British anarcho-punk collective, Crass, have today announced the release of three remastered original versions of their trail-blazing and vital albums; Stations Of The Crass, Feeding Of The Five Thousand (The Second Sitting), Best Before 1984. The recordsare available to buy today on vinyl, having been unavailable for many years.

Crass have also announced a pre-order on forthcoming remastered vinyl pressings of the original versions of Yes Sir I Will, Penis Envy, Ten Notes On A Summer’s Day, Christ The Album, to be released on their own Crass Records (distributed by One Little Indian).

The band have recently been causing a stir amongst long-time followers, surprising fans on Monday when they shared a free download of their compilation album Best Before 1984 for 24 hours only, and sending out their infamous Crass spray-paint stencils in the run up to this week. Crass members have been working in partnership with One Little Indian Records, who have filled hoards of stamped envelopes sent in by fans with the stencil. Rough Trade have also handed hundreds of stencils out to fans in the lead up to April 1st. In their active years, Crass and their wider collective and fanbase were known for the anti-fascism Crass symbol which was sprayed all over London and the Underground.

During the late ’70s and early ’80s, Crass were at the forefront of the punk scene in London, promoting anarchism as a political ideology and popularising the anarcho-punk movement. The band believed in direct action, performing organised squats, spreading anti-fascism messages and encouraging resistance of political authority through DIY leaflets, sound collages, art, poetry and film.

In the years since their disbandment in 1984, the individual members of Crass have continued to work on music, art and poetry projects expressing their political ideologies, including Eve Libertine’s recorded recital of Jack Kerouac’s ‘Sea’, and Penny Rimbaud’s lauded spoken word album in tribute to Wilfred Owen’s war poetry, ‘What Passing Bells’.

Rimbaud, co-founder of Crass and the famous anarchist/pacifist open house Dial House in Essex (alongside Crass bandmate Gee Vaucher), had this to say about the album giveaway: “Crass was then and this now, but the lyrics remain tragically relevant, indeed, Crass were often so prophetic that it’s only now that their warnings might make sense to those who in the day preferred to keep their heads firmly buried in the sand. ‘Global warming? Nah, let’s go down the lido.’ Where the Pistols and The Clash now sit comfortable in the backlit annuls of rock’n’roll history, Crass continue to contribute to the ever-growing voice of global dissent.

Buy link: https://crass.lnk.to/CrassCatalogue