The Buzzcocks have had difficulty living up to the formidable legacy of their past on the studio material they've released since reuniting in 1989, but in the early years of the 21st century they've finally learned to make new records that don't need to stand in the shadows of Singles Going Steady. The darker undertow of 2003's Buzzcocks set it apart from their previous albums, and though 2006's Flat-Pack Philosophy isn't haunted by the same degree of angst as that album, it reflects the same degree of increased maturity that informed Pete Shelley and Steve Diggle's material on that collection. While the Buzzcocks are still trying to figure out the nuts and bolts of love, "Reconciliation," "God, What Have I Done," and "I've Had Enough" speak of the stakes and responsibilities of grown-up relationships rather than the teenage frustration of their salad days, and the larger world has also become a subject of keener interest to them on numbers like "Sell You Everything" and "Credit." Fast and loud is still the Buzzcocks' preferred mode of attack, but though there are hooks galore to be found on Flat-Pack Philosophy, the tempos have eased up a bit so that Diggle's and Shelley's guitar parts have more room to interact with one another, and bassist Tony Barber's production is clean and roomy while giving the melodies plenty of opportunity to show off their muscle. Very few bands made better use of their teenage mood swings than the Buzzcocks, but Flat-Pack Philosophy shows that they have plenty of compelling things to say about their adult lives, too, which is a good thing for a band whose career now spans four decades. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide
Flat-Pack Philosophy
03/07/2006 | Cooking Vinyl
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CD
$15.99FLAT-PACK PHILOSOPHY
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CD
$38.99FLAT-PACK PHILOSOPHY (BONUS TRACK) (JPN)
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LP
$18.99FLAT-PACK PHILOSOPHY
All Music Guide Review
Flat-Pack Philosophy Track Listing
Flat-Pack Philosophy Notes
Buzzcocks - a band with a past, present, and future, and a legacy they could never have imagined back in the heady punk rock days of 1976.
30 years later, still going strong, still doing it arguably better than anyone else, the godfathers of punk-pop are back with a new album, "flat-pack philosophy", released 6th March, which will be preceded by a new single, "wish i never loved you" on 20th February which includes two new tracks - "don't matter what you say" and "orion".
"flat-pack philosophy" is Buzzcocks eighth studio album, but their first for Cooking Vinyl. In true punk rock fashion, and with superlative production by bassist Tony Barber, the album packs 14 songs into 36 minutes. Taking an urban guerilla stance against the evils of the modern world, from Tesco self-service tills to the cult of Ikea, "flat-pack philosophy" proves that when you put the right creative personalities together, the magic manifests.
Credits of Flat-Pack Philosophy
- John A. Rivers
- Remixing, Mastering
- Tony Barber
- Bass, Producer, Arranger
- Philip Barker
- Drums
- Pete Shelley
- Guitar, Vocals
- Harvey Birrell
- Engineer
- Steve Diggle
- Guitar, Vocals
- Buzzcocks
- Concept






















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