Seventies British punk was some angry stuff. But just like our red hot ire at the end of GOT, anger alters. In the case of British Post Punk, the always-gray UK skies, a long economic depression, and the power of the synthesizer combined to temper punk into something experimental, moody, and new — an ocean of echoes floating over machine-drum percussion. Dig out your blackest black T-shirt. Draw the blinds. It’s time to get dark.
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