Dionne WordPress Banner

The Second Disc

Expanded and Remastered Music News

  • Home
  • News
    • Classic Rock
    • Rock
    • Pop
    • Jazz
    • Popular Standards/Vocal
    • R&B/Soul
    • Country
    • Folk
    • Cast Recordings
    • Soundtracks
    • Everything Else
      • Classical/Opera
      • Disco/Dance
      • Funk
      • Gospel
      • Rap/Hip-Hop
  • Features
    • Release Round-Up
    • The Weekend Stream
    • Giveaways!
    • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Classic Rock
    • Rock
    • Pop
    • Jazz
    • Popular Standards/Vocal
    • R&B/Soul
    • Country
    • Folk
    • Cast Recordings
    • Soundtracks
    • Everything Else
      • Classical/Opera
      • Disco/Dance
      • Funk
      • Gospel
      • Rap/Hip-Hop
  • Release Calendar
    • Coming Soon
    • Now Available
  • About
  • Second Disc Records
    • Full Catalog
  • Contact

/ Reviews

Review: Shorty Long, "The Complete Motown Stereo Masters"

May 8, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

shorty long ace1

Frederick Long's nickname "Shorty" was ironic considering his surname, but the diminutive pianist, songwriter and vocalist was indeed a mere 5'1".  Yet Shorty was Long on talent.  Harvey Fuqua brought Long to Motown with him from Tri-Phi, and Long was eventually selected by Berry Gordy to inaugurate the new Soul label, designed to showcase the funkier side of the Sound of Young America.  That single arrived in 1964, but Gordy didn't release a Long solo album until 1968, just one year before the

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Shorty Long

Review: Iron Butterfly, "Fillmore East 1968"

April 27, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

iron butterfly fillmore1

Where were you 44 years ago today?  If you happened to be passing by 105 Second Avenue in New York City’s East Village, you would likely have seen a fantastic group of names displayed on the marquee at Bill Graham’s Fillmore East.  On Friday and Saturday, April 26 and 27, 1968, Iron Butterfly shared an explosive bill with Traffic and Blue Cheer.  The Fillmore East itself is now just a memory, of course.  Its exterior and entrance now welcomes you to a bank, and the storied auditorium has been

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews

Review: Carole King, "The Legendary Demos" and "Something Good from the Goffin and King Songbook"

April 24, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

something good carole king

Though there's no one formula for creating a great song, there's no denying the success of the method that flourished first in New York's Tin Pan Alley (28th Street between Broadway and Sixth Avenue, for those wondering) and later a bit uptown in and around the Brill Building (1619 Broadway near 49th Street).  A couple of blocks away at 1650 Broadway at 51st Street, during the halcyon days of the 1960s, you would have found the home of Aldon Music, and the team of Gerry Goffin and Carole King. 

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Pop Tags: Carole King, Gerry Goffin

Review: Sam & Dave and Philip Bailey, Expanded Editions from Edsel

April 23, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

chinese wall inside out

Mention “Hold On, I’m Comin’” and chances are you can hear that confident, swaggering horn riff that insistently opens the Sam and Dave classic.  Indeed, all you really need to know is in that riff!  All four albums recorded by Sam and Dave for Stax/Atlantic have been collected by Edsel on two new releases, and these expanded editions (including various single sides) add up to true cornerstones for any R&B or soul music library.  But the label hasn’t stopped there.  A very different kind of

Continue Reading

Categories: Reviews Tags: Philip Bailey, Sam & Dave

Review: Janis Joplin, "The Pearl Sessions"

April 18, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

janis pearl sessions

One dictionary defines "pearl" as an object both "hard" and "lustrous," synonymous with "gem" or "jewel."  Couldn't all of those words also describe Janis Joplin?  Pearl was, of course, the name bestowed upon the singer by her final group, The Kozmic Blues Band, and the title of her final, posthumously released album from 1971.  Pearl has arrived on CD once more from Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings under the title The Pearl Sessions (88697 84224 2), expanding the original 10-track album

