There are albums you listen to and albums that listen to you. The Hedrons' One More Won't Kill Us is the second kind. I played it constantly at twenty-two — on a CD player in a flat in Glasgow, on my laptop with headphones in the library, on my phone walking to work at the job I had before I knew what I actually wanted to do. It was the soundtrack to a period of my life that was chaotic and exciting and occasionally frightening, and it understood all of that in the way that only certain records do.
That was fifteen years ago. The CD is long gone. When the 15th anniversary vinyl pressing appeared from lastnightfromglasgow, I ordered it before I'd finished reading the description.
Why I Decided I Needed It
I came back to vinyl about three years ago, in the way that a lot of people in their mid-thirties come back to vinyl: gradually, then all at once. A turntable as a birthday present, a few records from charity shops, and then the realisation that listening to music this way — deliberately, with attention, without the ability to skip or shuffle — is a fundamentally different experience from streaming. Better, in the ways that matter to me.
I'd been rebuilding a collection of records that meant something to me. Not completism, not investment — just the albums that had been important at different points in my life, on a format that requires you to sit with them properly. One More Won't Kill Us was always going to be on that list. The 15th anniversary pressing from lastnightfromglasgow made it possible.
I ordered it from ALTOE for £10. Ten pounds for an album that shaped a year of my life. The maths is absurd in the best possible way.
Why The Hedrons Specifically
The Hedrons were a Glasgow band who made loud, urgent, melodic rock music at a time when that combination felt genuinely exciting. One More Won't Kill Us is their best record — the one where everything came together: the songs, the production, the energy. It sounds like a band who knew exactly what they were doing and were doing it with everything they had.
It also sounds, fifteen years later, completely undated. I put it on the turntable the evening it arrived and it sounded as immediate as it did when I first heard it. That's the test of a great record: whether it still has the same effect on you when the context has completely changed. One More Won't Kill Us passes that test without difficulty.
lastnightfromglasgow is an independent Scottish record label that has been releasing music by Scottish artists for years with genuine care and commitment. The anniversary pressing is exactly what it should be: a proper vinyl release, well-pressed, properly packaged, at a price that makes it accessible rather than precious.
What Happened When I Played It
I put it on a Friday evening, poured a glass of wine, and sat down to listen properly. Side one, track one, and I was twenty-two again — not in a nostalgic, wistful way, but in the way that great music collapses time. The songs were exactly as I remembered them and also somehow better, because I could hear things in them now that I couldn't hear then. The production, the arrangements, the way the songs are structured. Fifteen years of listening to music has made me a better listener, and listening to this record with better ears was a genuine pleasure.
I played it twice that evening. I've played it most weekends since.
How It Changed Things
It reminded me why I came back to vinyl. Not for the sound quality arguments, not for the aesthetic of the format, but for this: the experience of sitting with an album you love and giving it your full attention. Streaming has made music infinitely available and somehow less present. Vinyl makes it finite and immediate. You choose a record, you put it on, you listen to it. That's the whole thing.
One More Won't Kill Us is back in my life in the format it deserves. For £10, that's one of the better purchases I've made this year. I've also ordered two other lastnightfromglasgow releases since, because a label that cares this much about Scottish music deserves the support.
For £10, The Hedrons' One More Won't Kill Us 15th Anniversary Vinyl is the best ten pounds I've spent on music in years. Some albums just belong in your life. This one belongs in mine, and now it's back where it should be.
Get The Hedrons – One More Won’t Kill Us 15th Anniversary Vinyl here: The Hedrons – One More Won’t Kill Us 15th Anniversary Vinyl LP
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