As one of the UK’s foremost record shops we’ve been selling music from the heart of London’s Soho for 30 years.
Fast Delivery
We aim to ship as soon as we are able. Rely on us to get your music to you as quickly and efficiently as possible.
Safe & Secure
There would be no point in spending a shitload of money on a website that was insecure. That’s why we’ve partnered with the best companies to keep everything nailed on safe. If there is a certificate we’ve missed out on then it’s probably for a 50 metre swim badge at the local swimming baths.
FREE SHIPPING
Easy. If you are a UK based customer and we are shipping to a UK address then shipping is free if you spend £75 or more in a single order.
Astonishingly daring debut album, not as focused or overpowering as King Crimson's first but still crashing down barriers and steamrolling expectations. The mix of medieval harmonies and electric rock got stronger on subsequent albums, but the music here is still pretty jarring. Kerry Minnear was probably the only prog rock keyboard player of the era who allowed his synthesizers to sound like themselves and not mimic orchestras; Gary Green's guitars are alternately loud and brittle or soft and lyrical, and always surprising; and the presence of saxes and trumpets (courtesy of Phil Shulman) was unusual in any rock band of the era -- all of which explains how Gentle Giant managed to attract a cult following but hadn't a prayer of moving up from that level of recognition. "Funny Ways" was the softest prog rock song this side of Crimson's "I Talk to the Wind," but a lot of the rest is pretty intense in volume and tempo changes. "Nothing at All" by itself is worth the price of purchase.
Tracklist
A1 Giant 6:24 A2 Funny Ways 4:23 A3 Alucard 6:01 A4 Isn't It Quiet And Cold? 3:53 B1 Nothing At All 9:08 B2 Why Not? 5:31 B3 The Queen 1:40
Soundwave
https://youtu.be/Oq4b3nMsyyE
choosing a selection results in a full page refresh