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Classic Rock Tags: Janis Joplin

Review: Donovan, "The Essential Donovan"

April 17, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

essential donovan

Dear Donovan: what's it been like being you? The enigmatic Scotsman born Donovan Philips Leitch has worn many colours since bursting onto the music scene in 1965: the guitar-slinging Woody Guthrie disciple of "Catch the Wind," the mystical folkie of "Season of the Witch," the lysergic hippie of "Sunshine Superman," the sinister rock narrator of "Hurdy Gurdy Man." Though he's never retired, the poet/troubadour has maintained a low profile in recent years. He's only sporadically emerged with

Continue Reading

Categories: Reviews

Review: Johnny Cash, "Bootleg IV: The Soul of Truth"

April 3, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

johnny cash bootleg iv

“John, let’s do a shot for the warden,” photographer Jim Marshall reportedly implored Johnny Cash during the singer’s 1969 performance at San Quentin Prison.  Cash’s snarling response, with his middle finger in air, made for one of the most famous music photographs of all time.   Cropping up on T-shirts, posters and the like, Marshall captured the outlaw side of Johnny Cash like no photographer before or since.  Though it might have, indeed, been worth a thousand words, the image still only

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews

Review: Tom Northcott, "Sunny Goodge Street: The Warner Bros. Recordings"

April 2, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

tom northcott

Extra!  Extra!  Lost Folk Singer Found! His name is Tom Northcott, and had things turned out a little differently, he might be remembered in the same breath as Joni Mitchell or Gordon Lightfoot, fellow Canadian troubadours.  After founding the Tom Northcott Trio, he headed for California during perhaps the most fertile period ever for creative, boundary-breaking musical exploration, the mid-1960s.  Northcott opened for The Who, The Doors and Jefferson Airplane, and was signed to Warner Bros.

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Pop Tags: Leon Russell, Randy Newman, Tom Northcott

Review: John Williams, "Hook: Expanded Original Motion Picture Soundtrack"

April 2, 2012 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

hook promo shot

After more than three years of planning, preparing and waiting, audiences finally have a chance to enjoy an expanded edition of John Williams' score to Steven Spielberg's 1991 cult classic Hook (La-La Land Records LLLCD 1211). The world had been "getting by," so to speak, with the Epic label's original 75-minute CD presentation - a generous offering, to be sure, but one that only sort of did the score justice. While critics remain divided to indifferent on the celluloid continuation of James M.

Continue Reading

Categories: Reviews Genre: Soundtracks

Review: Frankie Avalon, "Muscle Beach Party: The United Artists Sessions"

March 27, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

frankie avalon ua

By the time of 1964’s Muscle Beach Party, Philadelphia-born Frankie Avalon had already racked up some 31 hits on the U.S. Billboard charts, including two at Number One, “Why” and “Venus.”  On the urging of his Chancellor Records mentor Bob Marcucci, Avalon had welcomed the 1960s by diversifying his talents into film, appearing opposite John Wayne in The Alamo and Walter Pidgeon in Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.  1963’s Beach Party, however, was something else altogether.  Directed by William

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Brian Wilson, The Beach Boys

Review: Randy Vanwarmer, "Warmer/Terraform" and "Beat of Love/The Things That You Dream"

March 26, 2012 By Joe Marchese 3 Comments

randy vanwarmer terraform warmer1

Bespectacled singer/songwriter Randy Vanwarmer became one of the unlikeliest radio heroes of the late 1970s when his gentle ballad “Just When I Needed You Most” began its ascent up the Billboard chart amidst an onslaught of disco (“I Will Survive,” “Hot Stuff”) and New Wave (“Heart of Glass”).  Vanwarmer’s bittersweet memory of a long-gone lover hit a nerve with listeners looking for an escape from the dance floor.  Although the song would qualify him as a one-hit wonder, Vanwarmer continued to

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Randy Vanwarmer

Review: John Cale, "Conflict and Catalysis: Productions and Arrangements 1966-2006"

