
Yard Act You're Gonna Need A Little Music 2026 Ltd Dinked Edition #412
Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 17th July, 2026
Dinked Edition #412
â Red with black splatter vinyl *
â Alternative sleeve artwork *
â Machine-numbered edition *
â Limited pressing of 1,500 *
*EXCLUSIVE to Dinked Edition
Tracklist:
1. Empty Pledges
2. New Beginnings
3. Tall Tales
4. Fiction
5. You're Gonna Need A Little Music
6. Cherophobe Rock
7. Thrill Of The Chase
8. Janey Said
9. Redeemer
10. Talky Talky People
11. Over The Barrel
Since their beginning, breaking through as a smart, witty new force within the British guitar music landscape back in the dark days of the pandemic, Yard Act have been wrangling with the knotty complexities of the human condition.
Their Mercury Prize-nominated 2022 debut The Overload span wry, winking tales of capitalism and the strive for success, wrapped in the sort of propulsive, serrated riffs that quickly saw them labelled as post-punkâs new darlings. With its Top Five-placing 2024 follow-up Whereâs My Utopia?, the band - vocalist James Smith, bassist Ryan Needham, guitarist Sam Shipstone and drummer Jay Russell - blasted both of those conceits apart, creating a musically-exploratory and diverse record that worked to unpick and examine the very notion of ambition and fulfillment; of âwhat happens nextâ.
The journey of Smithâs lyrics across each of their albums, Shipstone muses, has always been quite Faustian: âItâs someone whoâs seeking a goal, and then makes a pact with the devil to get the goods they want, but when they get them theyâre corrupted so they get the rewards but also this bitterness too.â âAnd how does Faust end?â questions Needham. âOh, not wellâŠâ
If this sounds like a macabre place to root the objectively excellent third album from one of the countryâs most celebrated bands of the last decade, then itâs also crucial to understanding Yard Actâs newest - and best - record yet, Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music. Simultaneously the most dynamic, collaborative, energised work theyâve laid to tape, but also containing some of the darkest, most cynical and truly questioning moments theyâve concocted too, it picks up their tale and examines the findings more unsparingly than ever.
It feels appropriate that, in order to interrogate these existential subjects, the writing and recording of Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music involved the four musicians coming together and strengthening their own core unit more than ever. Weirdly, for a band so associated with incendiary live shows and constant touring, their third LP marks the first time that the quartet have ever made an album together, as a live band in the same room.
âThe first two records were both laptop records essentially,â says Smith. The Overload was written alongside Needham before the band had fully formed; its follow-up was carved out in snatches of time on tour buses and hotel rooms, amongst a relentless schedule of âslinging [all our gear] in the rehearsal space, going back home, and then a week later piling it back into a van again.â
If their last record was created like a game of Exquisite Corpse, each member taking the track and adding their part in turn (âI always thought that was a really over the top name for a piece of folded down paperâŠâ Needham notes), then this time they laid down roots and gave themselves time. Russell kitted out their new studio in Leeds with everything they required to track the band live at the same time throughout the writing process, including an old piano passed down from Smithâs late aunt that would become integral to the process. For the first time in a long time, Yard Act were able to settle into an âuninterrupted five month periodâ of creativity, crafting â40 or 50 songsâ and allowing themselves to follow their ideas with no external pressure. âIt felt like freedom,â says Smith. âIt felt like everything Iâd wanted from being in a band - to be able to make enough money to be left alone.
The results speak for themselves. Recorded between Leeds and Glendale, Los Angeles with producer Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Nine Inch Nails, Beck, St. Vincent), Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music rings with the chemistry and energy of a band absolutely locked in. Each track has its own distinct character, whether in the ominous, guttural ferocity of âRedeemerâ, the sleazy disco odyssey of its title track, the fizzing indie smarts of âCherophobe Rockâ or the loose, cerebral meditations of âJaney Saidâ. It stems from a time of experimentation and exploration - ask Shipstone about âThe Codeâ and heâll give you a technical explanation as to why these songs are able to constantly veer into unexpected places whilst never undermining their melodic clout.
