For over ten years the Public Service Broadcasting "teach the lessons of the past through the music of the future'. Their 2013 debut album Inform - Educate - Entertain uses a series of samples of the British Film Institute to illustrate the Battle of Britain, the conquest of Everest and much more. Two years later The Race for Space uses the same means to narrate the rivalry and heroism of superpowers in orbit and on the Moon. In 2017, some well-known voices, including that of the singer of the Manic Street Preachers James Dean Bradfieldjoin the Public Service Broadcasting for Every Valley.
Their most ambitious undertaking to date, the most recent studio work Bright Magic, takes the listener to the heart of Europe, to the political and cultural metropolis that is the Hauptstadt of the Federal Republic of Germany, Berlin. The album contains two singles that entered the BBC ranking - People, Let's Dance (feat. EERA) e Blue Heaven (feat. Andreya Casablanca) - and is among the candidates in the categories Album of the Year by MOJO, Electronic Sound e PROG. Last year the band released This New Noisea recently remixed and remastered live recording of their acclaimed show at the BBC Proms of 2022 to the Royal Albert Hall in London. The track saw the line-up join forces with the 88-piece BBC Symphony Orchestra directed by Jules Buckley to celebrate the centenary of the BBC.