
Hard-Fi Don't Go Making Plans 12" Vinyl EP 2024
Tracklist:
1. Don't Go Making Plans
2. I Know What You Want
3. Don't Need You
4. Always and Forever
5. Don't Go Making Plans (The Reflex Revision)
6. Don't Go Making Plans (Wrongtom Remix)
1st single - Don't Go Making Plans - 20th May The first new music from Hard-Fi since 2014 - taken from the bandâs forthcoming EP of the same name. The bandâs 2005 debut album Stars Of CCTV had immediate success reaching no 1 in the UK, going double platinum and was Mercury Prize-shortlisted. The band have a catalogue of evergreen classics with over 144.3M total streams. A headline November tour announced - with a 2022 show at Londonâs Kentish Town Forum selling out in 10 minutes & over 14k tickets sold on their subsequent 2023 tour. Hard-Fi make their welcome return with brand new single âDonât Go Making Plansâ on Ignition Records. Their first new material in ten years, the track marks the first taste of an EP of brand new songs, as well as a big UK headline tour this November. Rolling around a sun-scorched groove and boisterous beats, âDonât Go Making Plansâ is an immediate, soul-infused summer anthem, recorded at the bandâs own Staines studio, produced by frontman Richard Archer and long-term contributor Wolsey White. Itâs the end result of the first session together since 2011 album Killer Sounds and follows a series of sold-out tours and live shows over the last 18 months - listen here. As with many of the bandâs songs, there is a thought-provoking depth behind Hard-Fiâs pop sensibility. The songâs defiant themes were initially inspired by the UK Governmentâs attempts to criminalise many aspects of popular protest through the 2022 Public Order Act, while the issue has been thrown into even sharper focus over the last year as police and people have repeatedly clashed on streets around the globe. Watch the striking lyric video HERE. âDonât Go Making Plans is sort of a protest song about protest, but I wanted to encapsulate that message into something that was still a pop song,â Archer explains. âA track that you can still dance to in a club or play on the radio, because a song like that you can make a real connection to and circumnavigates the pointless restrictions being put in our way. Governments passing laws to stop protests that âcause more than minor disruptionâ feels like something out of a dystopian film. The whole point of protest is disruption. Youâre trying to interrupt the inevitable flow of things, to encourage the people running the country to think again, especially when you have a government that doesnât seem to be bothered by what people actually need.â The new single is taken from the forthcoming Donât Go Making Plans EP released on November 1st, available on limited edition, numbered, transparent red 12â â pre-order here. The new music is released alongside news of a 10-date UK headline tour in November which will see a near-sold-out homecoming show at Londonâs Roundhouse on the 30th. Presale takes place Wednesday, 22nd May @ 10.00am for those signed up in advance at https://hard-fi.planet.fans/aaa/register, otherwise, all dates go on general sale this Friday, 24th May, at 10.00am (BST) â tickets available here. âPlaying gigs together really rekindled the fire at the heart of the band, and as much as we enjoyed playing our older songs â and audiences loved hearing them.â concludes Archer. âWe all felt the urge to create something new.â
Original: $21.47
-65%$21.47
$7.51Hard-Fi Don't Go Making Plans 12" Vinyl EP 2024
Tracklist:
1. Don't Go Making Plans
2. I Know What You Want
3. Don't Need You
4. Always and Forever
5. Don't Go Making Plans (The Reflex Revision)
6. Don't Go Making Plans (Wrongtom Remix)
1st single - Don't Go Making Plans - 20th May The first new music from Hard-Fi since 2014 - taken from the bandâs forthcoming EP of the same name. The bandâs 2005 debut album Stars Of CCTV had immediate success reaching no 1 in the UK, going double platinum and was Mercury Prize-shortlisted. The band have a catalogue of evergreen classics with over 144.3M total streams. A headline November tour announced - with a 2022 show at Londonâs Kentish Town Forum selling out in 10 minutes & over 14k tickets sold on their subsequent 2023 tour. Hard-Fi make their welcome return with brand new single âDonât Go Making Plansâ on Ignition Records. Their first new material in ten years, the track marks the first taste of an EP of brand new songs, as well as a big UK headline tour this November. Rolling around a sun-scorched groove and boisterous beats, âDonât Go Making Plansâ is an immediate, soul-infused summer anthem, recorded at the bandâs own Staines studio, produced by frontman Richard Archer and long-term contributor Wolsey White. Itâs the end result of the first session together since 2011 album Killer Sounds and follows a series of sold-out tours and live shows over the last 18 months - listen here. As with many of the bandâs songs, there is a thought-provoking depth behind Hard-Fiâs pop sensibility. The songâs defiant themes were initially inspired by the UK Governmentâs attempts to criminalise many aspects of popular protest through the 2022 Public Order Act, while