March 22, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

vu peel1

Catalysis (ca-tal-y-sis): The action of a catalyst, especially an increase in the rate of a chemical reaction. With his induction into Ace Records’ Producers series, John Cale joins an esteemed group including Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, Sly Stone, Phil Spector and Burt Bacharach.  If Cale isn’t always thought of in the same breath as those giants, it’s simply because his career has been so diverse, encompassing writing, performing and arranging for artists ranging from The Stooges to

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Siouxsie and The Banshees, Squeeze, The Velvet Underground

Guitars A Go-Go: "Fender: The Golden Age" and Jerry Cole's "Psychedelic Guitars" Celebrated by Ace

March 16, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

jerry cole psychedelic1

If you've got guitars on the mind, look no further than a pair of new releases from those compilation experts at the Ace label!  Fender: The Golden Age 1950-1970 (Ace CDCHD 1315) is a new 28-track anthology that manages to be both comprehensive and the tip of the iceberg, where the famous guitar is concerned!  A new companion to the 2010 book of almost the same name (Fender: The Golden Age 1946-1970 by Martin Kelly), this set offers a rare chance to appreciate both the talent on the record label

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Classic Rock, Pop Tags: Buck Owens, Jerry Cole, Otis Redding, The Beach Boys, The Velvet Underground, The Ventures

Review: Big Brother and the Holding Company Featuring Janis Joplin, "Live at the Carousel Ballroom 1968"

March 13, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

janis big bro bear2

Journey back with me to 1968, will you?  Your time machine is courtesy Owsley “Bear” Stanley, visionary sound engineer and renowned LSD chemist.  But you don’t need any lysergic acid to enjoy the music contained on the little silver disc known as Live at the Carousel Ballroom 1968 (Columbia/Legacy 88697 96409 2, 2012), billed as the first release from Bear’s Sonic Journals.  That said, a little Southern Comfort probably wouldn’t hurt.  (Or a toke or two, as per the suggestion of Stanley’s son

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews

Review: Mark Lindsay, "The Complete Columbia Singles"

March 5, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

mark lindsay complete1

There'll be joy and there'll be laughter/Something big is what I'm after now... As frontman, songwriter and saxophonist of Paul Revere and the Raiders, Mark Lindsay had experienced his fair share of joy and laughter, but as 1969 rolled around, the band behind such garage-pop anthems as "Kicks," "Just like Me" and "Hungry" was beginning to fracture.  Jack Gold, head of A&R at Columbia Records, however, saw something big in Mark Lindsay's future.  According to the singer, Gold had stumbled on

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Mark Lindsay, Paul Revere and The Raiders

Review: Pink Floyd, "The Wall: Immersion Box Set"

February 28, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

the wall immersion contents1

By the way, which one’s Pink? A record executive poses that wry musical question of Pink Floyd in “Have a Cigar,” a brief, humorous respite on the band’s elegiac 1975 album Wish You Were Here.  The ever-ambitious group would actually answer that wry question with The Wall, 1979’s sprawling double album.  The psychedelic Dark Side of the Moon and reflective Wish You Were Here both invited listeners to create their own stories in service of the albums’ impressionistic concepts, largely dealing

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Formats: Box Sets Tags: Pink Floyd

Review: Carole King, "The Carole King Collection: Simple Things, Welcome Home, Touch the Sky, and Pearls"

February 27, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

ck welcome home2

Carole King was ready for a fresh start in 1977.  She had recently split from manager/producer Lou Adler’s Ode Records, the label with which she had signed back in 1968 as the lead singer of The City.  It was, of course, at Ode where King triumphed with Tapestry, and over the years introduced a parade of memorable songs like “It’s Too Late,” “So Far Away,” You’ve Got a Friend,” “Sweet Seasons,” “Been to Canaan” and “Jazzman.”  Yet the four albums recorded by King at Capitol between 1977 and 1980

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews

Review: Tony Bennett, "Isn't It Romantic?"

