
In 1996, at the height of Britpop, this band was a disruptive force. While elsewhere people were celebrating beer, patriotism, and nostalgia, Brian Molko sang of , addiction, and alienation. It was music like an open secret: vulnerable, provocative, radically honest. Songs like “Nancy Boy” or “36 Degrees” weren’t hits in the traditional sense, but statements. Edgy, uncomfortable, necessary.
With Placebo’s “RE:CREATED,” this debut isn’t simply being reissued—it’s being reinterpreted. It’s more of a director’s cut than a remaster. The band has opened up the old master tapes and added something that can’t be created in the studio: three decades of live experience. Because these songs have evolved on stage, night after night, City City. They’ve grown, become rawer, and sometimes more delicate. Live—that has always been the place where Placebo found their true form.
Anyone who has ever experienced how Molko’s voice cuts through a room knows that this isn’t just about nostalgia. It’s more of a dialogue between the past and the present. The new versions still carry the nervous energy of the nineties, but also the power of a band that has learned to trust itself. It’s not about improvement, they say, but about perfection.