Exclusive vinyl reissue of the first two legendary albums by the most famous and lasting band of Galicia's punk history. This is a limited edition of 1000 copies in thick good vinyl with the original covers.

“¿Cuándo se come aquí?” (“When do you eat here?”), originaly released in 1982 by DRO, is widely recognised today as a milestone in Spanish punk history, and the big bang moment in Galician rock. Before this album there was nothing, and to break with nothingness Galician punk arrived. German Coppini, Julian Hernandez, Miguel Costas and Alberto Torrado, after the mythical first EP “Ayudando a los enfermos” (“Helping the Sick”, recently reissued by Munster), shocked and terrorized a whole nation by way of much celebrated hymns: 15 songs recorded in 3 days, a bare half an hour of stomach ache for delicate spirits. Siniestro Total dared to say what no one said in a rough punk exercise that looks out for the Damned, Ramones or Buzzcocks in absolute anthems such as “Hoy voy a asesinarte” (“Today I'm gonna murder you”, after a Petula Clark original), “Las tetas de mi novia” (“My girlfriend's boobs”, originally by Gruppo Sportivo), “Todos los ahorcados mueren empalmados (“All the hanged die with a hard-on”), “Chochos Voladores” (“Flying Cunts”) or “Los esqueletos no tienen pilila” (“Skeletons don't have weenies”), songs with a raw guitar sound who are still being sung by thousands. These songs made the album a quick success in “alternative” charts, and very soon the album had sold well over 2000 copies. A total classic.

After the big bang of this first album, they record two songs for a National TV Show which get censored. Afterwards it would come their most acclaimed single, “Sexo Chungo/Me Pica un huevo” (also reissued by Munster on vinyl). Siniestro come back in 1983 with the aptly titled “Siniestro Total II: El Regreso”: a hilarious exercise of perverse punk where hardcore rythms, diverse machine sounds, bubbling pop and coral attempts of dubious taste collide, and where we find new anthems such as “Más vale ser punkie que maricón de playa” (“It's better to be a punk than a beach fag”) or “Opera tu fimosis” (“Have a phimosis operation”, after a Rezillos original). This album is recorded as a trio since German Coppini has left the band, but the style remains the same: scatological and genital references abound, making such a Spanish rock illuminati as Miguel Rios cry in the press for the state of music (“Where has Spanish rock gone to when one can sing things such as “I've got an itching in my ball”?”). Excellent, epic lyrics follow, such as “Al que eyacula Dios le ayuda” (“God helps him who eyaculates”). Produced much better than the first album, this album marks the end of pure punk for Siniestro Total.

Get these two pieces of Spanish punk history NOW!!