Jimmy Endicott was murdered.
Maxwell Reid was part of something big once. At least for a little while. As bass player for post-punk darlings La Plage, he toured the world with their wondrous hit single (and single hit) Kreuzberg Wiedersehen.
Great days. So he keeps getting told.
Forty years on - and now a part-time lecturer, part-time Northern Soul DJ - Max investigates the death of his old lead singer, Jimmy Endicott.
Set on a journey that brings him face to face with bitter ex-bandmates, post pandemic cults, corrupt council employees, conspiracy theorists and a messianic club owner all the while helped (or hindered) by Debs Endicott, volatile adult daughter of the deceased - Max discovers that the secret behind Jimmys death lies in a past he has mostly managed to forget.
Until now.
Told over 45 tracks, and divided into Side A and Side B, Black Vinyl is part mystery, part alternative history, part fractured memorial to the ghosts of the 80s music scene, all played out as though on a scratched record that keeps skipping back to the same haunting refrain:
Jimmy Endicott was murdered.