The sense is of a band hitting a purple patch, where all the efforts of the last half-decade come together and create magic. âI think most bandsâ best stuff comes around the 3rd or 4th album where they really outgrow their influences and become their own thing,â muses Smith as Needham chips in: âI keep saying, itâs like Blur. This is Parklife. The first album they were doing the genre-y thing; the second one was a kick against that but they didnât really know what they were doing, and then they made Parklife, which was the perfect distillation of it all.â Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music, however, is no whimsical walk through suburban England. From the opening self-analytical sprawl of âEmpty Pledgesâ - a track that begins with juddering deep breaths at the top of a skyscraper and freefalls into a torrent of thoughts about purpose, pride and the feeling of punching your way out of a prison of your own making - Yard Actâs third seeks to work through some of the most complicated facets of life.
In some ways, and on purpose, it is a step away from Smithâs venerated vignettes and character studies; a move towards something more âimpressionisticâ and up for interpretation. âI felt like Iâd taken it to its logical extreme on âBlackpool Illuminationsâ [on the last record], and I didnât want to tread old ground,â he says. And yet the feeling still pours through, perhaps more than ever. There is a journey, should you want to trace it, from the fictional Isle of Balamory to the fantasy/ reality of San Francisco Bay. Tread the path with him and youâll keep running into Janey - a mirror to Smithâs own psyche; a person but, yâknow, not exactly. âI think the album is about multiple realities and how individualism has led us, in the modern world, to question if there even is a shared reality anymore because everyone just believes what they want now, this is the price we've paid for pursuing neoliberalism ultimatelyâ Smith suggests.
The questions are deep, but the spirit of Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music is boundless - not for nothing does its title point to the power of art and creativity to rescue us from the mire. âThrill of The Chaseâ, with its snarled, frenetic climax as close to rap as Smith has ever reached, is filled with venom but you can also picture it giddily going off in the mosh pit. âRedeemerâ might have thrown the kitchen sink - or at least its cookware - at the situation, with Meldal-Johnsen concocting a brittle, metallic soundscape out of a day of rattling pots and pans, but the result is direct, visceral and exciting.
Itâs a balancing act that culminates, as all Yard Act albums do, with a final moment of optimism in âOver The Barrelâ: a track that travels from rinky dink bar-room piano through a euphoric indie- rock chorus and out, finally, into that sought-after ocean. Perhaps itâs less certain than Smith has been in the past. ââOver The Barrelâ [as a saying] can have multiple meanings. The choice is yours. But,â says the frontman, âpersonally, I still have a bit of hope in me for how it all works out.â The destination might still be unknown, but the journey is unequivocally Yard Actâs finest yet. Maybe Faust didnât have the ending all worked out after all.
*Limited to 1 copy per customer/household, multiple orders will be cancelled without notice.
Original: $40.27
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Yard Act You're Gonna Need A Little Music 2026 Ltd Dinked Edition #412
Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 17th July, 2026
Dinked Edition #412
â Red with black splatter vinyl *
â Alternative sleeve artwork *
â Machine-numbered edition *
â Limited pressing of 1,500 *
*EXCLUSIVE to Dinked Edition
Tracklist:
1. Empty Pledges
2. New Beginnings
3. Tall Tales
4. Fiction
5. You're Gonna Need A Little Music
6. Cherophobe Rock
7. Thrill Of The Chase
8. Janey Said
9. Redeemer
10. Talky Talky People
11. Over The Barrel
Since their beginning, breaking through as a smart, witty new force within the British guitar music landscape back in the dark days of the pandemic, Yard Act have been wrangling with the knotty complexities of the human condition.
Their Mercury Prize-nominated 2022 debut The Overload span wry, winking tales of capitalism and the strive for success, wrapped in the sort of propulsive, serrated riffs that quickly saw them labelled as post-punkâs new darlings. With its Top Five-placing 2024 follow-up Whereâs My Utopia?, the band - vocalist James Smith, bassist Ryan Needham, guitarist Sam Shipstone and drummer Jay Russell - blasted both of those conceits apart, creating a musically-exploratory and diverse record that worked to unpick and examine the very notion of ambition and fulfillment; of âwhat happens nextâ.
