* 50th Anniversary Expanded Edition 2LP, 180g audiophile vinyl * The Canterbury scene produced some of British progressive rock's most distinctive and enduring music - a sound that owed as much to jazz and the European avant-garde as to rock, delivered with a peculiarly English wit and warmth. At the heart of this movement stood Hatfield and the North, a band whose brief existence between 1972 and 1975 yielded two albums that remain touchstones for adventurous listeners five decades later.
The Rotters' Club, released in 1975, represented the group's creative peak - a seamless fusion of intricate composition and playful spontaneity that few bands have matched before or since. The lineup reads like a Canterbury supergroup: Pip Pyle on drums, Phil Miller on guitar, Richard Sinclair on bass and vocals, and Dave Stewart - formerly of Egg - on organ and electric piano. Between them, the members' CVs connected to virtually every significant Canterbury act: Delivery, Gong, Matching Mole, Caravan, and beyond.
The album's side-long suite "Mumps" remains one of progressive rock's great achievements - a sprawling, episodic journey that balances compositional sophistication with genuine emotional depth. Throughout, the band's instrumental virtuosity serves the music rather than overwhelming it, while guest vocalists including Robert Wyatt and the Northettes add another layer of texture to an already rich sonic palette.
This 50th Anniversary Expanded Edition presents The Rotters' Club as a double LP on 180 gram audiophile vinyl, adding bonus material previously featured on the Afters compilation. An insert completes the package, offering context for both longtime devotees and newcomers discovering the Canterbury sound for the first time.
Half a century on, this music has lost none of its capacity to surprise, delight, and reward close listening. Essential.