Liam Frost is one of Manchester’s favourite singer-songwriters.
Since emerging from the city’s live scene and signing with Sony in 2005 to creating his own label he has remained an uncompromising independent artist. Liam has been championed by fans including Richard Hawley (who he has supported twice at The Met), Guy Garvey (who famously described him as “The UK’s answer to Bright Eyes”) and Clint Boon, who declared Liam “one of the greatest songwriters this city, nay this country has ever produced” during a radio interview at The Met in 2019.
To coincide with the reissue on vinyl of his 2006 debut album, Show Me How The Spectres Dance, (released as Liam Frost and The Slowdown Family), Liam and his specially-formed band joined us to record a unique filmed performance upstairs at The Met.
This special film, recorded over the course of a day with the band playing in the round in the centre of the historic Derby Hall space, features all 10 tracks from the much-loved album.
The show premieres online at 8pm on Thursday 5 November, as the re-released blue vinyl of the album hits stores the following day. The reissue itself was triggered in part by a huge outpouring of affection for the record following a ‘Tim’s Twitter Listening Party’ for ...Spectres… during lockdown, with many listeners sharing how much the record still means to them.
Liam says “It was really good to be able to celebrate the re-press of Show Me How The Spectres Dance by physically getting into a room with