with Dennis ‘Blackbeard’ Bovell At The Controls Tickets Follow The Pop Group on Songkick
Tagthepopgroup
THE POP GROUP’S NEW SINGLE ZIPPERFACE – AVAILABLE TO STREAM & DOWNLOAD NOW
Dangerous Days / The War For Tomorrow Has Begun / Death To Distraction Zipperface is available as an instant download with pre-orders of the new album Honeymoon On Mars through iTunes & streaming sites on Tuesday 6th September: ThePopGroup.lnk.to/HoneymoonOnMars Listen back to Marc Riley’s Thursday night show on 6 Music to hear the first radio
FACT MAGAZINE ANNOUNCE DETAILS OF NEW ALBUM & UK + EU TOUR DATES
“A hypersonic journey into a dystopian future full of alien encounters and sci-fi lullabies.” Tracklist: 01. ‘Instant Halo’ 02. ‘City Of Eyes’ 03. ‘Michael 13’ 04. ‘War Inc.’ 05. ‘Pure Ones’ 06. ‘Little Town’ 07. ‘Days Like These’ 08. ‘Zipperface’ 09. ‘Heaven?’ 10. ‘Burn Your Flag’ Read the full story via Fact Magazine Tour Dates (Tickets
NEW POP GROUP ALBUM READY TO PRE-ORDER VIA PLEDGEMUSIC
From TPG: ‘Dear Comrades We’ve at last fulfilled a double fantasy to work with our two favourite sonic assassins, Dennis ‘Blackbeard’ Bovell and Hank Shocklee for the new Pop Group album! To help us control our means of production, fight corporate censorship & maintain freedom of speech, you can now pledge for exclusive bundles &
THE POP GROUP TO PLAY ROUGH TRADE’S 40TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONS
The Pop Group are playing a special one off colloborative show with Detroit’s finest post punk exponents Protomartyr as part of Rough Trade’s 40th anniversary celebrations. Other acts on the night include John Grant + Wrangler and Scritti Politti + Alexis Taylor. 22nd October at the Barbican Centre. Tickets on sale this Friday: dice.fm/RT40 FB
MARK STEWART IN CONVERSATION WITH SPARK MAG
‘When the band broke up, we just sealed it. We kept and protected everything. There’s a five year plan of putting out stuff that’s interesting, recording new music, and playing all over the world. It’s a serious project we’re all into. I think we’re more into it now than we were as kids.’ Mark Stewart