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Friday Feature: Prince on Film

June 4, 2010 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

The Second Disc reader Robert Altman was predicting the future when he suggested a week devoted to Prince a few days ago. Prince - one of the most polarizing and intriguing figures to ever saunter onto the pop music scene - deserves reams (or gigabytes, in this case) written about his music and its impact, and The Second Disc promises to deliver in that regard. From this Friday to next Friday - going right through Prince's 52nd birthday on Monday - TSD will present a few features on Prince's

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Friday Feature, Prince, Prince Week, Uncategorized

Back Tracks: WHAM!

June 2, 2010 By Mike Duquette 4 Comments

The great thing about most reissues over the past few years is that labels seem to want to follow one rule: if they can reissue it, they will do their best. Of course there are people out there who like, say, Cutting Crew or a-ha - but who could have seriously predicted that labels would be open to the idea of reissuing those records with bonus cuts and all that? Of course, this rule makes some of the great bands without reissues - Prince, The Go-Gos, that one Buckingham Nicks album - look like

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Categories: News Tags: Back Tracks

Review: Otis Redding, "Live on the Sunset Strip"

May 27, 2010 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

“Are you ready for star time?” Considering that the star in question was “the one and only, Volt recording star Otis Redding," the answer was bound to be in the affirmative. That was the introduction granted Redding by emcee Al Brisko Clark at West Hollywood’s Whisky A Go Go on the evenings of April 8, 9 and 10, 1966. The Whisky was the happening nightspot on the Sunset Strip in ’66, immortalized by Johnny Rivers on a 1964 LP and frequented by a who’s who of the Los Angeles music scene. (See

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Categories: Reviews Tags: Otis Redding

Reissue Theory: Galactic Novelties

May 21, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

sote cd1

The Star Wars saga continues at The Second Disc with a trove of often-ridiculous but always intriguing musical curios devoted to the films. It's as much a story of disco and a rock legend from New Jersey as it is about Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader. And it's yours to read after the jump.

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Bon Jovi, Meco, Reissue Theory

Miles and Miles of Miles

May 20, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

bitches brew2

Well, damn. After blowing minds in the jazz world with last year's The Complete Columbia Album Collection, Legacy gears up a few more Miles Davis reissues that are sure to pique the interests of devoted listeners and rarity hunters. On August 31, Columbia and Legacy will re-release the trumpeter's acclaimed Bitches Brew as a Legacy Edition. The original album in its eight-track studio mix (as opposed to more recent digital remixes) will be enhanced with bonus session tracks and a newly-released

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Categories: News Formats: Box Sets Tags: Miles Davis

Review: The Rolling Stones, "Exile on Main Street" Deluxe Edition

May 20, 2010 By Joe Marchese 4 Comments

exile on main street2

Few records hold the mystique of the Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main St. Myths have grown and books have been published in an attempt to explain the sprawling album. The story generally goes that 1972 found the band, literally, as tax exiles, seeking refuge across the English Channel in France. A villa in Villefranche-sur-Mer named Nellcote is rented. Music is made. Sex and drugs abound. Somehow in all this debauchery a record is produced, and that record is Exile on Main St. When Universal Music

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Categories: Reviews Formats: Box Sets, CD Genre: Classic Rock Tags: The Rolling Stones

Back Tracks: The Solo Bacharach

May 18, 2010 By Joe Marchese 4 Comments

hitmaker 012

May 12, 2012: Happy 84th birthday, Burt Bacharach!  The living legend was recently the recipient, with longtime lyricist Hal David, of The Library of Congress' Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, bestowed upon the team by President Barack Obama.  In celebration of the maestro's birthday and this great honor, we're republishing this special installment of Back Tracks, exploring Bacharach's solo career from 1965's Hit Maker! through 2008's Live at the Sydney Opera House! Age hasn’t slowed Burt

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Categories: News Tags: Back Tracks, Burt Bacharach

A Double Dose of Soul

May 18, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

pressure cookin2

Two newly-announced catalogue titles bring some rare tracks by R&B and soul legends to CD for the first time - and both have a bit of a Motown collection. First up is Reel Music's CD debut of Pressure Cookin', the only LP cut by Labelle for RCA Records. Recorded a year before "Lady Marmalade" shot the group to success, this record features some intriguing highlights, including a medley of Thunderclap Newman's "Something in the Air" and Gil Scott-Heron's "The Revolution Will Not Be

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Categories: News Tags: The Temptations

Back Tracks: Ronnie James Dio

May 17, 2010 By Mike Duquette 2 Comments

The loss of Ronnie James Dio resounds greatly in the world of metal. The famed vocalist, best known for his time in Black Sabbath and his own eponymous band Dio, had a powerful voice that few in the hard rock spectrum could compete with. He was a prolific talent who left behind not only a lot of influences, but a lot of catalogue work from a half-century(!) of recording. That's right: Dio first got his start way back in 1957 as a bassist for The Vegas Kings, a teen-rock outfit that saw plenty

