This CultFavorite '80s Band's Debut Album Vanished for Decades—Now It's Finally Back Ben MundFebruary 15, 2026 at 8:02 PM 0 Photo by Jim Dyson on Getty Images Scritti Politti's 1982 debut, Songs to Remember, has spent so long in semimythical status that plenty of people know about it without ever having heard it. The problem? Access. Original vinyl has been scarce for decades, and the album hasn't been reissued or available in a way that you can easily play and hear how the band started. That changes this spring.
- - This Cult-Favorite '80s Band's Debut Album Vanished for Decades—Now It's Finally Back
Ben MundFebruary 15, 2026 at 8:02 PM
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Photo by Jim Dyson on Getty Images
Scritti Politti's 1982 debut, Songs to Remember, has spent so long in semi-mythical status that plenty of people know about it without ever having heard it. The problem? Access. Original vinyl has been scarce for decades, and the album hasn't been reissued or available in a way that you can easily play and hear how the band started.
That changes this spring. Songs to Remember is set for a full reissue on April 10, 2026, with a new remaster arriving on digital, CD, and vinyl. This is a standard, full release, rather than a limited edition with intended scarcity as we've seen with many other rereleases.
If your impression of Scritti Politti begins with the later, polished hits, the debut can feel like a very different animal. It's rougher around the edges but still has that post-punk urgency. And while it might be a little less 'produced,' it's still full of sharp rhythms and urgency. Nine tracks, no filler or bloat. This is a band pushing out it's first, hard-won work.
The singles alone explain why it kept its cult reputation. 'The Sweetest Girl' is clever without sounding smug, 'Faithless' maintains a relentless drive, while 'Asylums in Jerusalem / Jacques Derrida' is political with out being preachy.
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The new edition is being remastered by Alex Wharton at Abbey Road, and the vinyl is slated to keep the original embossed artwork (an important detail for anyone who understands how much the physical presentation helped build the record's aura in the first place). With albums that spent years half-available, packaging is part of the reason fans want a proper, official version rather than a patchwork of uploads and secondhand copies.
Fans are clearly ready for a new copy of this classic album. 'This is a really great and really weird album,' one fan noted. 'Super curious to hear the remastered edition, since the original production was very...lackluster.'
The album is being released by Rough Trade Records. Rough Trade's founder Geoff Travis had this to say about the band's initial album:
"Mark E Smith a Rough Trade artist at the time once said to me, 'Scritti have the best rhythm section in rock music.' He didn't mention Green Gartside, so I don't know what he thought of him. I do know that at Rough Trade we were all in thrall to Green's honeyed voice and his brilliant lyric writing. These were heady days when the amount of sheer talent walking into the Rough Trade universe was simply overwhelming. None more so than Green who epitomized the intelligent assault on the citadel of pop music perfection. I remember being very proud of Songs to Remember during a time when it was still a fairly new experience for us to be releasing full albums into the world."
This welcome rerelease puts a great, influential debut back on the shelf, where it should have been all along.
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This story was originally published by Parade on Feb 15, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Source: "AOL Entertainment"
Source: Entertainment
Published: February 15, 2026 at 12:45PM on Source: PRIME TIME
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