1
UK / US
Album artwork for 154 by Wire

154 from 1979 finds Wire moving away from its punk roots toward darker, more experimental horizons. There is less overt anger and insolence than in the past, and in its place is plenty of dark weirdness. truly disturbing at certain points, this album is a challenging listen. Beginning with the sinister I Should Have Known Better a song that has so little to do with the same-titled Beatles song that it really is scary, 154 follows with the shambling, atonal Two People in a Room and the choppy, robotic guitars of The 15th. The fiendish A Touching Display sounds like music for a primitive rite, while on A Mutual Friend, close british invasion-flavoured harmonies collide with harsh, dangerous-sounding guitar chords. The highlight here, and arguably the most incredible song in Wire's book, is Map Ref. 41 n, 93 w. words fail to conjure the otherworldly majesty of this track.

CD - Remastered Digipack CD Version.

LP - Remastered Vinyl with Inner Sleeve.

3CD - Remastered Triple CD Version with 80-page hardback book. The original album is presented on its own CD, accompanied by two bonus CDs with 19 cuts featuring Singles, B-sides, studio recordings and demo sessions.

Wire

154

Pink Flag
Album artwork for 154 by Wire
LP

£19.99

Remastered Vinyl with Inner Sleeve.

Released 29/06/2018Catalogue Number

pf13lp

Usually dispatched in 5-10 days

Album artwork for 154 by Wire
CD

£12.99

Remastered Digipack CD Version.

Released 22/06/2018Catalogue Number

pf13cd

Wire

154

Pink Flag
Album artwork for 154 by Wire
LP

£19.99

Remastered Vinyl with Inner Sleeve.

Released 29/06/2018Catalogue Number

pf13lp

Usually dispatched in 5-10 days

Album artwork for 154 by Wire
CD

£12.99

Remastered Digipack CD Version.

Released 22/06/2018Catalogue Number

pf13cd

154 from 1979 finds Wire moving away from its punk roots toward darker, more experimental horizons. There is less overt anger and insolence than in the past, and in its place is plenty of dark weirdness. truly disturbing at certain points, this album is a challenging listen. Beginning with the sinister I Should Have Known Better a song that has so little to do with the same-titled Beatles song that it really is scary, 154 follows with the shambling, atonal Two People in a Room and the choppy, robotic guitars of The 15th. The fiendish A Touching Display sounds like music for a primitive rite, while on A Mutual Friend, close british invasion-flavoured harmonies collide with harsh, dangerous-sounding guitar chords. The highlight here, and arguably the most incredible song in Wire's book, is Map Ref. 41 n, 93 w. words fail to conjure the otherworldly majesty of this track.

CD - Remastered Digipack CD Version.

LP - Remastered Vinyl with Inner Sleeve.

3CD - Remastered Triple CD Version with 80-page hardback book. The original album is presented on its own CD, accompanied by two bonus CDs with 19 cuts featuring Singles, B-sides, studio recordings and demo sessions.