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Categories: News Formats: Box Sets Tags: Back Tracks, Rainbow

News Round-Up: "Rated R" Release Date, Ozzy Reissues and Rare Cure

May 17, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

The aforementioned reissue of Queens of the Stone Age's Rated R (2000) has a release date set. Look for it July 20. (Thanks to MusicTAP for the tip) Rolling Stone reports in their new issue that Ozzy Osbourne is planning deluxe reissues of Blizzard of Ozz (1980) and Diary of a Madman (1981). While no bonus content has been confirmed, fans will rejoice that these reissues will be using the original LP mixes (in 2002, both albums were controversially reissued with uncredited drum and bass

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Categories: News Tags: Ozzy Osbourne, Queens of the Stone Age, The Cure

Friday Feature: "Psycho"

May 14, 2010 By Mike Duquette 2 Comments

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It is one of the greatest motion picture scores of all time. A suspense classic that immortalized its composer and director for all time. Arguably the most influential in its style. And, half a century later, has never been properly released on any format, ever. Psycho, Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 film, was a stunner from the get-go - not only unlike any film at the time, but unlike any in The Master of Suspense's lengthy career. The film starts out simply: a conflicted young woman steals a hefty

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Friday Feature

Back Tracks: Barry Manilow, Part 2 (1985-2010)

May 9, 2010 By Joe Marchese 2 Comments

Back Tracks left Barry Manilow in 1984 after the release of his first genre-specific album, the jazz-inflected 2:00 a.m. Paradise Café. We pick up with him shifting gears in an attempt to once again court the pop market. He’s left his longtime label, Arista, and signed a new deal with RCA. This union would be a short-lived one, producing just four albums: two sets of his greatest hits as sung in Spanish and Portuguese, and the following two discs... Manilow (RCA, 1985 - reissued Legacy,

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Categories: News Tags: Back Tracks, Barry Manilow

Review: Frank Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim, "Sinatra/Jobim: The Complete Reprise Recordings"

May 6, 2010 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

sinatra jobim2

"Tall and tan and young and handsome..." Those lyrics to Antonio Carlos Jobim's "The Boy from Ipanema" kicked off a bossa nova boom that saw virtually every noteworthy vocalist and jazz musician of the 1960s recording in the mellow Brazilian style. Frank Sinatra, though, was hardly one to follow a trend for hipness' sake. By 1967, the label he founded, Reprise, was turning its sights to Laurel Canyon and Haight-Ashbury, and the bossa craze was on the wane. Sinatra would, as always, record on his

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Categories: Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Jazz, Popular Standards/Vocal Tags: Antonio Carlos Jobim, Frank Sinatra

Back Tracks: Poison

April 29, 2010 By Mike Duquette 2 Comments

look what the cat dragged in2

The way culture advances nowadays, it's not surprising to realize you've forgotten certain ways you might have thought or felt about a musician in particular. For instance, when singer Bret Michaels was rushed to the hospital last week after suffering a massive brain hemorrhage, I'm sure many people (especially younger ones with less perspective) immediately thought of Michael's career as a reality show star - he's currently on NBC's Celebrity Apprentice and has spent three years on the abysmal

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Categories: News Tags: Back Tracks, Poison

Review: Carole King, "The Essential Carole King"

April 28, 2010 By Joe Marchese 3 Comments

essential ck3

“Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow.” “(You Make Me Feel Like a) Natural Woman.” “Up on the Roof.” “You’ve Got a Friend.” All of these songs have found a permanent home as part of The Great American Songbook, and all come from the pen of one Carole King. Her repertoire as both singer and songwriter is celebrated with this week’s release of Legacy’s The Essential Carole King (Ode/Epic/Legacy 88697 68257 2), the first set to focus on both aspects of King’s now 50-plus year career. Producers Lou

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

Release Round-Up: Wilde and Grey Edition

April 26, 2010 By Mike Duquette 2 Comments

We've got a few reissue notes (in case you missed them) to start off your week. First up, Cherry Pop is prepping another batch of Kim Wilde reissues. The label re-released Wilde's RAK-era LPs - Kim Wilde (1981), Select (1982) and Catch as Catch Can (1983) to a strong reaction from her fanbase, and are now prepping two-disc editions of Teases & Dares (1984) and Another Step (1986), Wilde's first two records for the MCA label. The latter is notable for being co-produced by Rod Temperton and

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Categories: News

Friday Feature: "Licence to Kill"

April 23, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

licence to kill2

Recent coverage of soundtracks on The Second Disc has been warmly received. To this end, we have added a the Friday Feature. Every Friday, you'll find some sort of article devoted to a soundtrack or film composer of merit. We hope you enjoy these trips through Hollywood's musical landscape! Our first Friday Feature deals with one of the oddest of the James Bond films. No, not Never Say Never Again (that's not really a Bond film, anyway). Licence to Kill was the second and final feature with

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Friday Feature, Patti Labelle

