Propagandhi issues 'At Peace' pink vinyl
- Propagandhi’s album “At Peace” was released on May 2, 2025 via Epitaph Records, with a translucent pink glass vinyl edition sold as an indie exclusive. - Amoeba Music listed the pink LP at $29.98, while Record Store Day’s store finder identified the variant as Epitaph’s indie-exclusive pressing. - Epitaph’s U.S. store lists a standard black LP, while indie retailers and local shops continue handling the pink edition.
Propagandhi’s “At Peace” is not a newly announced record but a May 2, 2025 release that is still circulating in collector formats through indie retail. The Canadian punk band’s official site says the album is “out now” and gives May 2, 2025 as the release date. Epitaph Records, which released the album, is currently listing a standard black LP on its artist page, while the translucent pink version has shown up through indie channels rather than as the main U.S. label-store variant. The pink pressing in question is being sold as “Translucent Pink Glass Vinyl,” according to Amoeba Music and Record Store Day’s product listing. Amoeba listed that edition at $29.98, providing one of the clearest public price points now visible for U.S. buyers. Record Store Day’s listing identifies the same version as an “Indie Exclusive” release on Epitaph with the same May 2, 2025 date and UPC 045778811731. (propagandhi.com) ### Is the pink vinyl an Epitaph exclusive or an indie-store variant? Record Store Day’s retail page describes the pink copy as an “Indie Exclusive,” which usually means it is distributed through participating independent shops rather than held back for a label’s direct storefront. Epitaph’s own U.S. Propagandhi page, by contrast, surfaces “At Peace LP (Black)” but does not show the pink variant in the same product set now visible there. (amoeba.com) That split helps explain why buyers are encountering the colored edition through stores like Amoeba instead of the main U.S. Epitaph page. A Europe-facing Epitaph store page also shows another colored configuration — “Cloudy Pink & Blue Vinyl” — indicating that multiple regional variants were issued around the same album cycle. That does not change the U.S. indie-exclusive status of the translucent pink glass version, but it does show Epitaph used more than one colorway for the release. ### What exactly is “At Peace”? (recordstoreday.com) Propagandhi’s official site calls “At Peace” the band’s new album and links it to Epitaph Records. Bandcamp lists 13 tracks, including “Guiding Lights,” “At Peace,” “Cat Guy,” “No Longer Young,” “Vampires Are Real,” and “Something Needs To Die But Maybe It’s Not You.” Record Store Day’s listing carries the same 13-song sequence for the indie-exclusive LP. Epitaph’s artist page describes Propagandhi as a Manitoba band known for politically charged punk and a technically heavier sound that developed from its DIY roots. (eu.epitaph.com) That framing matches how retailers are positioning “At Peace” in current catalog copy, with the album presented as part of the band’s established political and musical line rather than as a one-off collector item. (propagandhi.com) ### Why are buyers seeing mixed availability? Record Store Day’s page routes buyers to local stores and warns there is “no guarantee” a product will be in stock nearby. That language points to the normal indie-retail model for colored variants: stores get allocations, inventory changes quickly, and online listings may persist after local stock thins out. Amoeba’s product page confirms at least one major indie retailer has carried the release online. (epitaph.com) Discogs also shows the pink translucent U.S. pressing among several 2025 versions of “At Peace,” alongside other regional or limited variants. That secondary cataloging is useful for collectors trying to distinguish the indie pink copy from the black standard LP and other color editions. ### Where can someone still look for it now? Amoeba Music is one current reference point for the translucent pink glass LP, with a listed price of $29.98. (recordstoreday.com) Record Store Day’s product page remains another route because it directs buyers to participating local stores and online indie sellers carrying the UPC-linked edition. Epitaph’s U.S. store, meanwhile, is the clearest source for the standard black LP if the pink variant is unavailable. (discogs.com) (amoeba.com)