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*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records *Last shipping for arrival before Christmas - 18th December*
*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records *Last shipping for arrival before Christmas - 18th December*

Jake Bugg A Modern Day Distraction Vinyl LP Signed Assai Obi Edition Crystal Clear Colour 2024

Original price £28.99 - Original price £28.99
Original price
£28.99
£28.99 - £28.99
Current price £28.99
Cat no. 19802820051A

Assai Obi Edition

  • Assai Records Exclusive Japanese Inspired Obi Strip*
  • Limited to 300 copies*
  • Obi Strip signed by Jake Bugg
  • Crystal Clear Colour Vinyl
  • Hand-numbered*

 *Exclusive to Assai Records, limited to 1 copy per customer/address. No supply to resellers. Cancellation admin charge £5.00 to resellers.

Tracklist:

1. Zombieland
2. All Kinds of People
3. Breakout
4. Never Said Goodbye
5. I Wrote the Book
6. Waiting for the World
7. Instant Satisfaction
8. Got to Let You Go
9. All That I Needed Was You
10. Keep On Moving
11. Beyond the Horizon
12. Still Got Time

Fresh off the back of a tour as special guest to Liam Gallagher and John Squire, UK rock troubadour, Jake Bugg, returns with his forthcoming sixth album A Modern Day Distraction, out September 20th on RCA records. Alongside the announcement comes his new single ‘Zombieland’ and a run of winter 2024 UK and EU dates.

A bone-crunching Beatles-via-Nirvana guitar driven banger, ‘Zombieland’ is a rollicking ode to the many broken by the inescapable daily grind, trudging on with a stiff upper lip. “It’s fucking brutal,” he says of the people he’s known who exist in “a constant cycle of working to live”. “They’re not paid what they’re worth. People have the same routine every day, they’re at work more than they see their kids, then the government puts the retirement age up. It’s not right.”

Produced by Metrophonic at Metrophonic Studios in London, Jake returns to his roots on the rock-driven A Modern Day Distraction – a record that turns up the noise while shining a light on the injustice he’s seen dealt to the family and friends he grew up with. Fiery and engaged, the record was born out of a frustration of societal inequality. Bugg found that a time had come when he just couldn’t look away. “People might say ‘What do you know?’ or ‘Just stick to music’. I’ve got a bit of money, but we all know the people this affects. I was just writing it because it was the way I felt. It pisses me off – especially in a country like ours where we have the means and funds to take care of the people suffering the most, but we choose not to.”