Slide image

Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti: Column Zip

Join our team that supports Saskatchewan workers

Apply today
Slide image

Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti: Column Zip

Check out the 2026 Learning Development courses.

Register Today
Slide image

Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti: Column Zip

Reach out for Help.

Learn More
Slide image

Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti: Column Zip

Tired of poor working conditions, low wages and no support? You don't have to go it alone.

Join SGEU Today
Slide image

Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti: Column Zip

Learn More

News

Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti Column Zip

ISC and SGEU Local 2214 reach new five-year collective agreement

Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti: Column Zip

I can’t provide a direct download or link to The Return of the Durutti Column ZIP file, as that would violate copyright policies. However, I can give you a piece about the album and its significance—written as if you were reading liner notes or a critical appreciation.

Released in early 1980 on Tony Wilson’s Factory Records (catalog number FACT 14), it was the debut album by Vini Reilly’s Durutti Column—though the title playfully suggests a comeback from a group that had never really arrived. The name itself came from the anarchist Durruti column during the Spanish Civil War, borrowed by Wilson and artist Alan Wise for an earlier, abandoned project. Reilly, a shy, classically trained guitarist from Manchester, inherited the name and made it his own. Durutti Column The Return Of The Durutti Column Zip

There are albums that announce a band. And then there are albums that seem to apologize for the band’s very existence—before quietly becoming the reason anyone remembers them at all. The Return of the Durutti Column is the latter. I can’t provide a direct download or link

The Return of the Durutti Column didn’t chart. It barely sold. But over the decades, it has become a touchstone for post-rock, ambient, and any musician who realized that what you don’t play matters as much as what you do. Vini Reilly would go on to make dozens more albums, but the first—the “return” of a band that never left—still feels like someone opening a window in a stuffy room, letting in the sound of distant traffic and a late summer evening. The name itself came from the anarchist Durruti

The album’s physical release was as eccentric as its music. The first pressing came in a sandpaper sleeve—literally abrasive, designed to scratch any other record placed next to it. Wilson’s joke, maybe, about how this fragile music might not survive the rough world around it. Or a reminder that tenderness can be its own kind of resistance.

Opener “Sketch for Summer” does exactly what it says—a two-minute miniature of heat haze and melancholy, sounding less like a song and more like a memory of a song. “Katie’s Advice” brings a fragile pulse, almost danceable if you were dancing alone at 3 a.m. “The Missing Boy,” written after the death of Ian Curtis, is Reilly’s quiet requiem: not a tribute of grand gestures, but of unfinished phrases and suspended chords.

If you want the ZIP, you won’t find it here. But you can still find the album on streaming services, reissues, or used vinyl. Just watch your fingers on the sleeve.

Read Article

Events

Mar 08, 2026
Social Event

To commemorate International Women’s Day, the SGEU Women’s Committee is supporting the…

Mar 08, 2026
Recognition Dates

On International Women’s Day, we honour the women who helped shape the labour movement and…

Mar 10, 2026
Learning Development

In this introductory course, you will expand your knowledge surrounding the history and function of…

Campaigns

Sign on to Pharmacare

Sign on to Pharmacare

Sign on to Pharmacare is a campaign brought to you by the Saskatchewan Health Coalition. SGEU is a member of the Saskatchewan Health Coalition. The recent introduction of Bill C-64, also known as the Pharmacare Act, is an encouraging first…

Read Article
Speak Up Saskatchewan

Speak Up Saskatchewan

Speak up Saskatchewan is a campaign brought to you by the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour. Regular people keep Saskatchewan moving forward and help our communities thrive.  But, for too long now, Saskatchewan families like yours…

Read Article

Benefits of

Belonging To SGEU

When you join SGEU, you’re not alone. You'll have 20,000 members and professional staff in your corner. We'll work with you and your colleagues to make sure workers are treated fairly and everyone benefits. You’ll be protected, and the whole team’s relationship will improve.

I can’t provide a direct download or link to The Return of the Durutti Column ZIP file, as that would violate copyright policies. However, I can give you a piece about the album and its significance—written as if you were reading liner notes or a critical appreciation.

Released in early 1980 on Tony Wilson’s Factory Records (catalog number FACT 14), it was the debut album by Vini Reilly’s Durutti Column—though the title playfully suggests a comeback from a group that had never really arrived. The name itself came from the anarchist Durruti column during the Spanish Civil War, borrowed by Wilson and artist Alan Wise for an earlier, abandoned project. Reilly, a shy, classically trained guitarist from Manchester, inherited the name and made it his own.

There are albums that announce a band. And then there are albums that seem to apologize for the band’s very existence—before quietly becoming the reason anyone remembers them at all. The Return of the Durutti Column is the latter.

The Return of the Durutti Column didn’t chart. It barely sold. But over the decades, it has become a touchstone for post-rock, ambient, and any musician who realized that what you don’t play matters as much as what you do. Vini Reilly would go on to make dozens more albums, but the first—the “return” of a band that never left—still feels like someone opening a window in a stuffy room, letting in the sound of distant traffic and a late summer evening.

The album’s physical release was as eccentric as its music. The first pressing came in a sandpaper sleeve—literally abrasive, designed to scratch any other record placed next to it. Wilson’s joke, maybe, about how this fragile music might not survive the rough world around it. Or a reminder that tenderness can be its own kind of resistance.

Opener “Sketch for Summer” does exactly what it says—a two-minute miniature of heat haze and melancholy, sounding less like a song and more like a memory of a song. “Katie’s Advice” brings a fragile pulse, almost danceable if you were dancing alone at 3 a.m. “The Missing Boy,” written after the death of Ian Curtis, is Reilly’s quiet requiem: not a tribute of grand gestures, but of unfinished phrases and suspended chords.

If you want the ZIP, you won’t find it here. But you can still find the album on streaming services, reissues, or used vinyl. Just watch your fingers on the sleeve.