Campfire Punkrock Twenty
Frank Turner
Campfire Punkrock Twenty is a 2026 20th‑anniversary edition of Frank Turner’s debut EP Campfire Punkrock, originally released in 2006 via Xtra Mile Recordings. Issued on April 10, 2026 on CD, colored 12" vinyl, and digital platforms, the new version expands the original five-track folk‑punk release—Nashville Tennessee, Thatcher Fucked the Kids, This Town Ain’t Big Enough for the One of Me, Casanova Lament, and I Really Don’t Care What You Did On Your Gap Year—into a 13‑track, roughly 45‑minute album that pairs remastered studio recordings with archival live material from the same era. The package features reworked artwork with a shiny gold campfire on a matte black cover and is explicitly framed as a celebration of the point where Turner’s post‑Million Dead transition into solo acoustic, storytelling‑driven punk began.
Musically, Campfire Punkrock 20 preserves the raw, voice-and-guitar core of the 2006 EP—politically charged songs, wry autobiographical sketches, and small‑town observations—while adding context through a bonus live set from 2006 that captures Turner playing many of these pieces in their original, road‑tested form. The remastered tracks retain their scrappy folk‑rock energy and sharp, conversational lyricism, but the sequencing and added material invite listeners to hear them as the foundations of themes Turner would revisit across later albums: disillusionment with politics, pride and frustration in local scenes, and the tension between restless touring and a desire for belonging. In this way, Campfire Punkrock Twenty functions less as a simple repress and more as a small-scale retrospective, shining a spotlight on a formative release and showing how those early campfire‑punk songs have continued to echo through two decades of his songwriting.
Campfire Punkrock Twenty is a 2026 20th‑anniversary edition of Frank Turner’s debut EP Campfire Punkrock, originally released in 2006 via Xtra Mile Recordings. Issued on April 10, 2026 on CD, colored 12" vinyl, and digital platforms, the new version expands the original five-track folk‑punk release—Nashville Tennessee, Thatcher Fucked the Kids, This Town Ain’t Big Enough for the One of Me, Casanova Lament, and I Really Don’t Care What You Did On Your Gap Year—into a 13‑track, roughly 45‑minute album that pairs remastered studio recordings with archival live material from the same era. The package features reworked artwork with a shiny gold campfire on a matte black cover and is explicitly framed as a celebration of the point where Turner’s post‑Million Dead transition into solo acoustic, storytelling‑driven punk began.
Musically, Campfire Punkrock 20 preserves the raw, voice-and-guitar core of the 2006 EP—politically charged songs, wry autobiographical sketches, and small‑town observations—while adding context through a bonus live set from 2006 that captures Turner playing many of these pieces in their original, road‑tested form. The remastered tracks retain their scrappy folk‑rock energy and sharp, conversational lyricism, but the sequencing and added material invite listeners to hear them as the foundations of themes Turner would revisit across later albums: disillusionment with politics, pride and frustration in local scenes, and the tension between restless touring and a desire for belonging. In this way, Campfire Punkrock Twenty functions less as a simple repress and more as a small-scale retrospective, shining a spotlight on a formative release and showing how those early campfire‑punk songs have continued to echo through two decades of his songwriting.
Campfire Punkrock Twenty
Frank Turner
Campfire Punkrock Twenty is a 2026 20th‑anniversary edition of Frank Turner’s debut EP Campfire Punkrock, originally released in 2006 via Xtra Mile Recordings. Issued on April 10, 2026 on CD, colored 12" vinyl, and digital platforms, the new version expands the original five-track folk‑punk release—Nashville Tennessee, Thatcher Fucked the Kids, This Town Ain’t Big Enough for the One of Me, Casanova Lament, and I Really Don’t Care What You Did On Your Gap Year—into a 13‑track, roughly 45‑minute album that pairs remastered studio recordings with archival live material from the same era. The package features reworked artwork with a shiny gold campfire on a matte black cover and is explicitly framed as a celebration of the point where Turner’s post‑Million Dead transition into solo acoustic, storytelling‑driven punk began.
Musically, Campfire Punkrock 20 preserves the raw, voice-and-guitar core of the 2006 EP—politically charged songs, wry autobiographical sketches, and small‑town observations—while adding context through a bonus live set from 2006 that captures Turner playing many of these pieces in their original, road‑tested form. The remastered tracks retain their scrappy folk‑rock energy and sharp, conversational lyricism, but the sequencing and added material invite listeners to hear them as the foundations of themes Turner would revisit across later albums: disillusionment with politics, pride and frustration in local scenes, and the tension between restless touring and a desire for belonging. In this way, Campfire Punkrock Twenty functions less as a simple repress and more as a small-scale retrospective, shining a spotlight on a formative release and showing how those early campfire‑punk songs have continued to echo through two decades of his songwriting.
Campfire Punkrock Twenty is a 2026 20th‑anniversary edition of Frank Turner’s debut EP Campfire Punkrock, originally released in 2006 via Xtra Mile Recordings. Issued on April 10, 2026 on CD, colored 12" vinyl, and digital platforms, the new version expands the original five-track folk‑punk release—Nashville Tennessee, Thatcher Fucked the Kids, This Town Ain’t Big Enough for the One of Me, Casanova Lament, and I Really Don’t Care What You Did On Your Gap Year—into a 13‑track, roughly 45‑minute album that pairs remastered studio recordings with archival live material from the same era. The package features reworked artwork with a shiny gold campfire on a matte black cover and is explicitly framed as a celebration of the point where Turner’s post‑Million Dead transition into solo acoustic, storytelling‑driven punk began.
Musically, Campfire Punkrock 20 preserves the raw, voice-and-guitar core of the 2006 EP—politically charged songs, wry autobiographical sketches, and small‑town observations—while adding context through a bonus live set from 2006 that captures Turner playing many of these pieces in their original, road‑tested form. The remastered tracks retain their scrappy folk‑rock energy and sharp, conversational lyricism, but the sequencing and added material invite listeners to hear them as the foundations of themes Turner would revisit across later albums: disillusionment with politics, pride and frustration in local scenes, and the tension between restless touring and a desire for belonging. In this way, Campfire Punkrock Twenty functions less as a simple repress and more as a small-scale retrospective, shining a spotlight on a formative release and showing how those early campfire‑punk songs have continued to echo through two decades of his songwriting.
