[16][17] After the end of Tempertwig, Ben and Adam Parker formed Nosferatu D2 and began to play shows and demo new material, some of which was aired on XFM by John Kennedy[18] and BBC Radio 1 by Huw Stephens.
[19] One of these demos received a praising review from James McMahon of NME[20] and Art Brut member Chris Chinchilla.
[24] In 2007, Ben Parker began writing and recording under the Superman Revenge Squad name (taken from the comic book organisations of the same name) and Nosferatu D2 quietly disbanded.
[25][26][27] In 2009, Nosferatu D2's unreleased We're Gonna Walk Around This City With Our Headphones On To Block Out The Noise album was issued by the newly-founded Audio Antihero record label, more than two years after they had separated.
[54] "It's Christmas Time (For God's Sake)" was also included in the Darren Hayman (Hefner/The French) and Fika Recordings 2011 Digital Advent Calendar, alongside fellow Audio Antihero artists including Jack Hayter, Fighting Kites, Paul Hawkins, Ian Button, Broken Shoulder and Benjamin Shaw.
[63][64] In September 2012, the band re-issued remastered recordings of their final show as "Nosferatu D2 – Live At The Spitz" through Audio Antihero.
[65][66] In 2015, their debut album was reissued on cassette by Audio Antihero alongside an EP of non-album recordings entitled "Older, Wiser, Sadder" – which was praised by Drowned in Sound.
[80][81] The album received positive reviews from Bearded Magazine[82] and others[83][84] and FM4[85] and Gideon Coe, Tom Robinson and Steve Lamacq on BBC 6 Music.
"[102] The new material was covered by sites like The Post, Post-Trash, The Alternative, Merry-Go-Round Magazine, Muso's Guide, and God Is in the TV, [103][104][105] and played on stations including WKDU, WIDR, WZBC, KXFM, KXFS-LP, and Resonance FM.