» » Various - Bullshit Detector
Various - Bullshit Detectorh1
Electronic / Rock
Performer: Various
Title: Bullshit Detector
Style: Punk, Experimental
Year 1980
Country UK
Genre: Electronic / Rock
Rating: 4.9
Votes: 912
MP3 size: 1999 mb
FLAC size: 1748 mb
WMA size: 1147 mb
Other formats: DMF ADX DXD WAV ASF MOD MP3

Various - Bullshit Detector mp3 album


Various - Bullshit Detector mp3 album

Tracklist

Andy T Jazz On A Summers Day
Counter Attack Don't Wanna Fight For You
Alternative Change It
Clockwork Criminals We Are You
Reputations In Jeopardy Girls Love Popstars
Crass Do They Owe Us A Living
Amebix University Challenged
Sceptics Local Chaos
The Sinyx Mark Of The Beast
Frenzy Battalion Thalidomide
Icon* Cancer
The Speakers Why
A.P.F. Brigade Anarchist Attack
Fuck The C.I.A. Right Or Wrong
Caine Mutiny And The Kallisti Apples Of Nonsense Morning Star
The Sucks '3'
Porno Squad Khaki Doesn't Go With My Eyes
S.P.G. Murders Soldiers
Eratics* National Service
Red Alert Who Needs Society
The Snipers War Song
Armchair Power Power
Disrupters Napalm
Andy T Nagasaki Mon Amour
Action Frogs Drumming Up Hope (Ferret Skank)

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
421984/4 Various Bullshit Detector ‎(LP) Crass Records 421984/4 UK 1980
421984/4 Various Bullshit Detector ‎(LP, Comp, RP) Crass Records 421984/4 UK 1980


Dorilune
Various - 'Bullshit Detector Volume #1' (Crass Records, 1980). Without doubt the greatest expression of the DIY punk aesthetic ever pressed on vinyl. A clarion call to many dispossessed youth to express themselves musically as well as a media for spreading ideas throughout a community which may otherwise have remained geographically and culturally isolated from all the other like minds forming bands and starting 'zines across the land. At a time when most of the established punk bands had polished their sound and were gracing the TOTP studio this galvanised and gave ideological cohesion to the emerging, embryonic scene that became later known as 'anarcho-punk'. It is a record which remains even today unduly underestimated and maligned for its 'quality', which, of course, wasn't the point of the release at all. Stand-out tracks for me have always been the gratingly atonal Snipers 'War Song', the discordant lo-fi dementia (with what genuinely sounds like buckets and dustbin lids for drums!) of The Sucks ‘3’ and the primal pogo of Counter Attack’s ‘Don’t wanna fight for you’ . Bullshit Detector #1 stands as the first ‘punk’ record that irrefutably proved the ethos that ‘anyone’ really could DO IT, be on record and have their voice heard; even if that voice sounded like it was recorded down a phone and was accompanied by a toy guitar.