heck with you, as the Nottingham duo reel off razor sharp invectives, ...
sleaford mods

divide and exit (2020 reissue)

limited transparent blue lp - £18.99 | Buy
Reissue of classic 2014 album.
sleaford mods

ALL THAT GLUE

2lp - £24.99 | Buy
a collection of songs spanning the last seven years of the bands career; an array of crowd pleasers, B sides, unheard tracks and rarities for us to obsess about...
sleaford mods

Eton Alive

lp + download - £15.99 | Buy
Though their shtick is no longer shocking, the ‘mods revel in being the well established nihilistic voice of Britain, exploring the absurdity of it all wi...
Divide and Exit (10th Anniversary Edition)

0191402048407

  1. Air Conditioning
  2. Tied Up in Nottz
  3. A Little Ditty
  4. You're Brave
  5. Strike Force
  6. The Corgi
  7. From Rags to Richards
  8. Liveable Shit
  9. Under the Plastic and N.T.C.
  10. Tiswas
  11. Keep Out of It
  12. Smithy
  13. Middle Men
  14. Tweet Tweet Tweet

sleaford mods

Divide and Exit (10th Anniversary Edition)

Rough Trade
  • limited remastered clear red LP + bonus 'Git Some Balls' flexi in gatefold sleeve with alternate cover art + cold war steve postcard

    Released: 26th Jul 2024

    £31.99
    Buy
  • remastered black LP in gatefold sleeve + cold war steve postcard

    Released: 26th Jul 2024

    £21.99
    Buy
  • remastered CD + cold war steve postcard

    Released: 26th Jul 2024

    £11.99
    Buy

This reissue offers a chance to fully appreciate a band hitting their artistic stride while acknowledging and commiserating that many of the dark forces that inspired its creation linger on.

Once again though it is possible to bathe in the hopeful anger that underpins Sleaford Mods’ blasts of outrage and electro. Allying strong words and minimal electronics, Sleaford Mods’ second ‘proper’ album (or sixth if you go back through the early CD-R efforts) was not only Andrew Fearn and Jason Williamson’s most effective artistic expression to that point, it also truly captured the taste of a land souring by the day. “Where our previous album, 'Austerity Dogs', barked a directionless yet solid form of anger, 'Divide and Exit' then carried this basic form of class consciousness,” says Williamson of the vision behind the record, both musically and lyrically.

“After the release of 'Austerity Dogs', we realised we had seemingly created a formula,” he adds. “Andrew just took the formula and ran with it and his music started to sound much more compact and urgent.” “Listening to it now, 'Divide and Exit' is perhaps the most punk record we have done,” says Williamson, reflecting on how Sleaford Mods felt out ahead, covering fresh ground alone at the time, before going on to inspire a raft of post-punk-infused artists to follow their lead in the album’s aftermath. “Each song falls out of the last like an extension or whatever. There wasn’t anyone in the country doing what we were doing at that point, it feels like it was 30 years ago, but it’s only been 10. Mad as fuck.”