BRATS - 1980  LP
BRATS - 1980  LP
BRATS - 1980  LP
BRATS - 1980  LP
BRATS - 1980  LP
BRATS - 1980  LP
BRATS - 1980  LP
BRATS - 1980 LP


HRR 675, ltd 500, 200 x black + 300 x silver vinyl, 425gsm heavy cardboard cover with high gloss lamination, 4 page insert with extensive liner notes, poster, 2nd pressing: ltd 500, different labels, new barcode, 250 x black + 250 x silver/ black splatter vinyl, 425gsm heavy cardboard cover with high gloss lamination, 4 page insert with extensive liner notes, poster, 3rd pressing: ltd 500, 250 x black + 250 x black/ grey bi-color split vinyl, cardboard cover with high gloss lamination, 4 page insert with extensive liner notes, poster

Yenz - Bass, Guitars (acoustic), Vocals
Michael Denner - Vocals (track 10), Guitars
Hank de Wank - Guitars
Monroe - Drums, Keyboards, Piano

01. OY-905
02. Tame Me (Insomniac)
03. B-Brains
04. Punk Fashion
05. Complex (Don't Destroy Me)
06. Fuel
07. Heavy Rocker
08. Pinned on My Eyelids
09. Sense My Boy
10. Ogcah Ghaszlihr / Accepted
11. Zombie People

1st + 2nd pressing: SOLD OUT!
3rd pressing: AVAILABLE


mastered for vinyl by Patrick W. Engel at Temple of Disharmony in January 2019


This is a serious lesson in metal history for you lot out there! The ultimate re-issue of the legendary »1980 Brats« album, complete with 4-page insert, poster and extensive liner notes. As you may or may not know, Copenhagen’s very own Brats morphed into the one and only Mercyful Fate when a certain Kim Bendix Petersen (aka King Diamond) joined them towards the very end of their short “career”.
Apart from the future Mercyful Fate guitar duo of Michael Denner and Hank Shermann (calling himself Hank de Wank back then) Brats featured singer and bass player Yenz (also known as Yenz Leonhardt or Yenz Cheyenne; born Jens Arnsted). Yenz later went on to form Geisha and Y (together with King Diamond bassist Hal Patino).
As he explains, the Brats were his first serious band: “In August 1980 I was 19. I was standing on Strøget, the main shopping street in Copenhagen. The street was packed in front of the Bristol Music Center in Copenhagen, where we were scheduled to play an in-store gig. This was the holy place where I since childhood had purchased my vinyl collection, and now it felt like the whole city was here to celebrate our new album. Old school punks and metal heads of the surging New Wave Of British Heavy Metal had a brief moment of unity over the release party for our new »1980 Brats« album. The newspapers and magazines were out in full force.”
Just like Yenz remembers, with songs such as “Punk Fashion”, ”Heavy Rocker” and “Zombie People” »1980 Brats« was a totally unique album mixing punk, hard rock and proto-metal. It was far ahead of its time!
By 1980, the Brats had already made some waves in Denmark by inking a deal with major label CBS and recording their debut 7” single “B-Brains” (a split affair with “Vivian Wants To Dance” by Tyrantz on the flip side). The engineer of the record was none other than a certain Flemming Rasmussen (anyone aware of an album entitled »Ride The Lightning«?).
Even before that, Hank The Wank’s Brats (minus Michael Denner on guitar and with a certain Franz Dee Zazter on vocals) had two numbers on a compilation album of Danish punk rock bands issued in April 1979: “I Do What I Do” plus “Magazine”. The record was called »Paere Punk« (nowadays a precious little collector’s item) and featured a photograph of the then current Danish prime minister on the front cover.
Soon after the release of »1980 Brats« the original band did fall apart, giving birth to Mercyful Fate (of course the actual reality was a bit more complex). Back then, for Yenz at first it felt “like reaching for the universe”: “I remember thinking: How the hell did we get here that fast? We want to thank everybody who was part of this crazy ride back then, and everybody who's been appreciating this album ever since.”

Matthias Mader