
Shubunkin Over Rochdale College Bank
Recorded as an instrumental by Tractor in Rochdale in 1971 and originally released on LP in 1972 âShubunkinâ has now been sampled by LA band Broken Bells (Danger Mouse/ Brian Burton and James Mercer, the lead vocalist and guitarist for the indie rock band The Shins) as the basis of their track âTo Anyone a Ghostâ. Julian Cope writes about the Tractor track âShubunkinâ : ...âThen, one night in mid 1972, John Peel played a track that was more mysterious than almost anything I had ever heard. It was the music I thereafter wanted played at my funeral and was most certainly the sound of a soul approaching the canopy of heaven as it left the earth for the last time.â ..âwithout the proper printed Dandelion label there to guide me, I left a blob of marker pen on the side that began with âShubunkinâ and that became the ultimate beginning to any LP in my collection.â Originally Issued in late 2019 as a vinyl LP as a protest against Rochdale Boroughwide Housingâs plans to knock down four of the Seven Sisters/College Bank Flats- these blocks of flats were home to Tractorâs drummer in the 1970s as well as their manager Chris Hewitt and Andy and Liz Kershawsâ dad and a whole host of poets, musicians, tv producers etc. Many Tractor numbers were worked out in these flats prior to recording at various studios around Rochdale and Heywood. All songs written by Jim Milne and Steve Clayton. Jim Milne -vocals guitar (and bass most tracks), Steve Clayton -Drums and Percussion, Dave Addison- bass on Northern City. The album now starts the way Julian Cope always wanted to run.
Shubunkin Over Rochdale College Bank
Recorded as an instrumental by Tractor in Rochdale in 1971 and originally released on LP in 1972 âShubunkinâ has now been sampled by LA band Broken Bells (Danger Mouse/ Brian Burton and James Mercer, the lead vocalist and guitarist for the indie rock band The Shins) as the basis of their track âTo Anyone a Ghostâ. Julian Cope writes about the Tractor track âShubunkinâ : ...âThen, one night in mid 1972, John Peel played a track that was more mysterious than almost anything I had ever heard. It was the music I thereafter wanted played at my funeral and was most certainly the sound of a soul approaching the canopy of heaven as it left the earth for the last time.â ..âwithout the proper printed Dandelion label there to guide me, I left a blob of marker pen on the side that began with âShubunkinâ and that became the ultimate beginning to any LP in my collection.â Originally Issued in late 2019 as a vinyl LP as a protest against Rochdale Boroughwide Housingâs plans to knock down four of the Seven Sisters/College Bank Flats- these blocks of flats were home to Tractorâs drummer in the 1970s as well as their manager Chris Hewitt and Andy and Liz Kershawsâ dad and a whole host of poets, musicians, tv producers etc. Many Tractor numbers were worked out in these flats prior to recording at various studios around Rochdale and Heywood. All songs written by Jim Milne and Steve Clayton. Jim Milne -vocals guitar (and bass most tracks), Steve Clayton -Drums and Percussion, Dave Addison- bass on Northern City. The album now starts the way Julian Cope always wanted to run.
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Recorded as an instrumental by Tractor in Rochdale in 1971 and originally released on LP in 1972 âShubunkinâ has now been sampled by LA band Broken Bells (Danger Mouse/ Brian Burton and James Mercer, the lead vocalist and guitarist for the indie rock band The Shins) as the basis of their track âTo Anyone a Ghostâ. Julian Cope writes about the Tractor track âShubunkinâ : ...âThen, one night in mid 1972, John Peel played a track that was more mysterious than almost anything I had ever heard. It was the music I thereafter wanted played at my funeral and was most certainly the sound of a soul approaching the canopy of heaven as it left the earth for the last time.â ..âwithout the proper printed Dandelion label there to guide me, I left a blob of marker pen on the side that began with âShubunkinâ and that became the ultimate beginning to any LP in my collection.â Originally Issued in late 2019 as a vinyl LP as a protest against Rochdale Boroughwide Housingâs plans to knock down four of the Seven Sisters/College Bank Flats- these blocks of flats were home to Tractorâs drummer in the 1970s as well as their manager Chris Hewitt and Andy and Liz Kershawsâ dad and a whole host of poets, musicians, tv producers etc. Many Tractor numbers were worked out in these flats prior to recording at various studios around Rochdale and Heywood. All songs written by Jim Milne and Steve Clayton. Jim Milne -vocals guitar (and bass most tracks), Steve Clayton -Drums and Percussion, Dave Addison- bass on Northern City. The album now starts the way Julian Cope always wanted to run.