February 24, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

tony isnt it romantic

Isn’t it romantic? The titular phrase from a song by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart could apply to much of Tony Bennett’s musical career, now in roughly its 65th year.  It’s also the title of a new compilation aimed at the casual Bennett fan from Concord Music Group.  Isn’t It Romantic? (CRE-33463-02) repackages 15 prime cuts from the singer’s work at his own short-lived Improv label, with a smattering of tracks from a Fantasy Records LP thrown in for good measure.  Though Bennett’s artistic

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Tony Bennett

From Motown to the Bay Area! The Apollas' "Absolutely Right!" and Eddie Holland's "It Moves Me: The Complete Recordings 1958-1964" Available Now

February 23, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

the apollas1

Are you thinking you should take a chance on Ace Records’ supremely soulful duo of releases from The Apollas and Eddie Holland?  If so…you’re absolutely right!  For The Apollas’ Absolutely Right: The Complete Tiger, Loma and Warner Bros. Recordings (Kent CDKEND 365, 2012) and Holland’s It Moves Me: The Complete Recordings 1958-1964 (Ace CDTOP2 1331, 2012) both belong on the shelf of any serious fan of classic soul and R&B. If you haven’t heard of The Apollas, you’re forgiven.  This Bay Area

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: The Apollas

Review: Judy Garland, "The Historic Concert Remastered"

February 21, 2012 By Joe Marchese 6 Comments

judy garland historic concert

The applause started even before Mort Lindsey lifted his baton to conduct the Overture. By the time Judy Garland took the stage at Carnegie Hall on April 23, 1961 for "When You're Smiling (The Whole World Smiles with You)," it didn't seem too far-fetched that the whole world was smiling, even beyond the corner of New York's 57th Street and 7th Avenue. Such was the power of Judy Garland. Only the greatest of live albums, in any genre, can translate the grip of a performer on his audience. Judy at

Continue Reading

Categories: Reviews Formats: Box Sets, CD Genre: Popular Standards/Vocal Tags: Judy Garland

Aces High! "The London American Label: 1957," "Mod Jazz Forever" and "Smash Boom Bang: Feldman-Goldstein-Gotteher" Available Now

February 14, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

smash boom bang

Smash!  Boom!  Bang!  The ace compilation experts at, well, Ace Records are offering up plenty of Smash, Boom and Bang (both in impact and in label name!) for your buck with their diverse slate of February releases.  You'll find top-drawer pop, rock and soul for connoisseurs and beginners alike among the label's latest.  Perhaps the most unexpected is the new entry in the label's long-running Songwriters and Producers series.  Smash Boom Bang!  The Songs and Productions of

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Jazz, Pop, R&B/Soul, Rock Tags: Little Richard, Ronnie James Dio

Review: Frank Sinatra, "The Concert Sinatra" (2012)

February 9, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

the concert sinatra

There have been countless recordings of Frank Sinatra…but only one Concert Sinatra.  So named for its full concert orchestra (and not for a live performance), the 1963 album remains a career triumph.  It’s perhaps the pinnacle of Sinatra’s long association with conductor/arranger Nelson Riddle, a vivid display of the singer’s gifts as a dramatic actor, and the ultimate valentine to the American theatrical songbook.  Make no mistake, The Concert Sinatra is serious symphonic music, and it’s back

Continue Reading

Categories: Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Popular Standards/Vocal Tags: Frank Sinatra, Nelson Riddle

Greater Hits: Aretha/Arista

January 31, 2012 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

playlist  the very best of aretha franklin

Welcome to our latest installment of Greater Hits, where we scour an artist's discography for compilations and pick the best one for your buck. Today focuses on Aretha Franklin's fascinating third chapter on Arista Records and the multitude of compilations that it's yielded. Just as I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You, Aretha Franklin's sizzling 1967 album and first for Atlantic Records, was a shock to anyone who'd known her from her days singing solid if not transcendent soul on Columbia in

Continue Reading

Categories: Reviews Tags: Greater Hits

Review: Aretha Franklin, "Knew You Were Waiting: The Best of Aretha Franklin 1980-1998"

