Show results for

Explore

In Stock

Artists

Actors

Authors

Format

Condition

Theme

Category

Genre

Rated

Label

Specialty

Decades

Size

Color

Deals

Empty image
  • D'Ya Hear Me!: Naffi Years, 1979-83

  • (Reissue)
  • Artist: Brenda Ray
  • Format: CD
  • Release Date: 9/11/2012
D'Ya Hear Me!: Naffi Years, 1979-83
  • D'Ya Hear Me!: Naffi Years, 1979-83

  • (Reissue)
  • Artist: Brenda Ray
  • Format: CD
  • Release Date: 9/11/2012
  • Artist: Brenda Ray
  • Label: Em Records
  • UPC: 4560283211082
  • Item #: 368561X
  • Genre: Rock
  • Release Date: 9/11/2012
  • This product is a special order
CD 
List Price: $23.98
Price: $18.74
You Save: $5.24 (22%)
privacy notice
loading image
Backordered: Get it by Tue. Aug 18
Deliver to

You May Also Like

Description

D'Ya Hear Me!: Naffi Years, 1979-83 on CD

2016 repress. Sweet post-punk, with a heartfelt reggae/funk influence, analog dub effects and lovely femme-vox. A unique slice of late-70s/early-80s goodness, starring Brenda Ray, whose previous release on EM Records, Walatta [EM1071CD], has been embraced by a large number of listeners. Recorded in North West England, D'Ya Hear Me! Is warm-hearted, open, fresh and slyly experimental. With an independent spirit and a true D.I.Y. soul, these thirteen tracks, originally released in various formats by Ray a.k.a. Brenda Kenny a.k.a. Natalie Sand a.k.a. Polly Rith'm and her musical friends under the moniker(s) Naffi/Naffi Sandwich, were recorded in a simple home-made studio, making full use of the creative options opened up through the full use of simple means - although the warm, full audio belies any notions of primitivism. Far from media-crazed London, Naffi created a musical world free from lust for the spotlight, focusing solely on the music, and the results are fittingly pure. D'Ya Hear Me! Is a wide-ranging release, with lovely vocal tracks, warm dubs and pleasingly odd instrumentals, all knitted together with a special trans-Atlantic rhythmic sense. Two songs of special interest here are "Moonbeams" and the Young Marble Giants-esque "Everyday Just Another Dream", which are early versions of "Starlight" and "Another Dream" from Walatta. Also noteworthy are several previously unissued longer versions of some songs.