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Image of a book cover featuring a bright orange cover with a subtle paper texture. The title “POSTCARDS FROM SCOTLAND” is printed in large uppercase black text at the top. Beneath it, the subtitle “Scottish Independent Music 1983–1995” appears in large yellow uppercase letters, arranged vertically down. A list of band names and artists appears in smaller yellow text below. At the very top, a review quote is printed in white which says "Loved it. A truly deep dove - John Niven". At the bottom, the author’s name “Grant McPhee” appears in white.

ABOUT THIS BOOK

PUBLISHER: Omnibus Press

ISBN: 9781915841957

RRP: £14.99

PAGES: 482

PUBLICATION DATE:
April 23, 2026

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Postcards from Scotland: Scottish Independent Music 1983-1995

By Grant McPhee

SCOTLAND, 1983. The key musicians of the country’s first wave of post-punk had either disbanded or taken the big gold road south in search of major label deals in London. Into the vacuum came a new generation – rebellious, young musicians determined to reinvent the scene in their own image.

In this compelling and dynamic oral history, POSTCARDS FROM SCOTLAND chronicles the radical transformation of Scotland’s independent music scene from 1983-1995. Based on over 100 first-person interviews with the musicians, record labels, venues, promoters, and journalists who shaped the era, Grant McPhee lets the key players tell the story in their own words – including the Cocteau Twins, Shop Assistants, Teenage Fanclub, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Primal Scream, and many more.

POSTCARDS FROM SCOTLAND is the definitive story of the radicals, misfits and experimentalists who made independent music what it is today.

Reviews of Postcards from Scotland: Scottish Independent Music 1983-1995

'This is a brilliant account of one of the most fruitful periods of Scotland's musical heritage. The cast list is longer than Norman Blake's hair circa 1992. Devour!' – Marc Riley

'A truly deep dive. Like the best rock and roll, not everyone will get this. And thank God for that' – John Niven

'An enjoyable ride through independent Scottish music of the era, and it will send you scurrying back to record, so many of which still sound refreshing and fearless' – Shindig 4****

'Enthrals… Creates something historically solid from a butterfly box of Scottish pop" Outside Left "It is a joy to follow the scene building under its own steam… a true taste of independence' – Classic Rock

'Compelling and dynamic oral history. The characters come to life on the printed page' – Louder Than War

'McPhee's investigation into individual bands, labels, record shops, distributors and studios is impressive.' – Record Collector 4****

'The definitive account of a seminal period in pop history. A labour of love, it's sometimes funny, sometimes bittersweet tribute.' – The Big Issue

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