Tag: Ulcragyceptemol

The Associates – Club Country (UK 12″) (1982)

Burning The Ground Exclusive

NEW 2026 Transfer
NEW Meticulous Audio Restoration

Original post date: September 2, 2015

Pride is often celebrated through the obvious anthems, the songs that become rallying cries on dance floors and parade routes. But some songs belong to Pride for different reasons. They represent individuality, self-expression, and the courage to exist outside the lines others draw for us. The Associates’ 1982 single “Club Country” is one of those songs.

Released on May 8, 1982, “Club Country” arrived during one of the most exciting periods in The Associates’ career. Following the success of “Party Fears Two,” Scottish duo Billy Mackenzie and Alan Rankine suddenly found themselves on the verge of mainstream success. The single climbed to No. 13 on the UK Singles Chart and helped pave the way for their acclaimed album Sulk, released just a few weeks later.

At first listen, “Club Country” is irresistible pop. Sweeping piano lines, dramatic flourishes, infectious rhythms, and a chorus that practically begs to be shouted back at the speakers. But like so much of The Associates’ music, there was more happening beneath the surface.

Billy Mackenzie was one of the most extraordinary vocalists of his generation. His voice could shift effortlessly from warm intimacy to soaring falsetto, often within the same line. There was theatricality, vulnerability, humor, and longing in every performance. He didn’t sound like anyone else because he wasn’t trying to be anyone else.

For many LGBTQ+ listeners, that authenticity mattered.

Mackenzie rarely discussed his private life publicly, preferring to let the music speak for itself. At a time when many artists were pressured to fit into neat categories, he embraced ambiguity and individuality. He dressed how he pleased, performed with fearless intensity, and refused to compromise the qualities that made him unique. Simply existing on his own terms became a quiet act of defiance.

The title “Club Country” evokes images of nightlife and belonging. Clubs have long been sanctuaries for LGBTQ+ communities, places where people could dance freely, build connections, and discover versions of themselves that the outside world often rejected. Whether or not Mackenzie intended the song to carry that meaning, it resonates deeply through that lens today.

There is also joy here.

Pride is not only protest and remembrance. It is celebration. It is finding your people under flashing lights and losing yourself in music for a few precious minutes. “Club Country” captures that exhilaration perfectly. It feels glamorous and strange, sophisticated and playful. It invites everyone onto the dance floor while reminding us that the most interesting people are often those who never quite fit in.

The Associates would never fully capitalize on their commercial breakthrough. Tensions between Mackenzie and Rankine eventually brought their partnership to an end, making this period frustratingly brief. Yet the music they created together remains timeless.

More than four decades later, “Club Country” still sparkles with originality. It stands as a reminder that Pride’s soundtrack isn’t built solely from obvious anthems. Sometimes it comes from artists who challenged expectations simply by being unapologetically themselves.

Billy Mackenzie gave the world permission to embrace eccentricity, sensitivity, glamour, and contradiction. He showed that individuality could be its own kind of strength.

For this year’s Soundtrack of Pride, “Club Country” deserves its place on the playlist.

Turn it up, step onto the dance floor, and celebrate everything that makes you beautifully impossible to define.

SIDE A:
Club Country (Extended Version) 6:58

SIDE B:
A.G. It’s You Again 3:06
Ulcragyceptemol 4:25

VINYL GRADE:
Vinyl: Near Mint
Sleeve: Near Mint

Chart Performance — The Associates: Club Country (1982)
Chart Peak Position Date
UK Singles Chart #13 1982
Ireland Irish Singles Chart #22 1982

RELEASE INFORMATION:
Label: Associates – asc2t
Format: Vinyl, 12″, 45 RPM, Single
Country: UK
Released: Apr 29, 1982
Genre: Electronic, Rock
Style: Post-Punk, New Wave, Synth-pop

CREDITS:

NOTES:
Track A is an uncredited extended version.
Track B1 is an early version of “Arrogance Gave Him Up”.

Buy the 12″ at DISCOGS

VINYL TRANSFER & AUDIO RESTORATION:
-DjPaulT
for BURNING THE GROUND

THE GEAR:
Turntable: Technics SL-1200MK7
Cartridge/Stylus: Ortofon Concorde Music Black
Phono Pre-amp: Pro-Ject Tube Box DS2
Phono Tubes: Genalex Gold Lion 12AX7 ECC83/B759 Gold Pins Vacuum Tube – Matched Pair
Audio Interface: MOTU M4
Turntable Isolation Platform: ISO-Tone™ Turntable Isolation Platform
Platter: Pro Spin Acrylic Mat
Stabilizer: Pro-Ject Record Puck
Record Cleaning: VPI HW 16.5 Record Cleaning Machine
Cleaning Solution: Turgikleen Record Cleaning Solution
Scanner: Epson Workforce WF-7610 Professional Printer/Scanner

SOFTWARE:
Recording/Editing: Adobe Audition 25 (Recording)
Down Sampling/Dither: iZotope RX Advanced 2
Artwork Editor: Adobe Photoshop CS5
Click Removal: Manual
FLAC/MP3 Conversion: dBpoweramp
M3U Playlist: Playlist Creator

RESTORATION NOTES:
All vinyl rips are recorded @ 32bit/float
FLAC (Level Eight)
Artwork scanned at 600dpi


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