C86
| C86 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compilation album by various artists | ||||
| Released | May 1986 | |||
| Recorded | 1985/86 | |||
| Genre | Indie pop, post-punk, indie rock, jangle pop, alternative rock | |||
| Length | 61:11 | |||
| Label | Rough Trade, NME | |||
| Compiler | Neil Taylor, Adrian Thrills, Roy Carr | |||
| Various artists chronology | ||||
| ||||
C86 is a cassette compilation released by the British music magazine NME in 1986, featuring new bands licensed from British independent record labels of the time. As a term, C86 quickly evolved into shorthand for a guitar-based music genre characterized by jangling guitars and melodic power pop song structures, although other musical styles were represented on the tape. In its time, it became a pejorative term for its associations with so-called "shambling" (a John Peel-coined description celebrating the self-conscious primitive approach of some of the music) and underachievement. The C86 scene is now recognised as a pivotal moment for independent music in the UK, as was acknowledged in the subtitle of the compilation's 2006 CD issue: CD86: 48 Tracks from the Birth of Indie Pop. In 2014, the original compilation was reissued in a 3CD expanded edition from Cherry Red Records; the 2014 box-set came with an 11,500-word book of sleevenotes by one of the tape's original curators, former NME journalist Neil Taylor.
The C86 name was a play on the labelling and length of blank compact cassette, commonly C60, C90 and C120, combined with 1986.