The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
16
new
SPILL FESTIVAL FEATURE: NXNE 2026 – SPILL MAGAZINE PRESENTS 5 QUESTIONS
SPILL NEW MUSIC: MADLANDS – “ARMAGEDDON”
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HUSH – FOR DOLLY
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FUTURE ISLANDS – FROM A HOLE IN THE FLOOR TO A FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
SPILL NEW MUSIC: NOFX TO RELEASE OFFICIAL SOUNDTRACK + ORIGINAL SCORE OF CAREER-SPANNING DOCUMENTARY ’40 YEARS OF FUCKIN’ UP’
SPILL NEW MUSIC: LORDS OF ACID – “DREAM BOY” | NEW SINGLE BY PIONEERING ELECTRONIC DANCE ACT
SPILL NEW MUSIC: DREAM POP ARTIST MOLLIE ELIZABETH SHARES VIRAL NEW TRACK “RUN RABBIT”
SPILL NEWS: LEGENDARY GOTH ROCK BAND CHRISTIAN DEATH ANNOUNCES THE USA ‘BABY BATS PARADE’ TOUR
SPILL NEW MUSIC: PICKLE JUICE – “A LITTLE MORE TIME”
SPILL FEATURE: FAITH, FRACTURE AND THE SPACE BETWEEN – A CONVERSATION WITH DAVE KRYSL OF HASTE THE DAY
SPILL LIVE REVIEW: ARKELLS w/ ERNESTO BARAHONA @ ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION NO. 1 BRANCH, CALGARY (AB)
SPILL NEWS: SAINT AGNES RELEASE NEW SINGLE “GET THEM OUT” INCLUDING NINE INCH NAILS VIDEO HOMAGE + NEW STUDIO ALBUM ‘YOUR GOD FEARING DAYS ARE ABOUT TO BEGIN’ OUT MAY 29
SPILL NEWS: POP MONTREAL 25th ANNIVERSARY – THE FIRST NAMES
SPILL NEW MUSIC: MOCK MEDIA SHARE NEW SINGLE “MOCK CITY ROCK” | FORTHCOMING ALBUM ‘RAT BASTARD’ DUE JULY 17 VIA MAC’S RECORD LABEL
SPILL NEWS: EVERCLEAR ANNOUNCES THE LUCKY 7 TOUR WITH SPECIAL GUESTS AMERICAN HI-FI
SPILL FESTIVAL FEATURE: NXNE 2026 – SPILL MAGAZINE PRESENTS 5 QUESTIONS
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
  • Spill Menu
    • Reviews
      • Album Reviews
      • Features
      • Live Reviews
      • Festivals
    • Portraits
    • Headlines
      • News
      • Contests
      • Events
      • Entertainment Headlines
      • Concert Listings
      • Toronto Concert Venues
    • New Music
      • Premieres
      • Track Of The Day
    • Track Of The Month
    • Books + Movies
    • About
Album Reviews
285
previous article
Spill Artist Portrait by Daniel Adams: Sam Roberts Band
next article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE GOTHSICLES - SQUID ICARUS

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE POP GROUP – CITIZEN ZOMBIE

The Pop Group
Citizen Zombie
Freaks R Us Records
RATING

Punk was declared dead not long after it exploded in popularity in the U.K. and the U.S. It was dismissed as a fad and no longer taken seriously as a revolutionary force. By the late ‘70s Punk artists and those influenced by punk went off into different creative directions; the collective term for this evolution in music is postpunk. Postpunk is not a genre per say; the bands that sprung out from this movement experimented and hardly sounded alike – many incorporating into their punk foundations R&B/funk styles, synthesizers, reggae, jazz and just about any sounds they deemed to be against the grain at the time.

Many postpunk outfits later ended up in the mainstream as success stories by making their music more accessible (Echo & the Bunnymen, Siouxsie & The Banshees, Wang Chung, Modern English, Adam Ant) but there was a cluster of bands who would have none of that. This rump of postpunk agit-pop bands embraced radical sounds and radical hard-left lyrics, championing socialism and change and railing against conformity, income inequality, and poverty. Gary Clail and Tackhead, Gang of Four, The Fall and Wire were in that group and so was The Pop Group. The Pop Group, led by provocateur lyricist/vocalist Mark Stewart, were uncompromising in their approach. Listening to their only two proper releases from those days – 1979’s “Y” and 1980’s “For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?” is often painful (like having a filling put in) and just as rewarding. Songs like “Forces of Oppression,” “Feed the Hungry,” and “We Are All Prostitutes” make you genuinely uncomfortable as Stewart growls and rants uncomfortable truths over an avant-garde medley of chaos that is the music. Yet afterwards you realize that you’ve just experienced a call to arms of sorts. The Pop Group was a musical Occupy Wall Street way ahead of its time.

Forward to 2015 and the band’s third album, Citizen Zombie, recorded because progress and human rights have taken a backseat to militarism, corporate greed and hate and that pisses Mark Stewart off. This is his way of fighting back. Citizen Zombie is actually more accessible musically than anything previously released by The Pop Group. “Mad Truth” has a disco beat, “Nowhere Girl” has a poppy ambient feel, and “S.O.P.H.I.A” is a dance track. Many of the tracks have infectious melodies and catchy refrains. Frankly, much of it sounds like Arcade Fire and this is a good thing. Yet subversion oozes from every pore of this album; every note and every lyric. Except this time, it’s not as blunt and overt; it’s radicalism by stealth. Citizen Zombie is a seemingly gentle bear sniffing the snacks in your palm, before he tears your arm off.