The journey of Smithâs lyrics across each of their albums, Shipstone muses, has always been quite Faustian: âItâs someone whoâs seeking a goal, and then makes a pact with the devil to get the goods they want, but when they get them theyâre corrupted so they get the rewards but also this bitterness too.â âAnd how does Faust end?â questions Needham. âOh, not wellâŠâ
If this sounds like a macabre place to root the objectively excellent third album from one of the countryâs most celebrated bands of the last decade, then itâs also crucial to understanding Yard Actâs newest - and best - record yet, Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music. Simultaneously the most dynamic, collaborative, energised work theyâve laid to tape, but also containing some of the darkest, most cynical and truly questioning moments theyâve concocted too, it picks up their tale and examines the findings more unsparingly than ever.
It feels appropriate that, in order to interrogate these existential subjects, the writing and recording of Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music involved the four musicians coming together and strengthening their own core unit more than ever. Weirdly, for a band so associated with incendiary live shows and constant touring, their third LP marks the first time that the quartet have ever made an album together, as a live band in the same room.
âThe first two records were both laptop records essentially,â says Smith. The Overload was written alongside Needham before the band had fully formed; its follow-up was carved out in snatches of time on tour buses and hotel rooms, amongst a relentless schedule of âslinging [all our gear] in the rehearsal space, going back home, and then a week later piling it back into a van again.â
If their last record was created like a game of Exquisite Corpse, each member taking the track and adding their part in turn (âI always thought that was a really over the top name for a piece of folded down paperâŠâ Needham notes), then this time they laid down roots and gave themselves time. Russell kitted out their new studio in Leeds with everything they required to track the band live at the same time throughout the writing process, including an old piano passed down from Smithâs late aunt that would become integral to the process. For the first time in a long time, Yard Act were able to settle into an âuninterrupted five month periodâ of creativity, crafting â40 or 50 songsâ and allowing themselves to follow their ideas with no external pressure. âIt felt like freedom,â says Smith. âIt felt like everything Iâd wanted from being in a band - to be able to make enough money to be left alone.
The results speak for themselves. Recorded between Leeds and Glendale, Los Angeles with producer Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Nine Inch Nails, Beck, St. Vincent), Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music rings with the chemistry and energy of a band absolutely locked in. Each track has its own distinct character, whether in the ominous, guttural ferocity of âRedeemerâ, the sleazy disco odyssey of its title track, the fizzing indie smarts of âCherophobe Rockâ or the loose, cerebral meditations of âJaney Saidâ. It stems from a time of experimentation and exploration - ask Shipstone about âThe Codeâ and heâll give you a technical explanation as to why these songs are able to constantly veer into unexpected places whilst never undermining their melodic clout.
The sense is of a band hitting a purple patch, where all the efforts of the last half-decade come together and create magic. âI think most bandsâ best stuff comes around the 3rd or 4th album where they really outgrow their influences and become their own thing,â muses Smith as Needham chips in: âI keep saying, itâs like Blur. This is Parklife. The first album they were doing the genre-y thing; the second one was a kick against that but they didnât really know what they were doing, and then they made Parklife, which was the perfect distillation of it all.â Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music, however, is no whimsical walk through suburban England. From the opening self-analytical sprawl of âEmpty Pledgesâ - a track that begins with juddering deep breaths at the top of a skyscraper and freefalls into a torrent of thoughts about purpose, pride and the feeling of punching your way out of a prison of your own making - Yard Actâs third seeks to work through some of the most complicated facets of life.
In some ways, and on purpose, it is a step away from Smithâs venerated vignettes and character studies; a move towards something more âimpressionisticâ and up for interpretation. âI felt like Iâd taken it to its logical extreme on âBlackpool Illuminationsâ [on the last record], and I didnât want to tread old ground,â he says. And yet the feeling still pours through, perhaps more than ever. There is a journey, should you want to trace it, from the fictional Isle of Balamory to the fantasy/ reality of San Francisco Bay. Tread the path with him and youâll keep running into Janey - a mirror to Smithâs own psyche; a person but, yâknow, not exactly. âI think the album is about multiple realities and how individualism has led us, in the modern world, to question if there even is a shared reality anymore because everyone just believes what they want now, this is the price we've paid for pursuing neoliberalism ultimatelyâ Smith suggests.
