
Wreckless Eric England Screaming Vinyl LP Clear Colour 2025
Clear Colour
Tracklist:
1. Lifeline
2. Home & Away
3. Playtime Is Over
4. Lady Of The Manor
5. Land Of The Faint At Heart
6. The Lucky Ones
7. Food Factory
8. Our Neck Of The Woods
In 1985, Eric Goulden released an album entitled A Roomful Of Monkeys on the Go! Discs label under the name Captains Of Industry. It was a disaster - most people didnât like it - where it wasnât roundly ignored it was critically slated. Forty years later he decided to use these songs, written in the Medway Towns between 1982 and 84, as the basis for a new album: England Screaming.
âThat album has always been a regret to me because I think these songs mark my coming of age as a songwriter, but not, alas, as a recording artist.â On making England Screaming - "âI felt liberated: my songwriting took on an entirely different tone. There was no one telling me what I should be writing any more, so I wrote about what was around me, stuff I knew about - drugs, home-ownership, bankruptcy and bridal wear; being from somewhere, keeping up appearances, delusion, failureâŠâ
On the new recordings, Eric played most of the instruments himself. Sam Shepherd played the drums, Amy Rigby and Marc Valentine sang backing vocals, and contributed piano along with Ericâs art school friend, performance artist Graham (Graham) Beck.
England Screaming is a sonically savage world apart from the insipid, half-arsed (Ericâs words) original album. He has succeeded in marrying a young and unrealised vision to the wisdom and experience of his older years, incidentally posing the question: how far have we actually come as a society?
Original: $42.96
-65%$42.96
$15.04Wreckless Eric England Screaming Vinyl LP Clear Colour 2025
Clear Colour
Tracklist:
1. Lifeline
2. Home & Away
3. Playtime Is Over
4. Lady Of The Manor
5. Land Of The Faint At Heart
6. The Lucky Ones
7. Food Factory
8. Our Neck Of The Woods
In 1985, Eric Goulden released an album entitled A Roomful Of Monkeys on the Go! Discs label under the name Captains Of Industry. It was a disaster - most people didnât like it - where it wasnât roundly ignored it was critically slated. Forty years later he decided to use these songs, written in the Medway Towns between 1982 and 84, as the basis for a new album: England Screaming.
âThat album has always been a regret to me because I think these songs mark my coming of age as a songwriter, but not, alas, as a recording artist.â On making England Screaming - "âI felt liberated: my songwriting took on an entirely different tone. There was no one telling me what I should be writing any more, so I wrote about what was around me, stuff I knew about - drugs, home-ownership, bankruptcy and bridal wear; being from somewhere, keeping up appearances, delusion, failureâŠâ
On the new recordings, Eric played most of the instruments himself. Sam Shepherd played the drums, Amy Rigby and Marc Valentine sang backing vocals, and contributed piano along with Ericâs art school friend, performance artist Graham (Graham) Beck.
England Screaming is a sonically savage world apart from the insipid, half-arsed (Ericâs words) original album. He has succeeded in marrying a young and unrealised vision to the wisdom and experience of his older years, incidentally posing the question: how far have we actually come as a society?
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Description
Clear Colour
Tracklist:
1. Lifeline
2. Home & Away
3. Playtime Is Over
4. Lady Of The Manor
5. Land Of The Faint At Heart
6. The Lucky Ones
7. Food Factory
8. Our Neck Of The Woods
In 1985, Eric Goulden released an album entitled A Roomful Of Monkeys on the Go! Discs label under the name Captains Of Industry. It was a disaster - most people didnât like it - where it wasnât roundly ignored it was critically slated. Forty years later he decided to use these songs, written in the Medway Towns between 1982 and 84, as the basis for a new album: England Screaming.
âThat album has always been a regret to me because I think these songs mark my coming of age as a songwriter, but not, alas, as a recording artist.â On making England Screaming - "âI felt liberated: my songwriting took on an entirely different tone. There was no one telling me what I should be writing any more, so I wrote about what was around me, stuff I knew about - drugs, home-ownership, bankruptcy and bridal wear; being from somewhere, keeping up appearances, delusion, failureâŠâ
On the new recordings, Eric played most of the instruments himself. Sam Shepherd played the drums, Amy Rigby and Marc Valentine sang backing vocals, and contributed piano along with Ericâs art school friend, performance artist Graham (Graham) Beck.
England Screaming is a sonically savage world apart from the insipid, half-arsed (Ericâs words) original album. He has succeeded in marrying a young and unrealised vision to the wisdom and experience of his older years, incidentally posing the question: how far have we actually come as a society?












