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

Okay Okay: The First Three Albums Vinyl LP Silver Colour 2024

Original price £71.99 - Original price £71.99
Original price
£71.99
£71.99 - £71.99
Current price £71.99
Cat no. AK102
Tracklist

LP 1

1. Bloody
2. Now
3. Holy War
4. We
5. Devil
6. Replace
7. Oh
8. Game
9. Roman
10. Hoot
11. Bullseye

LP 2

1. Up
2. Good
3. Have
4. Compass
5. Hungry
6. Sing-Along
7. Mind
8. Fight
9. Give Up
10. Rescue
11. Mindless

LP 3

1. My
2. Only
3. Tragedy
4. Nightmare
5. Loveless
6. Peaceful
7. Natural
8. Simple
9. Hot-Wired
10. Panda
11. Blind
12. Beast
13. Poof
14. Truce
15. Huggable Dust
16. Already
17. Half-Asleep

Okay's Marty Anderson bends his chronic illness into buoyant, illuminating pop music. Simple songs, layered arrangements, like spending 5 minutes with someone new and knowing you'll be besties forever. His unique raspy croaking tenor lets us know he's real, that our pain is too, and that the music is here to make us all feel better. In the 20 years since these records were released, there's still nobody like Okay. Common word, rare talent. Finally on LP. The set includes 3 LPs on anniversary silver wax, including 2005's twin albums Low Road and High Road, and 2008's epic Huggable Dust.

The silver box set edition is numbered and strictly limited to 300 copies. The box set also includes printed jackets and inner sleeves, and our unique box set ornament, a three-part item that includes a printed bookmark that slides between the top of the LPs, and a label logo charm and band ribbon, which dangle parallel to the record spines, making the sets on any record shelf visible from across the room. The band name on outer slipcase is hot foil stamped.

"The magical psychedelic pop of Okay...transforms -- rather alchemically, via sugary melodies, warm baths of keyboards, jaunty rhythms, and all the kazoos you can take in -- this thick, weighty sadness into a joyful celebration." - SF Weekly