Laura Studarus - 01.12.2010  Manchester, England's Working for a Nuclear Free City are no strangers to ambition. Their catalogue is an odd blend of electronics-drenched, spiky dan...
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Ron Hart - 15.11.2010  It takes a mighty special band to make the fusion ofprogressive rock and modern dance work well together. And not since The BetaBand hit its early pea...
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Jory Spadea - 27.10.2010  If you live in the U.S., you've probably never heard of Working For a Nuclear Free City, a sad reality. Aside from a couple cameos on television, most...
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Pete Woolley - 15.10.2010 ?Jojo Burger Tempest? is a rotten name for a staggering piece of music. Sticking to this ballsy-honest approach, Working for a Nuclear Free City is a ...
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Sean Patrick Cooper - 12.10.2010  It’s easy to initially be put off by the particulars of Jojo Burger Tempest, the second album from Working for a Nuclear Free City. There is, for exam...
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JON YOUNG - 04.10.2010  Slippery and mischievous, England’s Working for a Nuclear Free City give short attention spans a good name on their second consecutive double album, h...
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Marc Hogan - 01.10.2010  There was a brief moment around 2006 when there seemed to be a new movement of krautrock-inspired indie dance bands. As if updating the sounds of Madc...
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Benjamin Hiorns - 03.09.2010  First of all let me start by saying that this is perhaps the most eclectic record I've heard all year. Is that necessarily a good thing though Well y...
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MARTIN ASTON - 03.09.2010 First, the Manchester four had to pick an unwieldy band name. Then they go and choose something baffling for their third album. At least 2007’s Busine...
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Jonathan Buchanan - 03.09.2010  When Working for a Nuclear Free City came to Los Angeles two years ago I went to see them, but didn’t know it was them until they fired off finale 'Je...
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