The questions are deep, but the spirit of Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music is boundless - not for nothing does its title point to the power of art and creativity to rescue us from the mire. âThrill of The Chaseâ, with its snarled, frenetic climax as close to rap as Smith has ever reached, is filled with venom but you can also picture it giddily going off in the mosh pit. âRedeemerâ might have thrown the kitchen sink - or at least its cookware - at the situation, with Meldal-Johnsen concocting a brittle, metallic soundscape out of a day of rattling pots and pans, but the result is direct, visceral and exciting.
Itâs a balancing act that culminates, as all Yard Act albums do, with a final moment of optimism in âOver The Barrelâ: a track that travels from rinky dink bar-room piano through a euphoric indie- rock chorus and out, finally, into that sought-after ocean. Perhaps itâs less certain than Smith has been in the past. ââOver The Barrelâ [as a saying] can have multiple meanings. The choice is yours. But,â says the frontman, âpersonally, I still have a bit of hope in me for how it all works out.â The destination might still be unknown, but the journey is unequivocally Yard Actâs finest yet. Maybe Faust didnât have the ending all worked out after all.
*Limited to 1 copy per customer/household, multiple orders will be cancelled without notice.
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Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 17th July, 2026
Dinked Edition #412
â Red with black splatter vinyl *
â Alternative sleeve artwork *
â Machine-numbered edition *
â Limited pressing of 1,500 *
*EXCLUSIVE to Dinked Edition
Tracklist:
1. Empty Pledges
2. New Beginnings
3. Tall Tales
4. Fiction
5. You're Gonna Need A Little Music
6. Cherophobe Rock
7. Thrill Of The Chase
8. Janey Said
9. Redeemer
10. Talky Talky People
11. Over The Barrel
Since their beginning, breaking through as a smart, witty new force within the British guitar music landscape back in the dark days of the pandemic, Yard Act have been wrangling with the knotty complexities of the human condition.
Their Mercury Prize-nominated 2022 debut The Overload span wry, winking tales of capitalism and the strive for success, wrapped in the sort of propulsive, serrated riffs that quickly saw them labelled as post-punkâs new darlings. With its Top Five-placing 2024 follow-up Whereâs My Utopia?, the band - vocalist James Smith, bassist Ryan Needham, guitarist Sam Shipstone and drummer Jay Russell - blasted both of those conceits apart, creating a musically-exploratory and diverse record that worked to unpick and examine the very notion of ambition and fulfillment; of âwhat happens nextâ.
The journey of Smithâs lyrics across each of their albums, Shipstone muses, has always been quite Faustian: âItâs someone whoâs seeking a goal, and then makes a pact with the devil to get the goods they want, but when they get them theyâre corrupted so they get the rewards but also this bitterness too.â âAnd how does Faust end?â questions Needham. âOh, not wellâŠâ
If this sounds like a macabre place to root the objectively excellent third album from one of the countryâs most celebrated bands of the last decade, then itâs also crucial to understanding Yard Actâs newest - and best - record yet, Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music. Simultaneously the most dynamic, collaborative, energised work theyâve laid to tape, but also containing some of the darkest, most cynical and truly questioning moments theyâve concocted too, it picks up their tale and examines the findings more unsparingly than ever.
It feels appropriate that, in order to interrogate these existential subjects, the writing and recording of Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music involved the four musicians coming together and strengthening their own core unit more than ever. Weirdly, for a band so associated with incendiary live shows and constant touring, their third LP marks the first time that the quartet have ever made an album together, as a live band in the same room.
