Public Works and Utilities

The sixth Warrington-Runcorn album continues to explore New Towns and the demise of the post-war consensus. This time Gordon Chapman-Fox’s gaze falls on our public services that have been starved of cash or privatised since 1980.

“It seems ridiculous in hindsight for a developed country to have packed up and sold off vital infrastructure such as power, water or the rail network”, says Gordon. “40 years down the line, and all of these vital industries are barely functional. Their prime function now is to drain cash from our pockets and into the bulging wallets of shareholders.”

Gordon’s anger continues to power his desire to make Warrington-Runcorn a statement for the here and now, rather than an exercise in rose-tinted nostalgia. The People Matter, as side two’s sole track will attest.

“This album very much came from my live shows” says Gordon. “A lot of these tracks were designed to be performed live, and you will have heard quite a few of them if you’ve seen me live in the last year.”

There is a certain rawness to some of the tracks, not to mention an almost upbeat, danceable quality. This is no less atmospheric than previous albums, but it has become fused with an urge to get you to move your feet.

A rain-soaked electronic lament for a lost concrete future, like missing the last bus at the end of the world.
Mojo
Nobody within the modern age has created synth-led tracks in quite the same way as Warrington-Runcorn New Town Development Plan.
Far Out Magazine
No.TitleLength
A01Swift, Safe And Comfortable3m 13s
A02Sunset Over Stanlow4m 25s
A03800 Yards Down At Ince Six Feet3m 17s
A04Water Treatment Works4m 25s
A05Renewal And Regeneration4m 30s
B06The People Matter18m 40s
PressingDateDescriptionCopies
First pressingNovember 2025Solid black and transparent red, half and half4,000 copies