other titles...

Peel sessions 84-86

1. Debra (session)
2. Man Of Few Syllables (session)
3. Sargasso (session)
4. Breath Of A Nation (session)
5. All The Irish Must Go To Heaven
6. New Way (Quick Wash And Brush Up With Liberation Theology)
7. Chanel Samba
8. These Boots Are Made For Walking
9. Earsore
10. Let's Rewrite The American Constitution
11. Cat With Cholic
12. Every Conversation
13. Sink (Get Out Of The Ghetto Blues Part 1)
14. Xpqwrtz
15. Three On Baffled Island
16. Testament To The Slow Death Of Youth Culture (session)

bIG*fLAME

Peel sessions 84-86

precious recordings of london
  • Very Limited LP (500 Only)

    Released: 30th May 2025

    £22.99
    Buy

Working within a pre-determined lifespan, bIG*fLAME developed their own distinctive sound and style: super-fast, two-minute, non-decadent Mach 2 beats overlain by distinctive, spiky, loud, unorthodox guitars, and politically-charged lyrics.

John Peel described the band as “one of he two or three very best bands of Planet Earth”, and also called them “the best dance band since Glenn Miller and his Orchestra”. Find out for yourself on this album which features all four Peel sessions recorded by the agitpop trio between 1984 and 1986 – 16 tracks in total, with versions of nearly everything they ever recorded. And a few things they didn’t.

Among the highlights are the covers of the June Brides’ indie standard Every Conversation (Phil Wilson, a big fan of bIG*fLAME, loves it), plus These Boots Are Made For Working – Nancy & Lee eat your hearts out. Plus, of course, the notorious Wham! cover … Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go it ain’t. Well it is, but it’s also Testament To The Slow Death Of Youth Culture. Once heard, never forgotten.

There never was a bIG*fLAME LP because they didn’t believe in it. So we’ve struck it lucky here. All this, plus sleeve notes from Greg O’Keeffe and printed inners with photos and flyers etc. All the stuff you love from Precious.

“James [Dean Bradfield] was always banging on about Big Flame and I could never understand it. But then I played a record of theirs at a slower speed by mistake on vinyl once, and suddenly I got the jazziness of it.” Nicky Wire, Manic Street Preachers