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*Free UK Delivery over £75 -- Or Collect Free from your nearest Assai Records Store*
*Free UK Delivery over £75 -- Or Collect from your nearest Assai Records Store*

Benefits Constant Noise Vinyl LP Neon Pink Colour Due Out 21/03/25

Original price £26.99 - Original price £26.99
Original price
£26.99
£26.99 - £26.99
Current price £26.99
Cat no. INV332LPC2

Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 21st March, 2025

Neon Pink Colour

Tracklist:

1. Constant Noise
2. Land Of The Tyrants (feat Zera Tønin)
3. The Victory Lap
4. Lies And Fear
5. Missiles
6. Blame
7. Divide (feat Shakk)
8. Relentless (feat. PeterDoherty)
9. Terror Forever
10. Dancing On The Tables
11. Everything Is Going To Be Alright
12. Burnt Out Family Home

“I fucking love Benefits.”
- Steve Albini

Due out 21st March via Invada Records, “Constant Noise” follows the band’s debut album ‘NAILS’ which earned widespread press and radio support and appeared in album of the year lists inc. Louder Than War (#1), BBC 6Music, NME, The Quietus, The Line Of Best Fit and more.

After a succession of different line-ups, Benefits have now settled as a two-piece made up of Hall and electronic virtuoso Robbie Major. “We’re still angry” says Hall, “just angry in a different way to before. If the previous record was black and white, we wanted this to be technicolour. ”The first taste of this new musical direction came in the form of “Land Of The Tyrants”, which saw the band delving into bass-heavy, dance inflected rhythms and subtle industrial undercurrents. Follow-up single ‘Relentless’ featured The Libertines’ Peter Doherty and saw the band move further into ambient electronic atmospherics. Doherty is just one of the collaborators on the new record, Zera Tønin, the singer of queer pop-electro duo Arch Femmesis, Neil Cooper of Therapy?, and Middlesborough rapper Shakkall make cameos. In addition to the guest musicians, the album also features production from James Welsh (Phantasy Sound), and James Adrian Brown (ex-Pulled Apart By Horses) who helped to guide the new direction. The result is an album that gleans as much from the likes of Underworld and Leftfield as it does the likes of The Streets or Beastie Boys in their pomp, or even the 90s /early 00s Indie Sleaze-era.