Monday, June 2, 2025

“Revolutionary Spirit: The Sound of Liverpool 1976–1988”

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 is a sprawling 5-CD box set (released by Cherry Red Records in 2018) that documents the post-punk, new wave, art-pop, and outsider sounds that emerged from Liverpool in the wake of punk’s detonation. It's not just a compilation—it’s a myth-busting time capsule that rewrites the city’s music history beyond the Beatles and Merseybeat, giving rightful spotlight to a secret underground of genius misfits.


💥 WHY IT MATTERS:

While Manchester often gets lionized for Factory Records and Madchester, Liverpool’s post-1976 scene was just as radical—maybe more dream-drenched, existential, poetic. This set captures the shadow-Liverpool: a city crumbling economically but exploding culturally, where art school freaks, punk exiles, synth tinkerers, and dub philosophers created their own visionary soundtrack.


🧠 WHAT'S ON IT (Highlights):

Echo & The Bunnymen – Essential early cuts show their atmospheric, literate grandeur.

The Teardrop Explodes – Julian Cope at his lysergic-glam best.

Wah! Heat / Pete Wylie – Political soul wrapped in post-punk punkadelic strut.

Big in Japan – Germinal band whose alumni birthed Frankie Goes to Hollywood, The KLF, and more.

Afraid of Mice – “Intercontinental” – A shimmering, under-the-radar pop artifact with echoes of power-pop and Bowie-leaning theatricality. Total lost classic vibes.

Ambrose Reynolds – “He’s Dead Alright” – Co-founder of Zulu Records and ex-Big in Japan, this track feels like a walk through a haunted Victorian data center—post-punk with ambient dread.


🎧 WHAT IT FEELS LIKE:

A collage of velvet decay, neon poetry, and existential grooves. These bands were reacting not just to punk, but to Thatcherism, post-industrial rot, Catholic mysticism, and the crumbling urban dream. You get art-rock, minimal synth, glam ghosts, dub mutations, haunted ballads.


🔥 DEEPER CONTEXT:

Liverpool had:

Eric’s Club, a breeding ground like CBGBs, where punk and art collided.

Zoo Records, which released raw, early cuts from Bunnymen and Teardrops.

A DIY, experimental ethos rooted in performance art, cabaret, and politics. These artists weren’t just chasing fame—they were trying to transform their world through sound.


🌫️ THE VIBE:

If you love bands like:

Magazine

The Fall

Joy Division

Roxy Music

Durutti Column Then this is your spiritual b-side. Stranger, sadder, funnier, more idiosyncratic.


📦 ESSENTIAL FOR:

Post-punk archaeologists

Fans of mythic regional scenes (a la Akron, OH or Athens, GA)

People who know the best music is often made under duress, in ruins

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