RECORD STORE DAY 2023 RSD titles are limited to one copy per person. With fairness in mind, we have to prohibit multiple buys of the same release. Orders for multiple copies will be fully refunded! LP CLEAR VINYL Tracklisting Learn to Learn The Good Life The Story Waits for No One Its All Gone Quiet The Airport Line Yesterdays Paper Come Home Scratch the Surface The Week That Was, a one off concept album with a fractured, murder mystery subtext from Peter Brewis of Field Music was released by Memphis Industries in 2008. Inspired by the novels of Paul Auster and written after a period of self imposed retreat from the glow of screens, whether televisual, handset or monitor, The Week That Was was the first of Field Music’s extra curricular releases and features some of the Brewis brothers’ finest works, including the singles The Airport Line, Scratch the Surface and the beautiful Come Home. It’s a record that added to the brothers’ burgeoning reputation as some of the UK’s finest writers and producers of music. Mojo made it album of the month and it received great reviews from Pitchfork, Uncut and the Guardian. Such was the acclaim for the record that Peter put a band together and toured the UK, USA and Europe. But it was only ever intended to be a one off and, come the end of 2008, The Week That Was was no more with the vinyl deleted and no prospect of the songs ever being played live again. So it is with great pleasure that Memphis Industries announces that The Week That Was will be reissued for the first time to celebrate the 15 year anniversary of the album’s release. It has been remastered by David Brewis for additional audio clarity and comes on clear vinyl. “In these crop-to-fit times, omnivorous, visionary pop is at a premium, and theres all the more reason to prize an omnivorous visionary pop record like the Week That Was”. ***** MOJO Brewis constructs songs with architectural scale and precision–in its own prim, nostalgic, English way, it’s dazzling stuff”. 8/10 Uncut Never mind the retro-gazing moniker– The Week That Was is a band you need to hear now”. 8.2 Pitchfork