Joanna's Lost Debut Album 'Hello Flower' to Finally See Light After 35 Years

November 30, 2025
Joanna's Lost Debut Album 'Hello Flower' to Finally See Light After 35 Years
  • Nearly 35 years after Joanna's unreleased debut, a quarter-inch reel tape surfaced in a Manchester loft during lockdown, revealing eight tracks that would become the album Hello Flower.

  • The four members charted separate paths in music and other fields, with post-band activities including tours with Jarvis Cocker and collaborations with acts like SuperGiant.

  • Joanna built buzz as the most popular band without a record out, driven by standout live shows and media attention, including an interview on Kiss FM and support slots for notable peers of Shack and the Happy Mondays.

  • The reunion emerged as a natural outgrowth of renewed interest and chance, with optimism about how far they can go with the new release.

  • The band recorded an unreleased debut at Pentagon Studios, but internal decisions and waning label interest led to their dissolution after a London show failed to secure label backing.

  • A Northern indie band named Joanna formed in the late 1980s, featuring Neil Holliday, Terry Lloyd, Tyrone Holt, and Carl Alty, gaining early momentum in Manchester amid the Madchester scene.

  • The recovered tapes were mastered and pressed on vinyl, with recognition that the songs still sound fresh and could sit alongside contemporaries like the Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses.

  • Hello Flower, Joanna’s long-lost debut, is due for release in December, framed as a Bohemian time capsule of Northern music heritage; a release show is set for Low Four Studio in Deansgate on December 13, with additional performances eyed for the following year.

Summary based on 1 source


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