Celebrate 8 years of the Buried Treasure label with an evening of groovy brutalism, new town psych and rare library electronics beneath a 1970's car park. Featuring:
THE BLACK ALBUMEN (Biggabush DJ set)
HOWLROUND (live)
REVBJELDE / ZYKLUS (live)
DOLLY DOLLY (spoken words + DJ set)
VERISTHEPROGRAM (Mondo Fuzz DJ set)
TARA EGAN (spoken words)
THE INFINITE ATTIC (lights + projections)
FRIDAY 26TH NOV 2021
7pm - late @ The Acoustic Couch, Bracknell, Berks. RG12 1JG
Ticket price includes a Buried Treasure CD of your choice. E-tickets will be sent out 3 to 4 days before the event.
The venue is an easy 2 minute walk from Bracknell train station with buses and taxis also close by.
Audience size has been limited to 1/5th of the venues capacity to allow for social distancing with air conditioning, a licensed bar and comfortable seating areas.
Ticket holders are kindly requested to show a proof of vaccination or a negative covid test taken within 24 hours before entering the venue.
supported by 43 fans who also own “Return To Atlantis”
Being a child in the 70s and early 80s had a certain spookiness to it. Spirits seemed more readily available. I recall a homesickness which would haunt me even then, as if I were from another place entirely. Life's a mystery which childhood makes even worse, so let us revisit it in all its haunting creepiness.
Who are the "pocket pavilions"? I can find nothing more other than this one song, and it's a very good tune I really enjoy. .23:AGHOR💀NATH:23.
supported by 37 fans who also own “Return To Atlantis”
This album is truly one of my favorite as it makes me think about the act of forgetting something when you don't want to. You can't control it and makes you feel miserable. This truly makes me enjoy the memories I can remember because there will be a point in time where it will be gone. tenr3d
The solo project of Philip Quinn (Girls Names), this is dark-edged electronic work with a needle-sharp take on life in the U.K. Bandcamp New & Notable Sep 10, 2019
supported by 35 fans who also own “Return To Atlantis”
It recalls so many memories of the 70s passing into the 80s: being a kid on the vinyl back seat of my dad's car driving on motorways alongside towns that I had never heard of, watching episodes of Tomorrow's World and the hope technology promised - the relentless, destructive march of Thatcherism. GCF captures it all in this superb album. umbral7