Bristol Archive Records Blog

Posts Tagged ‘Punk’

NEWSLETTER – DECEMBER 2010

Saturday, December 18th, 2010

Sugar Shack Records Ltd

Firstly can I wish you and your family a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

You will no doubt be fully aware of the economic position we currently find ourselves in the UK.

The music industry is in a complete mess with physical product sales decreasing month on month and download sales increasing very slightly but not at a rate which will save the industry or the companies who trade within it.

I had to make a difficult decision in 2010 to cease trading as Sugar Shack Records Ltd on the advice of my Accountants MWM.

Where are we now?

As you should be aware Bristol Archive Records is a subsidiary label of Sugar Shack and with effect from the 1st October 2010 we continue business as usual with the new name Sugar Shack Records. The Archive label is by far the bigger party now with an average of six digital releases per month.

In 2010 The Archive has released three compilation CDs and two Vinyl albums however across the board sales including digital, have been bitterly disappointing.

The Future?

My commitment to Bristol music remains as strong as ever and my passion to ensure that artists from the past should be remembered and not forgotten is as important today as it was on the launch of www.bristolarchiverecords.com . Sugar Shack however will not release many new records in 2011.

I’m excited about The Bristol Reggae Explosion 1978-1983 on CD and Vinyl to be released in Feb 2011 and we follow this with a Talisman album in April. Pre sales look more positive and the initial press looks like we should get good reviews.

One of the major positives is the amount of traffic the website obtains and this is reflected in the search engine positions when tracking Bristol Archive Records – clearly people are interested.

I could not run the label without the support of the small team that works with me to provide the mastering, artwork, design, websites and sourcing of material. Thanks a million to all the team and thank you to you the artist for allowing your material to be made available through the Archive and Sugar Shack.

I wish I could report a healthier picture and I wish we were selling more music.

Please contact me directly if you wish to receive an accurate of account of your individual sales.

 In time as the Archive gets bigger I believe things will improve but for now let’s drink a toast to the New Year 2011.

Yours sincerely

M DARBY

On behalf of the team

www.bristolarchiverecords.com   /    www.sugarshackrecords.co.uk

 

The Pigs to support 999

Saturday, July 24th, 2010

 

The Pigs have confirmed a home town support slot in Bristol for Friday November 5th supporting the legendary 999. The venue is The Fleece and there will be a Punk club night until 2am.

Put a note in the diary 

July News Flash:

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

New Vinyl Release

The Pigs album ‘1977’ is now available to pre-order from our Record Shop

http://www.bristolarchiverecords.com/vinyl.html

THE PIGS

‘1977’

Released on 4th October 2010

LIMITED EDITION 500 COPIES VINYL ALBUM

100 Copies will have a special Limited Edition Insert featuring stories and exclusive pictures

 

“When we finally got to see The Cortinas at the Granary – up till then we had them down as more of the Feelgood thing – wow we really got the message!! And that’s what did it. It was so energizing, it felt like we had to get our band started the next day, the same night probably. The Punk train came and we all jumped on it, like a lot of people did, but we were the first ones on in Bristol, after The Cortinas.”

So says guitarist Kit Gould, who indeed formed The Pigs with drummer Ricky Galli, bassist Nigel Robinson and singer Eamonn McAndrew, in time to release the second Bristol Punk single to hit the shops after said Cortinas debut.

New Bristol Records was set up after the band supported Generation X at Chutes, where they met Miles Copeland. “We decided to set it up, it was our idea, with Vernon and John (their managers), and he just went along with it”, says Kit. “Now, looking back, it’s obvious that if Miles Copeland’s going to pay for you to do a recording, he’s not just donating it to you so you can set up your own label, whereas at the time that seemed like an entirely realistic proposition. It’s just naïve kids really that don’t have a clue about the music business. Miles Copeland came on board, he was our London connection.”

