Description
Additional information about this The Farm vinyl art.
The Farm – The Artist/s
The Farm are a British band from Liverpool. Their first album, Spartacus, reached the top position on the UK Albums Chart when it was released in March 1991. The band was formed in early 1983[3] and initially comprised Peter Hooton, Steve Grimes, John Melvin and Andrew John “Andy” McVann, who was killed in a police chase on 1 October 1986 at the age of 21, and to whose parents the band’s subsequent album, Spartacus, is dedicated. The Farm’s first song to reach the top part of the UK Singles Chart was “Groovy Train”, which reached the Top 10 in September 1990.] During the summer that year they played in Ibiza and were a key feature in the film A Short Film About Chilling. In late November that year, they released their most memorable song, “All Together Now”, which instantly became a hit and peaked at number three in the charts in December 1990. It was on the crest of this wave that their album Spartacus reached No. 1 in the UK the following year.
All Together Now – The Song
All Together Now is a song by British band The Farm and the second single from their debut album, Spartacus (1991). The song was released in November 1990 by Produce, Jive, Sire and Reprise. Vocalist of the band, Peter Hooton wrote the lyrics in his early 20s, after reading about the Christmas truce of 1914. The song was first recorded under the title “No Man’s Land” for a John Peel session in 1983. In 1990, Hooton wrote the chorus after Steve Grimes suggested putting the lyrics of “No Man’s Land” to the chord progression of Pachelbel’s Canon. To shorten the song for radio, the producer Suggs cut the song to three verses from its original six. Its accompanying music video received heavy rotation on MTV Europe. “All Together Now” has been used by numerous football teams since, as well as by the Labour Party for their 2017 general election campaign, often played during rallies.
The Subbuteo Player- The Shape
Modelled into a subbuteo player. Subbuteo is a tabletop football game in which players simulate association football by flicking miniature players with their fingers. The name is derived from the Neo-Latin scientific name Falco subbuteo (a bird of prey commonly known as the Eurasian hobby), after a trademark was not granted to its creator Peter Adolph (1916–1994) to call the game “Hobby”
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