Funk legend Nile Rodgers, a frequent user of Twitter, has spent the past few weeks talking about his ongoing process to locate and catalogue the many demo tapes he's found over the years. While a firm release plan has yet to be implemented, I'm getting the impression he's going to release some of them for free. So if you do that whole Twitter thing, follow him so you can get the scoop when it happens. (Of course I'll be posting when anything is released, too.) This isn't particularly
Archives for February 4, 2010
One Track Mind
I'm not a betting man, but if I were, I'd bet that there are two big questions that reissue producers and catalogue compilers get from fans. There's "What about a proper reissue/expansion of such-and-such an album?" and "Why did you miss/forget that one track?" I've been thinking about that last query lately - and I'll bet you've thought about it at some point, too. Oh sure, to some of your friends and fellow fans it sounds crazy - why on Earth would someone obsess over one stupid little
Reissue Theory: Ben Folds Five, "Ben Folds Five"
In Reissue Theory, The Second Disc researches and drafts a box set, compilation or reissue that would be worth pursuing by a label. Lots of catalogue enthusiasts are older folks, there's no getting around that. Those who grew up with great rock and roll and consumed it on compact discs as adults are probably the lion's share of people reading sites like this. But regardless of what you perceive the quality of more recent music to be, it needs to be looked after as well by catalogue