The band went into Sound Conception Studio on 12 August 1977 and recorded their whole set, from which four tracks were selected for the ‘Youthanasia’ EP. It gained airplay on John Peel’s show and sales were reasonable, but it proved to be their only release. They continued to gig regularly, including two more shows with The Cortinas, a support slot with Siouxsie and the Banshees at Barton Hill Youth Club, and even a headliner at the legendary (but by that time sadly ailing), Roxy, on 13 January 1978 with Open Sore and The Heat, but they called it a day the following March.

And now we are proud to give you, for the first time, all eleven tracks that the band recorded at Sound Conception, on lovely vinyl, in a rather dinky sleeve.

 NEW CD RELEASE

Avon Calling 2 is now available to pre-order from our Record Shop

http://www.bristolarchiverecords.com/vinyl.html

VARIOUS ARTISTS

‘AVON CALLING 2’

Released worldwide on 23rd August 2010

20 SUPERB TRACKS ALL PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED

 

In 1979, Bristols’ music scene was riding the crest of the new wave, spawning numerous bands and performers whose influences and indeed physical beings have gone on to feature in some of todays’ big music makers.

During this period local musician Simon Edwards decided to form Bristols’ first independent label, Heartbeat Records, to capture all the excitement and get Bristols’ music out beyond the M32.

With so many bands to choose from the label set about releasing a series of 7” singles, and such was the demand realised by these that a compilation LP featuring fifteen of these bands was released. The album, topically titled AVON CALLING went on to achieve near legendary status – even hailed by John Peel as “truly superb, the compilation that all others should be judged by”.

Such was the interest in the album that the bands involved continued to supply the label with demo tapes, and the lucky ones went on to release more singles, even 12” EP’s and ultimately LP’s.  The sheer volume of demos and the eventual logistical constraints of “just how many records can one man put out in a year” meant that only a few would actually see further releases – though the content was in most cases nothing short of superb.

Label boss Edwards openly admits to continually returning to many of the songs purely

just to listen and enjoy some “bloody good music”.  Long has it been his ambition to put together an album of these songs – for no other reason but to get them out there where they belong, so they can at last be heard by others and the bands once more be applauded for making such exciting and essential sounds.

Well, the dream has finally been realised and Bristol Archive Records have given him the platform to finally release AVON CALLING 2, a collection of previously unreleased recordings from the vaults of  Bristols’ Heartbeat Becords.  Featured bands include EUROPEANS, APARTMENT, SNEAK PREVIEW, JOE PUBLIC, 48 HOURS, ESSENTIAL BOP, THE DIRECTORS, THE X-CERTS and SOCIAL SECURITY.

This new album full of forgotten treasures will sit perfectly along side the original AVON CALLING release and go some way to completing the story of just what was happening in Bristol back in 1979/1980 and how the music sounds as relevant today as it did back then.

   OTHER RELEASES

We have cd versions of The Cortinas ‘Mk 1’ and The Pigs ‘1977’ available from the Record Shop. These are highly collectable miniature versions of the album sleeves made by Sam Giles. They are strictly limited editions.

 DIGITAL RELEASES

The Seers

Available from the 26th July as download albums we have for the first time ever two brand new releases from the mighty

Seers.

Live in Europe 1990 and Live in Bristol 1991

The Roots of the Seers lie in two places; Bristol (obviously) and Billericay (not so obviously). Leigh Wildman grew up in Billericay and it was there he met Jason Collins, a guitarist from nearby Brentwood. They had spent some time in bands around the Essex region and they, along with a few friends, had decided to up sticks and try somewhere else. At the suggestion of one of their number, Bristol was decided upon, and a mini Essex invasion took place in the summer of 1984.

 

 

http://www.bristolarchiverecords.com/bands/The_Seers_Story.html

 

Loads more coming your way next month, keep checking back

 

Mike and The team

www.bristolarchiverecords.com

Bristol The Punk Explosion

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

 

Bristol The Punk Explosion is now mastered, press release written and release date set for June 14th – Just got to get the sleeve designed now and Shane to finish the sleeve notes.