Sold Date:
May 4, 2020
Start Date:
May 1, 2020
Final Price:
£47.00
(GBP)
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Arlo Parks - Super Sad Generation - Ltd Picture Disc - Signed
RARE collection of all her early EP's on one release.
Also includes a spoken word poem 'London' which is only available on this
Vinyl.
Limited to only 200 copies. 50 were sold signed.
This is one of the edition of those 50, with its Sleeve SIGNED, pressed as a PICTURE DISC Vinyl,
and is NEW and Unplayed.
Limited edition 12" Picture Disc, transparent sleeve SIGNED by Arlo Parks. (SEE PICS)
Picture
disc includes Arlo Parks
artwork on side A and Super Sad Generation artwork on Side B.
Vinyl comes in a luxury PVC sleeve & flap.
Tracklist
A1
Cola
A2
Super Sad Generation
A3
Sophie
A4
Romantic Garbage
A5
I Like
B1
Second Guessing
B2
George
B3
Angel's Song
B4
Paperbacks
B5
London Poem
Record will be posted within 2 days of cleared payment.
Any questions just ask :)
More info on artist and release:-
This release is a collection of Arlo Parks' first and second EP ('Super
Sad Generation' and 'Sophie'), plus an exclusive unreleased spoken word
poem - 'London'
'Super Sad Generation' was entirely self-written between the ages of
16-18 is a delicate ode to the emotionally wrought youth of today. Since
her debut track 'Cola', Parks has been heavily championed by the likes
of BBC Radio 1, BBC 1Xtra, Beats1, Radio X and Foundation FM, as well as
COLORS, FADER, Complex, Noisey, Guardian, Gal-Dem, The Face, The Line
of Best Fit, DIY, Clash, LOVE Magazine, Wonderland, Independent and many
more. She also counts Killing Eve's Jodie Comer, Lily Allen and Amandla
Stenberg amongst her ever-growing list of fans.
Now at just nineteen, the young London based singer demonstrates soul and compassion beyond her years, and says she "made this record to pay tribute to all those kids that are in a lot of pain and are confused as to why".
On a personal level, Parks struggled with her identity growing up; a
self-confessed tom boy who was super sensitive and "uncool", she says it
was like "I'm a black kid who can't dance for shit, listens to emo
music and currently has a crush on some girl in my Spanish class." By
the time she reached 17, she shaved her head, figured out she was
bisexual and produced/wrote an album's worth of material.
Growing up in South West London, half Nigerian, a quarter Chadian and a
quarter French, Arlo Parks learned to speak French before English. A
quiet child, she'd write short stories and create fantasy worlds, later
journaling and then obsessing over spoken word poetry, reading American
poets such as Ginsberg and Jim Morrison and watching old Chet Baker
performances on YouTube. These days she references Nayyirah Waheed,
Hanif Abdurraqib and Iain S. Thomas as her favourite modern poets, and
it is clear that their works are as influential on her song writing as
any musician. Books too, such as The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath and
Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami. Parks says, "the way Murakami writes
in that book is how I aspire to write my songs; gritty and sensitive and
human."
Fela Kuti's 'Water' and Otis Redding's 'Sittin On The Dock Of The Bay'
sound tracked Arlo Parks' childhood, but it was aged around 13 that she
discovered King Krule; an artist who would heavily influence the music
she writes today. Later listening to more hip-hop (from Kendrick Lamar,
MF Doom and Earl Sweatshirt to the more confessional sounds of Loyle
Carner) and rock (Jimi Hendrix, Shilpa Ray and David Bowie), as well as
the subdued, pained sounds of Keaton Henson, Sufjan Stevens and Julien
Baker, Parks explains, "I would write stories so detailed you could
taste them, while maintaining the energy and life of the hip-hop I
loved." There's a visual, almost cinematic quality to her writing too,
which is born from her love of horror films, streetwear and abstract
art.