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Alternative Colchester

Alternative Colchester

By: Steve Green & Tim Young
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Alternative Colchester is where football rivalry meets punk rock passion.


Join Tim Young (Labour councillor, former Colchester mayor, and die hard Ipswich Town fan) and Steve Green (Special Duties founder and long suffering Colchester United supporter) as they prove that two blokes who disagree about football can agree that 1977 changed everything.


They were both in the room when Stiff Little Fingers supported Tom Robinson Band at Essex University in 1978 - they just didn’t know it until 2023. Now they’re bringing that shared punk spirit to the airwaves with fierce football debate, classic tracks from 1976 -1980, and the kind of authentic banter that can only come from forty-plus years of living the life they’re talking about.


One show. Two teams. Five decades of passion. No nostalgia without nuance. This is Alternative Colchester - because like the best punk songs, local football deserves to be loud, honest, and impossible to ignore.

© 2026 Alternative Colchester
Music
Episodes
  • Alternative Colchester #10
    May 15 2026

    Request a record from 1976-1981

    Steve Green recorded episode 10 of Alternative Colchester without his partner in crime, Tim Young, who was unavailable due to health reasons, but he will be back, all guns blazing, for episode 11.

    Tim had been looking forward to talking about Ipswich's promotion to the Premier League, but not only does producer Luke Fitch carry the Tractor Boys flame in his absence, but the show's guests also include Ipswich's very own Red Flag 77's Rikki Flag and John "Fanny" Adams, who get to play some of their favourite records from 1976–1981.

    Tim's choices are played in his absence, while Steve's picks include tracks by Bullitz 23 and The Scissor Fits, both of whom have got in touch with the show and definitely meet the criteria. Bullitz 23 are new to us, but their sound is clearly influenced by the sound of 1977, while The Scissor Fits, hailing from Hounslow, were actually there.

    Other records played are classics by Johnny Moped, The Drones, Department S, Sleepers, Blondie, The Saints, The Boys, The Carpettes, Tom Robinson Band, and of course Stiff Little Fingers. Red Flag 77's alter ego, Blue Flag 78, also features.

    www.alternativecolchester.co.uk

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    1 hr and 53 mins
  • Alternative Colchester #9
    May 1 2026

    Request a record from 1976-1981

    Episode 9 of Alternative Colchester revisits the years when punk was more than just a sound — it was a statement. Hosted by Steve Green and Tim Young, with guest Professor Jules Pretty, the episode blends nostalgia, attitude, and fresh insight as they explore how punk and environmentalism intersected from 1976 to 1981.

    The episode explores how punk, between 1976 and 1981, became a tool for resistance and social commentary. Jules selects five tracks that highlight punk’s ecological undercurrent, while Steve and Tim each bring four of their own. Their thirteen-track playlist captures the era’s turbulence and creativity, reflecting both social unrest and the desire for renewal.

    Jules draws parallels between punk’s defiance and the green movement’s challenge to neglect, showing punk was about more than destruction — it was about awareness. From The Clash to Joy Division, The Cure and Siouxsie & The Banshees, the tracks reflect unrest and hope.

    Jules’ picks highlight the tension between decaying cities and fragile landscapes, between chaos and the hope for change—issues that feel relevant today. His selections form the thoughtful backbone of the episode.

    Steve leans into classic punk’s energy with Suburban Studs, Stiff Little Fingers, and The Dole, while Tim picks Wreckless Eric, The Skids, The Flys, and, naturally, Stiff Little Fingers, showing how punk’s chaos was underpinned by a desire for transformation.

    A single modern track, “Operation Underground” by Hi‑Fi Spitfires, fits seamlessly with the classics, its punk-reggae raw energy and lyrics proving punk’s spirit is still alive. Its DIY ethics and anthemic power bridge past and present.

    Beyond music, the show is about memory and community. Steve and Tim’s chemistry and football banter evoke how youth culture, sport, and music shaped the era, conjuring a vivid picture of the seventies when creativity flourished amid hardship.

    Jules provides an intellectual perspective on sustainability and rebellion, showing how punk bands were early environmentalists, railing against pollution and alienation even if not in those words.

    The episode’s arc moves from chaos to consciousness, with early tracks channelling punk’s fire, later songs adding nuance, and with Hi-Fi Spitfires' Operation Underground, injecting fresh blood. The playlist is a story of endurance and evolution.

    The blend of scholarship and spirit keeps the pace lively. Jules’ insights invite listeners to hear familiar songs differently, while Steve and Tim bring humour and the sensibility that shaped punk’s first wave.

    This isn’t just nostalgia, it’s re-evaluation. By linking the music of that era to today’s environmental issues, the show proves rebellion can still teach us about hope.

    Whether you’re a lifelong punk fan or new to the scene, this episode guides you through punk’s deeper meaning, linking crashing guitar chords to protest and renewal. Jules Pretty makes it clear: music and environment both thrive on urgency and truth.

    With its humour, insight, and energy, Alternative Colchester #9 shows the past isn’t done speaking. Punk and environmentalism combine in one loud, human conversation. So turn it up — punk’s still alive, and Alternative Colchester is proof.

    www.alternativecolchester.co.uk

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    1 hr and 35 mins
  • Alternative Colchester #8
    Apr 17 2026

    Request a record from 1976-1981

    Episode 8 of Alternative Colchester sees Steve Green and Tim Young welcome Ben Howard from Keep Colchester Cool to the show. Ben fits into the Alternative Colchester setup like a well-worn leather jacket — comfortable, sharp and full of character, with plenty to say about football and punk rock in equal measure.

    The football chat is particularly rich this week. Colchester United's anticipated takeover by a John Terry-led consortium provides plenty of optimism and excitement, while the Tractor Boys' derby win at Norwich is dissected by Tim and producer Luke alongside broader football chat that keeps the banter lively throughout.

    The music is the real star though, with a tracklist that reads like a love letter to first wave punk. John Cooper Clarke opens with Suspended Sentence, The Boys follow with Cast Of Thousands, and The Damned deliver the gorgeous Love Song. The Germs bring LA punk fury with Lexicon Devil, The Saints make a long overdue appearance with This Perfect Day, and The Stranglers deliver their gloriously menacing take on Walk On By. XSLF contribute Here We Are Nowhere, Crass — much to Steve's objection — arrive with the uncompromising So What, and Sweden's Dead Pollys tip their hat to a certain Mr Strummer. A classic Monty Python interlude keeps things delightfully unpredictable, before the obligatory Stiff Little Fingers track Mr Fire Coal Man and The Clash's Protex Blue round things off perfectly. Essential listening.









    www.alternativecolchester.co.uk

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    1 hr and 45 mins
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