Recreational Records was a British record label set up in 1981 by the Bristol record shop and distributor Revolver Records. Originally formed as an independent record label with its own distribution as part of the Cartel.
Revolver Records and the Cartel
Revolver Records (not to be confused with Revolver Music) was a long established record store based at The Triangle, Clifton, Bristol, and in the 1970s was a hangout of Mark Stewart, Nick Sheppard, and other local musicians. It also had a distribution arm, which allowed it to distribute its own records (under the Recreational label) and those of other Indie labels (Monopause Records, etc.) via its participation in the Cartel.
The Cartel was a co-operative record distribution organisation in the United Kingdom, set up by a number of small independent record labels to handle their distribution to record shops. By pooling their resources it allowed them to compete with the larger distribution operations of the major record labels, and also to gain access to the larger shop chains. The association of regional distributors included some of the most notable labels of the 1980s UK post-punk and indie scene: Backs (Norwich), Fast Forward (Edinburgh), Native (Sheffield), Nine Mile (Leamington Spa), Probe (Liverpool), Revolver (Bristol), Red Rhino (York) and Rough Trade (London).[1][2][3][4]
Artists
Animal Magic: Were "a brassy Bristol sextet led by vocalist Howard Purse, they swiftly developed from a punk to a hardcore dancefloor sensibility."[5]
Ivory Coasters: Afro beat/Highlife band that at one time included Prince Nico Mbarga.[6] They also released the 12" single 'Roscoe/Kinzengi Nzengi/1Z4IC', on Politone (PT001) in 1981.
Mouth: After their single on Recreational, this funk band went on to release records on the Y label, including the track 'Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea', on the 1982 'Birth of the Y' compilation LP.[7]
Scream And Dance: Tribal funk band. ‘In Rhythm’ was remixed by DJ Marcelle/Another Nice Mess and released on a German double LP, ‘Meets Her Soulmates At Faust Studio Deejay Laboratory’ in 2008.[8]
Talisman: A multi-racial Reggae Band who provided the labels very first single and UK Indie Chart hit (#17).[9] Dole Age also became Single of the Week and the Record Sleeve of the Year in the NME.[10] In 1982 as well as playing the Glastonbury Festival, they were the opening act for The Rolling Stones concert at Ashton Gate, Bristol.
The X-Certs: Started off as a Punk Band in 1978 and recorded several tracks for Heartbeat Records, had two tracks on Bristol Recorder 2, and were including reggae by the time of their 1981 Recreational single. This was to be their last recording as they split up in early 1981.
Releases
The Recreational catalogue[11] listed singles with the Sport prefix (some had 7" and 12" versions), apart from The X-Certs 7" single Together/Untogether, which is listed as Play 1.
Singles
Cat No.
Artist
Title
Date
Configuration
PLAY 1
The X-Certs
Together/Untogether
1981
7”
SPORT 1
Talisman
Dole Age/Free Speech
1981
7”
SPORT 12
Talisman
Dole Age/Free Speech
1981
12”
SPORT 2
Talisman
Run Come Girl/Wicked Dem
1981
7”
SPORT 22
Talisman
Run Come Girl/Wicked Dem
1981
12”
SPORT 3
Mouth
Ooh, Ah, Yeah!/Ooh?
1981
7”
SPORT 4
Electric Guitars
Work/Don't Wake The Baby
1981
7”
SPORT 52
Animal Magic
Get It Right/Grip/Crow Black/Go Funky-Doo-Lally
1982
12”
SPORT 6
Ivory Coasters
Mungaka Makossa/Chavakali Charlie
1982
7”
SPORT 62
Ivory Coasters
Mungaka Makossa/Chavakali Charlie/The Bongo That Ate Pik Botha
1982
12”
SPORT 7
Scream And Dance
In Rhythm/Giacometti
1982
7”
SPORT 72
Scream And Dance
In Rhythm/In Pink & Black/Giacometti/Giacometti (wicked mix)
1982
12”
SPORT 8
Animal Magic
Standard Man/Trash That Blad!
1982
7”
Reissues on other labels
Bristol Archive Records are currently providing Recreational back catalogue tracks for download, through the usual outlets (Amazon, iTunes, etc.).