Review: Judy Garland and Liza Minnelli, "Live at the London Palladium"

April 22, 2010 By Joe Marchese 4 Comments

Leave it to Bob Dylan.  In his 2004 memoir Chronicles Volume One, he writes about the experience of listening to Judy Garland: "A couple of times I dropped a coin right into the slot and played 'The Man That Got Away' by Judy Garland.  The song always did something to me...listening to Judy was like listening to the girl next door."  He writes of the song's composer, Harold Arlen: "In Harold's songs, I could hear rural blues and folk music...there was an emotional kinship there."  He continues,

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Categories: Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Popular Standards/Vocal Tags: Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli

Reissue Theory: Sting, "The Dream of the Blue Turtles"

April 21, 2010 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

The latest issue of Rolling Stone had a cover feature about the "State of Rock: 40 Reasons to Get Excited About Music" (a cover which featured terrible pop-rap group The Black Eyed Peas, so the list was slightly less than 40). As debatable as the list might be, one item on the list was actually somewhat intriguing - up and coming band I Blame Coco, led by Coco Sumner, daughter of the irrepressible Sting. Coco is not the first Sting spawn with musical tendencies - his oldest son, Joe, fronts the

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Categories: News Tags: Reissue Theory, Sting

On the Right (Sound)Track

April 19, 2010 By Mike Duquette 7 Comments

superman themusic 012

Here at The Second Disc, there's a lot of coverage of soundtracks. (For proof, check Joe Marchese's recent exciting review of a few vault reissues by Henry Mancini.) Granted, not every fan of classic pop, rock and R&B catalogue releases is big on orchestral scores and whatnot, but it's an integral genre in the wide, wild world of reissues and worth covering from an artistic point of view. But recent revelations have shown that soundtrack catalogue comings and goings are worth covering from

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Open Forum

Review: Two by Mancini

April 16, 2010 By Joe Marchese 2 Comments

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Henry Mancini would have gone down in film history had he only composed the instantly recognizable “Pink Panther Theme,” or supplied the melody to Johnny Mercer’s wistful lyric “Moon River.”  But those accomplishments are mere tips of the iceberg for the man who scored over 80 films and recorded over 90 albums, garnering 20 Grammys and 4 Oscars along the way.  Hardly a year goes by without a CD reissue of one of his classic scores, and 2010 is no exception, with 2 very different works given new

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Categories: Reviews Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Uncategorized

The (Original) Sound of Philadelphia

April 3, 2010 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

Long before the triumvirate of Kenneth Gamble, Leon Huff and Thom Bell immortalized "The Sound of Philadelphia" as silky, smooth soul, Cameo-Parkway Records supplied the soundtrack to the City of Brotherly Love.  The label may be best known for dances like the 81, the Twist, the Hully Gully, the Wah-Watusi and the Mashed Potato, or for teenage icons like Bobby Rydell.  But Cameo-Parkway's roster was in fact much more diverse, from garage rockers ? and the Mysterians to doo-wop legend Johnny

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Categories: News

Review: David Bowie - "David Bowie" Deluxe Edition

April 3, 2010 By Joe Marchese 1 Comment

David Bowie Deram Deluxe

David Bowie circa 1966 was an artist in search of an identity.  He had flirted with theatre, the mod movement, and even mime.   When signed by Decca's Deram arm, he had already released six unsuccessful singles on three different labels and fronted a number of quickly-vanishing bands.  The Decca contract came shortly after his recordings for Pye, which had been shepherded by British hitmaker Tony Hatch of "Downtown" and "Call Me" fame.  The Deram album, simply titled David Bowie, was all but

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Categories: Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Pop Tags: David Bowie

News Round-Up: Broken Wings, Hendrix Rocks, Phish in Exile and Film Score Tidbits

March 29, 2010 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

mr mister2

A big reissue is coming from indie reissue label Friday Music: a 25th anniversary reissue of Welcome to the Real World, the 1985 sophomore LP by Mr. Mister. This record, which spawned the Top 10 hits "Broken Wings," "Kyrie" and "Is It Love," is remastered direct from RCA's original master tapes and comes in a digipak. (No bonus tracks, but outside of a dance mix and dub for "Is It Love," there were none, really.) Amazon has this one listed for an April 20 release. (Thanks to Pause & Play for

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Mr. Mister, The Rolling Stones

Reissue Theory: Various Artists - "Soup for One: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack"

March 22, 2010 By Mike Duquette 4 Comments

soup for one3

There may not be enough positive words to write about Nile Rodgers. The sole surviving member of The CHIC Organization (which included bassist Bernard Edwards and drummer Tony Thompson), Rodgers helped shape the sound of late '70s and early '80s pop and R&B, either as a performer with CHIC, a producer - often alongside Edwards - for Diana Ross, Sister Sledge, Madonna and others or even as a sampled artist (see The Sugar Hill Gang's "Rapper's Delight" and "The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Reissue Theory

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