DLX ADV Heroes & Heretics Box Set

£30.00

This box set kicks off our series that celebrates a list of unsung and essential individuals. Included are 3 envelopes, inside which you will find articles and accompanying sundry relating to their subject matter in hand (exclusive Ken Campbell audio on 7” vinyl, a signature Quinton Crisp silk scarf and a Sister Corita Kent 10 Rules sticker pack). Add to that, original additions from DLX ADV in the form of 2 x posters, an enamel pin badge, a download card for the first DLX ADV mix and their first ever recorded track ‘Everybody’s Bent’ pressed on beautiful 7” white vinyl.

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This box set kicks off our series that celebrates a list of unsung and essential individuals. Included are 3 envelopes, inside which you will find articles and accompanying sundry relating to their subject matter in hand (exclusive Ken Campbell audio on 7” vinyl, a signature Quinton Crisp silk scarf and a Sister Corita Kent 10 Rules sticker pack). Add to that, original additions from DLX ADV in the form of 2 x posters, an enamel pin badge, a download card for the first DLX ADV mix and their first ever recorded track ‘Everybody’s Bent’ pressed on beautiful 7” white vinyl.

This box set kicks off our series that celebrates a list of unsung and essential individuals. Included are 3 envelopes, inside which you will find articles and accompanying sundry relating to their subject matter in hand (exclusive Ken Campbell audio on 7” vinyl, a signature Quinton Crisp silk scarf and a Sister Corita Kent 10 Rules sticker pack). Add to that, original additions from DLX ADV in the form of 2 x posters, an enamel pin badge, a download card for the first DLX ADV mix and their first ever recorded track ‘Everybody’s Bent’ pressed on beautiful 7” white vinyl.

The Heroes and Heretics series started life as an exhibition in London by DLX ADV (a joint endevour by Va Va Records, Proud Robinson and Hellicar Studio). It showcased the lives and learnings from a perhaps lesser known cast of adventurers and protagonists from across the last 100 years. Individuals like Ken Campbell, who in his own words “wasn’t mad” he’d just read different books or Baroness Elsa Von Freytag Loringhoven, who depending on who you talk to, may have been the actual author of Duchamps most famous work. Ranging from Sister Corita Kent to Quentin Crisp, Ivor Cutler to Paul Robeson, the exhibition was accompanied by a printed set of journals bringing to life the key tenets of each of these figures and housed in a boxed set complete with assorted extras and exclusively licensed content previously unseen or heard.