âThe first two records were both laptop records essentially,â says Smith. The Overload was written alongside Needham before the band had fully formed; its follow-up was carved out in snatches of time on tour buses and hotel rooms, amongst a relentless schedule of âslinging [all our gear] in the rehearsal space, going back home, and then a week later piling it back into a van again.â
If their last record was created like a game of Exquisite Corpse, each member taking the track and adding their part in turn (âI always thought that was a really over the top name for a piece of folded down paperâŠâ Needham notes), then this time they laid down roots and gave themselves time. Russell kitted out their new studio in Leeds with everything they required to track the band live at the same time throughout the writing process, including an old piano passed down from Smithâs late aunt that would become integral to the process. For the first time in a long time, Yard Act were able to settle into an âuninterrupted five month periodâ of creativity, crafting â40 or 50 songsâ and allowing themselves to follow their ideas with no external pressure. âIt felt like freedom,â says Smith. âIt felt like everything Iâd wanted from being in a band - to be able to make enough money to be left alone.
The results speak for themselves. Recorded between Leeds and Glendale, Los Angeles with producer Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Nine Inch Nails, Beck, St. Vincent), Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music rings with the chemistry and energy of a band absolutely locked in. Each track has its own distinct character, whether in the ominous, guttural ferocity of âRedeemerâ, the sleazy disco odyssey of its title track, the fizzing indie smarts of âCherophobe Rockâ or the loose, cerebral meditations of âJaney Saidâ. It stems from a time of experimentation and exploration - ask Shipstone about âThe Codeâ and heâll give you a technical explanation as to why these songs are able to constantly veer into unexpected places whilst never undermining their melodic clout.
The sense is of a band hitting a purple patch, where all the efforts of the last half-decade come together and create magic. âI think most bandsâ best stuff comes around the 3rd or 4th album where they really outgrow their influences and become their own thing,â muses Smith as Needham chips in: âI keep saying, itâs like Blur. This is Parklife. The first album they were doing the genre-y thing; the second one was a kick against that but they didnât really know what they were doing, and then they made Parklife, which was the perfect distillation of it all.â Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music, however, is no whimsical walk through suburban England. From the opening self-analytical sprawl of âEmpty Pledgesâ - a track that begins with juddering deep breaths at the top of a skyscraper and freefalls into a torrent of thoughts about purpose, pride and the feeling of punching your way out of a prison of your own making - Yard Actâs third seeks to work through some of the most complicated facets of life.
In some ways, and on purpose, it is a step away from Smithâs venerated vignettes and character studies; a move towards something more âimpressionisticâ and up for interpretation. âI felt like Iâd taken it to its logical extreme on âBlackpool Illuminationsâ [on the last record], and I didnât want to tread old ground,â he says. And yet the feeling still pours through, perhaps more than ever. There is a journey, should you want to trace it, from the fictional Isle of Balamory to the fantasy/ reality of San Francisco Bay. Tread the path with him and youâll keep running into Janey - a mirror to Smithâs own psyche; a person but, yâknow, not exactly. âI think the album is about multiple realities and how individualism has led us, in the modern world, to question if there even is a shared reality anymore because everyone just believes what they want now, this is the price we've paid for pursuing neoliberalism ultimatelyâ Smith suggests.
The questions are deep, but the spirit of Youâre Gonna Need A Little Music is boundless - not for nothing does its title point to the power of art and creativity to rescue us from the mire. âThrill of The Chaseâ, with its snarled, frenetic climax as close to rap as Smith has ever reached, is filled with venom but you can also picture it giddily going off in the mosh pit. âRedeemerâ might have thrown the kitchen sink - or at least its cookware - at the situation, with Meldal-Johnsen concocting a brittle, metallic soundscape out of a day of rattling pots and pans, but the result is direct, visceral and exciting.
Itâs a balancing act that culminates, as all Yard Act albums do, with a final moment of optimism in âOver The Barrelâ: a track that travels from rinky dink bar-room piano through a euphoric indie- rock chorus and out, finally, into that sought-after ocean. Perhaps itâs less certain than Smith has been in the past. ââOver The Barrelâ [as a saying] can have multiple meanings. The choice is yours. But,â says the frontman, âpersonally, I still have a bit of hope in me for how it all works out.â The destination might still be unknown, but the journey is unequivocally Yard Actâs finest yet. Maybe Faust didnât have the ending all worked out after all.
*Limited to 1 copy per customer/household, multiple orders will be cancelled without notice.












