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Remaining Record Store Day 2024 Stock NOW LIVE
Remaining Record Store Day 2024 Stock NOW LIVE
Edition: 20th Anniversary 2x Standard Black Vinyl LP
Condition: New

The Libertines - Up The Bracket

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Original price £10.99 - Original price £124.99
Original price £124.99
£23.99
£10.99 - £99.99
Current price £23.99
Condition: New
Track Listing / Description
LP1/CD1 – Up The Bracket (Remastered)
Vertigo
Death On The Stairs
Horror Show
Time For Heroes
Boys in the Band
Radio America
Up The Bracket
Tell The King
The Boy Looked at Johnny
Begging
The Good Old Days
I Get Along
 
LP2/CD2 - Live at The 100 Club
Horrorshow
Vertigo
The Delaney
What A Waster
Begging
Time For Heroes
Death On The Stairs
Boys In The Band
I Get Along
 
Up The Bracket arrived like a raging bull in a tired post-Britpop china shop and introduced the world to The Libertines, a new gang of London bohemians, whose ragged tunes, red military tunics, opiated poetry and ‘live now pay never’ lifestyle came to define the millennial angst of the early noughties. At the heart of the band is the blood bond bromance between the ramshackle Music Hall Jagger/Richards, Peter Doherty and Carl Barat, ably assisted by the rock solid rhythm twins John Hassall and Gary Powell. Any bookie worth his salt would have given you short odds on this quartet surviving more than a month or two, given the teetering on the brink lifestyle they chose to lead, but here we are two decades later and our Byronic heroes, though older and wiser, are still fighting the good fight and making music every bit as vital as their debut. The belief, talent and fervour that Doherty spoke of in their earliest manifesto has stood them in good stead.

Track Listing / Description
LP1/CD1 – Up The Bracket (Remastered)
Vertigo
Death On The Stairs
Horror Show
Time For Heroes
Boys in the Band
Radio America
Up The Bracket
Tell The King
The Boy Looked at Johnny
Begging
The Good Old Days
I Get Along
 
LP2/CD2 - Live at The 100 Club
Horrorshow
Vertigo
The Delaney
What A Waster
Begging
Time For Heroes
Death On The Stairs
Boys In The Band
I Get Along
 
Up The Bracket arrived like a raging bull in a tired post-Britpop china shop and introduced the world to The Libertines, a new gang of London bohemians, whose ragged tunes, red military tunics, opiated poetry and ‘live now pay never’ lifestyle came to define the millennial angst of the early noughties. At the heart of the band is the blood bond bromance between the ramshackle Music Hall Jagger/Richards, Peter Doherty and Carl Barat, ably assisted by the rock solid rhythm twins John Hassall and Gary Powell. Any bookie worth his salt would have given you short odds on this quartet surviving more than a month or two, given the teetering on the brink lifestyle they chose to lead, but here we are two decades later and our Byronic heroes, though older and wiser, are still fighting the good fight and making music every bit as vital as their debut. The belief, talent and fervour that Doherty spoke of in their earliest manifesto has stood them in good stead.