Slik ser originalen ut, fra -81
		
		
	 
Du har den altså? UK-pressing? Normalt har jeg ingenting til overs for bonuslåter, men det er noen på denne nyutgivelsen som er hinsides. F. eks "It´s All Right", "Speed It Up", "Black Punk Rockers" og ikke minst "Mercenaries". Pluss et skitstilig hefte med politisk historie i en musikalsk kontekst.
		
 
		
	 
Dessverre ikke Tremor

Har skamløst lånt bilde fra nett, det er av originalen
fra Sør-Afrika
mvh
S-mannen
Kanskje interressant for andre, fra Allmusic
The National Wake  were a mixed-race punk band in the township of Soweto in South Africa  between 1976, and 1981. The band grew out of the student uprising in  Soweto in 1976 through a series of loose jam sessions during the commune  explosion of that year. Founded by Jewish immigrant 
Ivan Kadey,   and the rhythmsection comprised of two Soweto-born brothers, Gary and  Punka Khoza, and guitarist Steve Moni, the band played its own mix of  punk, reggae, and township-inspired funk. They released one album in  1981, which sold a little more than 700 copies. Due to pressure from the  apartheid regime that refused the group permission to play in public,  the recording itself was eventually withdrawn. Given the oppression, the  band split that year, but their influence had already spread to dozens  of emerging bands from Johannesburg. Outside their native country, 
The National Wake languished in obscurity until 
the documentary film Punk in Africa led to their rediscovery. 
Kadey,  an architect who emigrated to Los Angeles, reissued the band's lone  recording in 2011 in South Africa (the Khoza brothers were deceased by  this time), and through the web and social media, let others know there  were 20 other tracks left in the can. In 2013, Light in the Attic issued  the the album with bonus material.