In times of perpetual war, poverty, a shrinking middle class and the greed of the one per cent, albums like Citizen Zombie are important. Or as Stewart put it in a recent interview when told that we no longer live in political times: “Not where I live. We’re engaged. People understand that they’re being fed bullshit and want change.”

– Matthew Coe Hill

thepopgroup.net
mchill.blog.com

Item Reviewed

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: THE POP GROUP – CITIZEN ZOMBIE

Author

Matthew Coe Hill

Here's what we think...
Spill Rating
Fan Rating
Rate Here
New Criteria
10
—
8.0
Total Spill Rating
—
Total Fan Rating
You have rated this
Album Reviews
album reviewscitizen zombiethe pop group
album reviews, citizen zombie, the pop group
About the Author
Matthew Coe Hill
RELATED ARTICLES
album reviews
 
8.0
Hush

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HUSH – FOR DOLLY

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on May 22, 2026
HUSH FOR DOLLY SIMONE RECORDS How do you craft a debut album to make exactly the right impact? Do you rush into it while the inspiration is red-hot, or do you take it slow to make sure everything sounds exactly as you envisioned? For Montreal [...]
 
8.0
Future Islands

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FUTURE ISLANDS – FROM A HOLE IN THE FLOOR TO A FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH

by John Porter on May 22, 2026
FUTURE ISLANDS FROM A HOLE IN THE FLOOR TO A FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH 4AD Has it really been two decades since Future Islands found their way onto the airwaves for the first time? It certainly has, and From a Hole in the Floor to a Fountain of Youth is [...]
 
9.0
Peter Frampton
8.3

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PETER FRAMPTON – CARRY THE LIGHT

by Aaron Badgley on May 15, 2026
PETER FRAMPTON CARRY THE LIGHT UME It is a good idea to forget what you think you know about Peter Frampton before you listen to his new album, Carry The Light. This is an extremely important album for Peter Frampton. Not only is it his first [...]
 
8.0
Shakey Graves

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHAKEY GRAVES – FONDNESS, ETC.

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on May 15, 2026
SHAKEY GRAVES FONDNESS, ETC. DUALTONE RECORDS When you decide to go lo-fi, make a DIY record, and make it work, there has to be a set of very solid musical reasons (unless it is a question of being forced to go cheap) behind it, and those [...]
 
8.0
Shhe

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHHE – THALASSA

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on May 15, 2026
SHHE THALASSA  ONE LITTLE INDEPENDENT RECORDS Your personal background comes into play at some point when you create music, and for the Scottish-Portuguese sound artist and producer Shhe (Su Shaw), for her new album Thalassa she references her [...]

Latest Album Reviews
View All
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HUSH – FOR DOLLY
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FUTURE ISLANDS – FROM A HOLE IN THE FLOO...
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PETER FRAMPTON – CARRY THE LIGHT
9.0
8.3
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHAKEY GRAVES – FONDNESS, ETC.
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHHE – THALASSA
8.0

STAY UP-TO-DATE
WITH OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER!

SPILL MAGAZINE MENU
  • Home | The Spill Magazine
  • Newsletter
  • Premieres
  • Track Of The Month
  • Album Reviews
  • Books + Movies
  • Features
  • Live Reviews
  • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • News
  • Events
  • Entertainment Headlines
  • Concert Listings
  • Toronto Concert Venues
  • About Us
  • Contests
  • New Music
  • Contributors
  • TOTD
  • Privacy Policy
  • The Scene Unseen
  • Newsletter

Copyright © 2026 | The Spill Magazine
All Rights Reserved.

TRENDING RIGHT NOW
   
 
SPILL FEATURE: IT’S ABOUT THE CLIMB – A CONVERSATION WITH GORILLAZ
3530
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SOCIAL DISTORTION – BORN TO KILL
1118
 
SPILL TRACK OF THE MONTH: DAYS OF SORROW – “WHO WE ARE”
951
 
SPILL LIVE REVIEW: TENILLE TOWNES @ RICHMOND HILL CENTRE FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, RICHMOND HILL
916
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BRIAN WILSON – ON TOUR 1999-2007
775
 
SPILL NEWS: THE AFGHAN WHIGS RELEASE NEW SINGLE “HOUSE OF I” | THEIR FIRST NEW MUSIC SINCE 2022
750
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: TORI AMOS – IN TIMES OF DRAGONS
691
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SQUEEZE – TRIXIES
619
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JOE JACKSON – HOPE AND FURY
614
 
SPILL MUSIC PREMIERE: IAMX – “INFINITE FEAR JETS {MIMETIC HEXES REWORK}”
563
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CODEFENDANTS – LIFERS
545
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BILL ORCUTT – MUSIC IN CONTINUOUS MOTION
541
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: NOAH KAHAN – THE GREAT DIVIDE
530
ENTERTAINMENT HEADLINES