Welcome to another installment of Reissue Theory, where we reflect on well-known albums of the past and the reissues they could someday see. Twenty-six years after its release, this newest installment takes you back to Band Aid's "Do They Know It's Christmas?" Exactly 26 years ago, for better or worse, the British supergroup Band Aid released "Do They Know It's Christmas?" a single that kicked off a flurry of activity to raise money, aid and awareness for African famine and relief. Monday,
Archives for November 29, 2010
Taylor, King, Vaughan, Joel, More Due from MoFi in 2011
Start saving your pennies now. In an eye-opening move, audiophile specialty label Mobile Fidelity has announced a massive slate of releases across the CD, SACD and LP formats scheduled for 2011. Longtime collectors of audiophile masterings may get a thrill at seeing the “Original Master Recording” banner above the works of classic artists ranging from Tony Bennett and Ray Charles to Carole King and James Taylor. While this writer has some quibbles (why no CDs or SACDs for Bennett, Frank
"Nowhere" Goes Somewhere for 20th Anniversary (UPDATED 11/29)
Another deluxe title is on its way from Rhino Handmade next month, and it's a good one for any shoegaze fans out there: Pitchfork reports that the label is reissuing Nowhere, the debut LP by Ride, for its 20th anniversary. Ride were a British alt-rock band in the tradition of The Cocteau Twins, The Jesus and Mary Chain and My Bloody Valentine. All of those outfits were deemed "shoegaze" bands by the British music press, a term which would describe bands heavy on distorted but melodic guitars.
Review: Bruce Springsteen, "The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story"
In 1978, Bruce Springsteen famously mined the darkness on the edge of town, but it was unknown until recently that he considered living in the light of those same New Jersey streets. Flush with the success of Born to Run but drained from a prolonged battle with his former manager, Springsteen considered all avenues in creating the follow-up to the album that changed everything. And much like the eventually-resulting Darkness on the Edge of Town upped the ante from that 1975 landmark, the