Cold Waves Of Color Volume 2
After the brilliant and now sold-out 1st volume, legendary UK wave label, Color Tapes corral a must-have 2nd volume of vintage synth-pop, minimal and industrial peaches from their 1981-1985 archive.
Most of them previously appeared on tiny cassette editions and now make their 1st appearance on vinyl, notably and faithfully remastered by Denis Blackham to represent and retain their original fidelity (rather than the over eager or mis-representative remasters of vintage gear doing the rounds).
There's some real gold inside, not least in The Lord's kosmic electro-garage-punk mission, 'Transvision', or the wiry EBM of Beserk In A Hayfield's 'Pulse', but also the swirling noise blow-out of WeR7's 'Masterful of Ceremonies (Edit)', and the flanging garage-punk strut of 'Elixir Vapor' by Disintegrators, plus a handful of icy, cold and crisp 808 workouts Lives of Angels and Body Electric.
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After the brilliant and now sold-out 1st volume, legendary UK wave label, Color Tapes corral a must-have 2nd volume of vintage synth-pop, minimal and industrial peaches from their 1981-1985 archive.
Most of them previously appeared on tiny cassette editions and now make their 1st appearance on vinyl, notably and faithfully remastered by Denis Blackham to represent and retain their original fidelity (rather than the over eager or mis-representative remasters of vintage gear doing the rounds).
There's some real gold inside, not least in The Lord's kosmic electro-garage-punk mission, 'Transvision', or the wiry EBM of Beserk In A Hayfield's 'Pulse', but also the swirling noise blow-out of WeR7's 'Masterful of Ceremonies (Edit)', and the flanging garage-punk strut of 'Elixir Vapor' by Disintegrators, plus a handful of icy, cold and crisp 808 workouts Lives of Angels and Body Electric.
After the brilliant and now sold-out 1st volume, legendary UK wave label, Color Tapes corral a must-have 2nd volume of vintage synth-pop, minimal and industrial peaches from their 1981-1985 archive.
Most of them previously appeared on tiny cassette editions and now make their 1st appearance on vinyl, notably and faithfully remastered by Denis Blackham to represent and retain their original fidelity (rather than the over eager or mis-representative remasters of vintage gear doing the rounds).
There's some real gold inside, not least in The Lord's kosmic electro-garage-punk mission, 'Transvision', or the wiry EBM of Beserk In A Hayfield's 'Pulse', but also the swirling noise blow-out of WeR7's 'Masterful of Ceremonies (Edit)', and the flanging garage-punk strut of 'Elixir Vapor' by Disintegrators, plus a handful of icy, cold and crisp 808 workouts Lives of Angels and Body Electric.
After the brilliant and now sold-out 1st volume, legendary UK wave label, Color Tapes corral a must-have 2nd volume of vintage synth-pop, minimal and industrial peaches from their 1981-1985 archive.
Most of them previously appeared on tiny cassette editions and now make their 1st appearance on vinyl, notably and faithfully remastered by Denis Blackham to represent and retain their original fidelity (rather than the over eager or mis-representative remasters of vintage gear doing the rounds).
There's some real gold inside, not least in The Lord's kosmic electro-garage-punk mission, 'Transvision', or the wiry EBM of Beserk In A Hayfield's 'Pulse', but also the swirling noise blow-out of WeR7's 'Masterful of Ceremonies (Edit)', and the flanging garage-punk strut of 'Elixir Vapor' by Disintegrators, plus a handful of icy, cold and crisp 808 workouts Lives of Angels and Body Electric.
**Back in Stock - 180g vinyl with A3 poster and photocopied A5 reprint of the 'Purple Twilight' fanzine**
Out of Stock
After the brilliant and now sold-out 1st volume, legendary UK wave label, Color Tapes corral a must-have 2nd volume of vintage synth-pop, minimal and industrial peaches from their 1981-1985 archive.
Most of them previously appeared on tiny cassette editions and now make their 1st appearance on vinyl, notably and faithfully remastered by Denis Blackham to represent and retain their original fidelity (rather than the over eager or mis-representative remasters of vintage gear doing the rounds).
There's some real gold inside, not least in The Lord's kosmic electro-garage-punk mission, 'Transvision', or the wiry EBM of Beserk In A Hayfield's 'Pulse', but also the swirling noise blow-out of WeR7's 'Masterful of Ceremonies (Edit)', and the flanging garage-punk strut of 'Elixir Vapor' by Disintegrators, plus a handful of icy, cold and crisp 808 workouts Lives of Angels and Body Electric.