January 31, 2012 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

keith aretha jumpin jack flash

Aretha Franklin is serious about her royalty.  Billed on her newly-activated Twitter account as "the undisputed Queen of Soul" (take that, Tina Turner!), Franklin doesn't take her title lightly.  But for a brief period, the artist's credentials as reigning Queen of Pop were just as unimpeachable.  When Aretha joined Arista Records in 1980, it was after five disappointing albums at Atlantic, none of which have ever seen the light of day on compact disc.  On those LPs, producers as diverse as

Continue Reading

Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Aretha Franklin

Review: "Golden Gate Groove: The Sound of Philadelphia, Live in San Francisco 1973"

January 30, 2012 By Joe Marchese 3 Comments

No love, no peace, no shoes on my feet…no home, just a shack where I sleep… In the fall of 1971, Philadelphia International Records launched its long-playing series with Billy Paul’s Going East, and the title opus in which the velvet-voiced crooner spins a slow-burning yarn of slavery.  It was hardly Top 40 fare (Paul would have to wait till producers/songwriters/label entrepreneurs Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff gifted him “Me and Mrs. Jones” the following year) but signaled the dramatic

Continue Reading

Categories: Reviews Tags: MFSB, The O'Jays, The Three Degrees

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • …
  • 43
  • Next Page »

Upcoming Releases

  • Version 1.0.0
    Natural Gas: Original Master Edition
    Natural Gas
    May 30, 2025
    US UK
  • Grateful Dead The Music Never Stopped
    The Music Never Stopped
    Grateful Dead
    May 30, 2025
    US UK
  • TMBG Spine Surfs Alone CD
    The Spine Surfs Alone: Rarities 1998-2005
    They Might Be Giants
    May 30, 2025
    US UK
See Full Calendar

Connect

  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 4,673 other subscribers

Popular Posts

  • Most Commented
  • Most Viewed
  • Dionne Warwick Make It Easy on Yourself(Don't) Walk On By: Dionne Warwick's "Make It Easy on Yourself: The Scepter Recordings 1962-1971" Due in June on 12...
  • Tracks II CD packshot no disc artShut Out the Light: Bruce Springsteen Offers Seven Unheard Albums on 'Tracks II'
  • Rod Stewart Ultimate Hits Amazon exclusiveHe Wears It Well: Rod Stewart's 'Ultimate Hits' Due in June
  • RSD 2025 best of restRecord Store Day 2025: The Best of the Rest
  • record store day logoThe Second Disc's Guide to Record Store Day 2025: Our Favorite Picks
  • John Williams Anthology 1Mondo Maestro: New John Williams Box Set Series Announced, Plus 'Star Wars' Re-Recordings on Vinyl

Music Resources

  • Addicted to Vinyl
  • Crap from the Past
  • Discogs
  • Film Score Monthly
  • IMWAN Forum – From the Vaults
  • MusicTAP
  • Musoscribe
  • Pause & Play
  • Popdose
  • Slicing Up Eyeballs
  • Steve Hoffman Music Forums
  • Ultimate Classic Rock
  • Vintage Vinyl News
  • Wolfgang's Vault

Labels of Note

  • Ace Records
  • Analog Spark
  • Bear Family
  • BGO Records
  • Big Break Records
  • Blixa Sounds
  • Cherry Red Label Group
  • Craft Recordings
  • Demon Music Group
  • Friday Music
  • Funky Town Grooves
  • Iconoclassic Records
  • Intervention Records
  • Intrada
  • Kritzerland
  • La La Land Records
  • Legacy Recordings
  • Light in the Attic
  • Masterworks Broadway
  • Now Sounds
  • Omnivore Recordings
  • Real Gone Music
  • Rhino Entertainment
  • Rock Candy Records
  • SoulMusic Records
  • Sunset Blvd. Records
  • Supermegabot
  • Varese Sarabande
  • Vinyl Me, Please
  • Wounded Bird
Copyright © 2025 The Second Disc. All rights reserved. · Site by Metaglyphics

The Second Disc is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com, amazon.ca and amazon.co.uk.

Terms and Conditions - Privacy Policy