What if history had a soundtrack? The Tenementals reveal their debut album ’Glasgow: A History’  

The Tenementals Group Photo. Creidt Holger Mohaupt
The Tenementals Group Photo. Creidt Holger Mohaupt
Imagine walking through Glasgow’s old streets where every cobblestone echoes with songs of resistance, where a shipyard whistle signalling the end of the workday blends with protest chants, and where the ghosts of past revolutionaries sing along with modern-day troubadours.

This is the world The Tenementals invite you to inhabit with their groundbreaking debut album, ’Glasgow: A History (Vol. I of VI)’, launching at a free concert at Òran Mór at the end of November.

The Glasgow-based collective of academics, musicians, and artists has crafted nine powerful tracks that don’t just recount history - they reimagine it. This isn’t a nostalgic trip down memory lane, but rather a bold attempt to seize moments of Glasgow’s radical past and blast them into the future.

Frontman David Archibald, who is also Professor of Political Cinemas at the University of Glasgow, said: "What would history look like, feel like, smell like if it were created by a band’ Well, it would look, feel and smells very much like a newly cut 12" black vinyl fresh out of its sleeve.

"We love Glasgow and its history - we want the public to engage with our past especially young people and we are doing this through the universal language of music. The Tenementals album tells a radical history of a radical city in a radical way. The songs engage with the complex interplay of a city’s history - at personal and political levels - and explore moments of radical possibility - for instance, when the shipyards were occupied and ran by the workers.

"While our project has academic roots, it lives and breathes as a rock band, turning fragments of the city’s radical past into provocations for radical futures. We hope the songs operate as thought bombs, provocations to think and act in a radical way."

The album weaves together diverse narratives, from men who died fighting fascism in the Spanish Civil War to militant Suffragettes of the early 20th century. It explores the 1820 Radical War, Glasgow’s complex relationship with Empire and slavery, and celebrates the city’s culture of pleasure and excess.

Professor Archibald said: "The Tenementals is a wild research project. Some of the band members are academics and it’s got one foot in the university. But it has another foot in the city’s vibrant music community. For a project like The Tenementals to have a life, to breathe, it has to move to its own beat and be run on the logics of a rock band. That’s the only way that The Tenementals can be alive."

The band has already gained international recognition - their interpretation of the Nazi concentration camp protest song "Die Moorsoldaten" is now housed in Germany’s Documentation and Information Center Emsland Camps archives.

The Tenementals will perform at the Working Class Movement Library, Salford, on 24 November, alongside Maxine Peake and other performers, before returning to Glasgow for their free-to-enter album launch at Òran Mór on 27 November.

This Tenementals’ album is supported with funds from Glasgow City Heritage Trust.

The Tenementals video here:

The Tenementals: ’Glasgow: A History (Vol. I of VI)’

The album is available for pre-order as a limited edition 12" black vinyl with gatefold sleeve (£25) or digital download (£7) via Strength in Numbers Records

The Tenementals’ album features:
  • Bob Anderson - drums
  • David Archibald - vocals
  • Jessica Argo - cello/theremin
  • Sophie Askew - harp
  • Ronan Breslin - keys
  • Jen Cunnion - vocals
  • Mark Ferrari - bass guitar/vocals
  • Therese Martin - vocals
  • Sarah Martin - vocals
  • Olivia McLean - cello
  • Simon Whittle - guitars/vocals


The Tenementals: Glasgow: A History (Vol. I of VI) was recorded at La Chunky Studios, Glasgow by Ronan Breslin, and mixed/mastered by Johnny Smillie.

Examples of tracks from Glasgow: A History (Vol. I of VI) include:

A Passion Flower’s Lament

Written from the perspective of a statue that sits on the banks of the River Clyde which commemorates the Glasgow members of The International Brigadeswho died fighting in the Spanish Civil War.

The Owl of Minerva

This track riffs off Hegel’s aphorism, The Owl of Minerva takes flight at dusk. What would it be like if The Owl of Minerva was resident on the Finnieston Crane, one of the magnificent titan cranes that sits on the Clyde, at the foot of Minerva Street’ In that song she flies over the city, commenting on what she encounters and reflecting on the historical process.

Universal Alienation: We’re not Rats

This takes inspiration from a celebrated speech by Jimmy Reid, who was a major trade union figure in Glasgow in the 70s and elected as the University of Glasgow Rector.