Return Of The Ranters LP

 
Return Of The Ranters LP cover
$43.00 Out of Stock
6+ weeks
add to cart more by this artist

Normil Hawaiians
Return Of The Ranters LP

[ Upset the Rhythm / LP ]

Release Date: Friday 5 February 2016

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

During the brief English Commonwealth (1649-1660), a number of radical groups blossomed across the land; nonconformists, nudists, shakers, quakers, opponents of Church/State and of property ownership, free-thinkers, Diggers, Levellers and Ranters.

In the equally austere years of the post-punk permafrost, and under the grip of another ruthless despot, freedom was in part personified by the widely vilified and brutally attacked people's Peace Convoy - a manifestation of idealism that was grotesquely smashed near Stonehenge on 1 June 1985; 537 arrested, children terrorised, idealism and hope stamped on with fear and violence.

What was essentially a class war had been joined in the previous year with horse charges and gloved fists against miners and their families across Yorkshire. This was clearly intended to force home the point: "You are nothing. We own you and your labour. You work for us."

It was during these dark times that Normil Hawaiians third album 'Return Of The Ranters' was written, recorded and shelved.

Normil Hawaiians have always operated as a collective of musicians rather than a band per se and for this third album, the group comprised Guy Smith, Simon Marchant, Alun 'Wilf' Williams, Noel Blanden and Jimmy Miller.

Recorded at Dave Anderson's Foel studio in Wales (sonic home of Amon Duul II and Hawkwind) in the Winter of 1985 - a time and a place triangulated from political, social and geographical aspects - 'Return Of The Ranters' extended their free experiments in compelling arrhythmia and seemingly organised sound, taking a loose trajectory from their previous albums and earlier, more confrontational approach.

The album opens amidst vast clouds of atmosphere before the tape looped violin of "Sianne Don't Work In A Factory" starts to drag the song out of itself and into a sparse yet tender love song, full of hope, exalted synths and mechanised drum patterns.

Acoustic guitars and walls of keyboard drone provide a fitting acre of space for the raw polemics of "Slums Still Stand", while "The Search For Um Gris" follows in full head-down, motorik mode with a miraculously hypnotic drum beat and whirling mood. "What's the colour of your heart?" sings Guy as the song spools out and grows onwards into the distance.

Tracks:

1. Sianne (Don't Work In A Factory)
2. The History Of Coal
3. Slums Still Stand
4. Search for Um Gris
5. Sléibhte Macalla
6. The Battle of Stonehenge
7. Piton De la Fournaise
8. Steam

Listen to Sianne (Don't Work In A Factory) via Youtube