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*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records
*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records

Johnny Foreigner How To Be Hopeful Vinyl LP Ripples Of Blue Eco Colour 2024

Original price £26.99 - Original price £26.99
Original price
£26.99
£26.99 - £26.99
Current price £26.99
Cat no. ALCOPOP282X
Ripples Of Blue Eco Colour

Tracklist:

1. Roisin Does Advice Now
2. The Blazing World
3. What The Alexei
4. Museum of Useless Things
5. Orc Damage
6. Okay 1 More
7. This is a Joke
8. Dark Tetris
9. Their Shining Path
10. A Sea To Scream At
11. Emily and Alex
12. We Build This City

New album from Johnny Foreigner, a 4-piece indie rock band from the UK's second city.

Feels like a huge privilege to release a loud righteous rock record about finding love and joy in the universe at a point where such things are in such universal short supply. This release is 28 months past deadline; our timing has always sucked. But honestly we've had little choice; How to be Hopeful is a pure product of chaos magic. It compelled us to be made, to harness returning ripples of stones long since thrown. It felt way too significant, too personal, too full of moments worth savouring and patterns playing out, to rush. Also, we are old and have real jobs now. It's actually 2 matched parallel soundtracks, 1 per side, for a 12 month period where the worst, then the weirdest, then the best possible things happened. Same series of events, different ripples, chaos and consequence and everything connecte It is our celebration record, our fell-in-love-and-stopped-worrying album, the glowing cathartic coda that we couldn't help but channel. The least Johnny Foreigner of albums; nearly 3 years of obsessive planning and constructing, executive produced by 2007 anti-nostalgia us, and 2016 us who stopped being a band when we ran out of things worth singing about.

Between 2007 - 2016 Johnny Foreigner released 5 albums and 7 Eps, starting with Drowned in Sound's inaugural Pluto Prize winner, culminating with a final album deep dive on Pitchfork. They toured on 4 continents, received a simultaneous 3/10 and 9/10 for the same record in NME, played every festival except Glastonbury, became just as notorious for their merch line as their DIY ethos... and proved their many critics wrong by consistently failing to make a career out of it.

Released on lovely gatefold vinyl with a printed inner and lyric sheet, released on very limited Ripples of Blue eco vinyl.