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XTC

Big Express (2023 reissue)

remastered cd w/ bonus tracks + blu-ray - £22.99 | Buy
XTC’s seventh album, “The Big Express” was virtually ignored on release, much as its immediate predecessor “Mummer” had been.
XTC

go 2 (2023 reissue)

limited 200g lp + 200g 12" ep in gatefold sleeve - £31.99 | Buy
After 'White Music' came 'Go 2', a beguiling, brilliantly off kilter and often underappreciated slice of leftfield art rock.
XTC

The Big Express (2022 reissue)

200g lp in gatefold - £23.99 | Buy
If Mummer was XTC’s quiet album, this was its polar opposite: bright, brash, noisy - even cluttered on occasion if the song demanded it - as it became a c...
XTC

DRUMS & WIRES

200g LP - £23.99 | Buy
Mummer (2022 reissue)
  1. Beating Of Hearts
  2. Wonderland
  3. Love On A Farmboy’s Wages
  4. Great Fire
  5. Deliver Us From The Elements
  6. Human Alchemy
  7. Ladybird
  8. In Loving Memory Of A Name
  9. Me And the Wind
  10. Funk Pop A Roll

XTC

Mummer (2022 reissue)

panegyric
  • 200g lp w/ partridge's originally intended artwork

    Released: 6th May 2022

    £22.99
    Buy

Unavailable for decades on LP and with its original, but never used, sleeve art restored, Mummer becomes the eleventh XTC studio album to be reissued on high grade audiophile vinyl.

XTC’s sixth album, Mummer was another turning point for the band as it marked their first release as a studio only band. Evolving from the brash, post-punk/pop of their first two albums White Music and Go2 into one of the most highly regarded of British bands of the era via a trio of essential albums – Drums And Wires, Black Sea, English Settlement – which showcased the increasing versatility of both band and the twin songwriters, Andy Partridge & Colin Moulding. But even the comparatively quieter/more considered English Settlement was very much an album of songs written with one ear for the studio and another for how they would work live. Mummer was different. Freed from the constraints of ‘the road’ this was XTC in widescreen – experimenting with songs, arrangements and the expanded sonic palette that studios can provide when there is no afterthought as to how to reproduce the material in a variety of theatres, university halls and other venues few, if any, of which were built with rock groups in mind. And, just as the Mummers’ plays involve people travelling from place to place in a village enacting tales of the cycle of life (albeit in disguise), XTC travelled the best of the UK’s studios recording, mixing and re-mixing their songs cycle to exacting standards. Released as the follow-up to their most successful UK album to date and with a new record label in America, band and record company hopes were high – three of the album’s first four songs were issued as singles – but were to remain unfulfilled. Fans loved it, the press was positive but radio was changing, especially in the UK, and with no touring it failed, as sometimes happens with bands adopting a new approach, to cross over to that wider audience. As also happens with such records, its reputation (and sales) have, over the years, grown far greater than its initial reception indicated and it can now be seen, in retrospect, to have been an important first step towards the sort of expansive approach to writing and recording that would yield much greater commercial results later in the same decade with Skylarking and the albums that followed.