
VIA PRESS RELEASE | 2026 marks the 40 years of Truthdare Doubledare, the second studio album from UK synth outfit Bronski Beat.
Four decades on, London Records revisit the album with its first-ever reissue, presented across a range of formats including digital, limited edition purple LP, picture disc LP, 1CD and expanded 3CD. Fully remastered, the release also unearths rare and previously unreleased studio sessions and live recordings. The 40th Anniversary editions of Truthdare Doubledare will be released July 3 and are available to pre-order HERE.
New remixes include a striking rework of “Hit That Perfect Beat” from Doncaster-born, London-based DJ I. JORDAN. Injecting the original track with euphoric synth lines, complex arpeggios and a driving vocal hook, the rework is built for the modern dance floor whilst respecting the original’s important roots.
The album emerged during a period of transformation for Bronski Beat. Following the departure of founding frontman Jimmy Somerville, Steve Bronski and Larry Steinbachek enlisted friend of the band John Jøn Foster to take up the helm as lead vocalist. What began as informal studio collaborations soon culminated in the creation of the album’s first single (and era-defining smash) “Hit That Perfect Beat.”


That said, I have this to say about 1980’s Laughter; it never fails to make me laugh. Which is to say Laughter isn’t such an ironic title after all. Even at his most lugubrious Dury–who was, and will likely always remain, England’s most lovable vulgarian–cheers me up, and that’s a rare gift. Down in the mouth Dury may have been, but he hadn’t lost his cheek, and he still managed to produce an album chockfull of dance friendly grooves and happy-making pub rock sing-alongs.




Up in It emerged in 1990 and was an immediate breath of fresh air. A whole lot of loud and heavy stuff was steamrolling toward a point of detonation, but the Afghan Whigs essentially came out of nowhere and infused the template with better than average songwriting right out of the gate. The LP’s best song is its opener, “Retarded” an almost ridiculously catchy hard rocker reinforcing that Dulli and company weren’t just hitched to a trend on the upswing. It’s sort of cut that can get stuck in one’s head for days, as this writer can attest, and reinvestigation has proved this capability undiminished.







Willie Dunn’s best-known song is “I Pity the Country,” in large part because it was one of two recordings featured on Native North America (Vol. 1). That revelatory compilation, GRAMMY®-nominated and prominent in numerous year’s best lists including the top 10 reissues offered by this very website, smartly placed “I Pity the Country” as track one on side one.










































