Interpol - Antics (20th Anniversary Edition, Red Colored Vinyl) (Preorder: Ships October 25, 2024)

Interpol - Antics (20th Anniversary Edition, Red Colored Vinyl) (Preorder: Ships October 25, 2024)

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Pickup available at 2235 Fern Street Usually ready in 4 hours

Interpol - Antics (20th Anniversary Edition, Red Colored Vinyl) (Preorder: Ships October 25, 2024)

2235 Fern Street

Pickup available, usually ready in 4 hours

2235 Fern Street
San Diego CA 92104
United States

6197844286

*Please note: This title will ship on or around its release date of October 25, 2024. Date and availability is subject to change. We cannot guarantee the coloring of the vinyl will be identical to the mock-up. We will ship all items in your order when the last title is released and available – so if you would like anything else on your order shipped separately, please place separate orders. Thank you.

Interpol’s iconic sophomore album celebrates 20 years as part of Matador’s ongoing Revisionist
History catalog series, released on limited edition red vinyl available exclusively to retailers. The reissue supplements a wider anniversary campaign that draws attention to Interpol’s classic, era-defining 2004 studio album through previously unreleased music, concert footage, and photos.

After two years of seemingly endless tours, the quartet returned in early 2004 to Peter Katis’s Tarquin Studios in Bridgeport, CT to record their second album. They had already debuted a handful of songs earmarked for Antics on the road: “Length of Love,” “Narc,” “C’mere.” Meanwhile, having revisited – and reinvented – the material from ‘Bright Lights’ night after night, they discovered new strengths. There was more room for experimentation in these songs, for toying with arrangements and intricacies of individual parts, than on their debut.

With ‘Antics,’ Interpol has delivered a disc even more engaging than its celebrated predecessor, without sacrificing any of the depth that has made them such an important band for so many. The songs are at once catchier and more variegated, revealing themselves over time to a degree heard on few current releases, and nothing is ever obvious. Frontman Paul Banks describes, “A lot of time, there are specific topics or events that that inspire the songs, but it’s not explicit in my lyrics.“ Indeed, with Interpol, things are rarely what they seem.