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Soul Jazz Records Presents: Secret Superstar Sounds - Scraping Bubblegum Off My Soul 1977-80: Punk - Powerpop - New Wave - DIY - V/A Vinyl LP

Original price £23.99 - Original price £23.99
Original price
£23.99
£23.99 - £23.99
Current price £23.99
Black Vinyl LP
Release Year: 2025
Catalogue Number: SJRLP571
Barcode: 5026328005713
Record Grading: Mint (M)
Sleeve Grading: Mint (M)
Condition Note: Brand New

Track Listing / Description
01 Gooblinz - London
02 Plummet Airlines - It's Har
03 Xdreamysts - Right Way Home
04 Tours - Language School
05 The Squares - No Fear
06 The Monitors - Compulsory Fun
07 The Meanies - It's True
08 Jeff Hill Band - Something's Wrong With My Baby
09 The Squad - 24 Hours
10 Krypton Tunes - Limited Vision
11 The Zeros - Hungry
12 The Wardens - Do So Well
13 The Letters - Nobody Loves Me
14 The Tunnelrunners - Forever Crying At Love Songs
15 Comic Romance - Cry Myself To Sleep
 
Secret Superstar Sounds, is Soul Jazz's well-groovy new punk / powerpop collection of rare tracks from little-known bands from the late 1970s.Grab yourself a serious slice of lost musical history! Featuring The Squares, The Meanies, The Monitors, Plummet Airline, Tours, Gobblinz, Krypton Tunes and many more!
 
Power pop mixed together a love of lyrical and melodically beautiful 60s pop and garage sounds together with the energy and attitude of 70s punk. Almost completely out of kilter with the fashions of the day (punk, new wave and post-punk) these bands managed to fall between the musical cracks at almost every step of the way - leaving them practically unknown to all but a few. Inspired by the D-I-Y messaging of bands like The Desperate Bicycles, Sniffing Glue fanzine and early UK punk labels like Stiff, Chiswick and Rough Trade, these bands chose mainly to go into a studio and make their own private press/D-I-Y records themselves - then try to work out everything else (promotion, marketing, etc) afterwards. As mainly outsiders to the mainstream music industry, and usually unable to make any inroads into it, save for sending their own record to John Peel, most of these bands fell at the first hurdle. These records remain both beautifully crafted 3-minute musical gems, and long-lost micro-histories of an essentially hidden genre.