the issue has been thrown into even sharper focus over the last year as police and people have repeatedly clashed on streets around the globe. Watch the striking lyric video HERE. âDonât Go Making Plans is sort of a protest song about protest, but I wanted to encapsulate that message into something that was still a pop song,â Archer explains. âA track that you can still dance to in a club or play on the radio, because a song like that you can make a real connection to and circumnavigates the pointless restrictions being put in our way. Governments passing laws to stop protests that âcause more than minor disruptionâ feels like something out of a dystopian film. The whole point of protest is disruption. Youâre trying to interrupt the inevitable flow of things, to encourage the people running the country to think again, especially when you have a government that doesnât seem to be bothered by what people actually need.â The new single is taken from the forthcoming Donât Go Making Plans EP released on November 1st, available on limited edition, numbered, transparent red 12â â pre-order here. The new music is released alongside news of a 10-date UK headline tour in November which will see a near-sold-out homecoming show at Londonâs Roundhouse on the 30th. Presale takes place Wednesday, 22nd May @ 10.00am for those signed up in advance at https://hard-fi.planet.fans/aaa/register, otherwise, all dates go on general sale this Friday, 24th May, at 10.00am (BST) â tickets available here. âPlaying gigs together really rekindled the fire at the heart of the band, and as much as we enjoyed playing our older songs â and audiences loved hearing them.â concludes Archer. âWe all felt the urge to create something new.â
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Tracklist:
1. Don't Go Making Plans
2. I Know What You Want
3. Don't Need You
4. Always and Forever
5. Don't Go Making Plans (The Reflex Revision)
6. Don't Go Making Plans (Wrongtom Remix)
1st single - Don't Go Making Plans - 20th May The first new music from Hard-Fi since 2014 - taken from the bandâs forthcoming EP of the same name. The bandâs 2005 debut album Stars Of CCTV had immediate success reaching no 1 in the UK, going double platinum and was Mercury Prize-shortlisted. The band have a catalogue of evergreen classics with over 144.3M total streams. A headline November tour announced - with a 2022 show at Londonâs Kentish Town Forum selling out in 10 minutes & over 14k tickets sold on their subsequent 2023 tour. Hard-Fi make their welcome return with brand new single âDonât Go Making Plansâ on Ignition Records. Their first new material in ten years, the track marks the first taste of an EP of brand new songs, as well as a big UK headline tour this November. Rolling around a sun-scorched groove and boisterous beats, âDonât Go Making Plansâ is an immediate, soul-infused summer anthem, recorded at the bandâs own Staines studio, produced by frontman Richard Archer and long-term contributor Wolsey White. Itâs the end result of the first session together since 2011 album Killer Sounds and follows a series of sold-out tours and live shows over the last 18 months - listen here. As with many of the bandâs songs, there is a thought-provoking depth behind Hard-Fiâs pop sensibility. The songâs defiant themes were initially inspired by the UK Governmentâs attempts to criminalise many aspects of popular protest through the 2022 Public Order Act, while the issue has been thrown into even sharper focus over the last year as police and people have repeatedly clashed on streets around the globe. Watch the striking lyric video HERE. âDonât Go Making Plans is sort of a protest song about protest, but I wanted to encapsulate that message into something that was still a pop song,â Archer explains. âA track that you can still dance to in a club or play on the radio, because a song like that you can make a real connection to and circumnavigates the pointless restrictions being put in our way. Governments passing laws to stop protests that âcause more than minor disruptionâ feels like something out of a dystopian film. The whole point of protest is disruption. Youâre trying to interrupt the inevitable flow of things, to encourage the people running the country to think again, especially when you have a government that doesnât seem to be bothered by what people actually need.â The new single is taken from the forthcoming Donât Go Making Plans EP released on November 1st, available on limited edition, numbered, transparent red 12â â pre-order here. The new music is released alongside news of a 10-date UK headline tour in November which will see a near-sold-out homecoming show at Londonâs Roundhouse on the 30th. Presale takes place Wednesday, 22nd May @ 10.00am for those signed up in advance at https://hard-fi.planet.fans/aaa/register, otherwise, all dates go on general sale this Friday, 24th May, at 10.00am (BST) â tickets available here. âPlaying gigs together really rekindled the fire at the heart of the band, and as much as we enjoyed playing our older songs â and audiences loved hearing them.â concludes Archer. âWe all felt the urge to create something new.â











