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/ Search Results for: "very"

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

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

Feeling Gravity's Pull, 25 Years Later

May 17, 2010 By Mike Duquette 5 Comments

fables of the reconstruction3

As has been customary for a few years now, 2010 will see the release of another 25th anniversary reissue for R.E.M.; this time, Fables of the Reconstruction (1985) gets the deluxe treatment. Like previous deluxe editions (Murmur in 2008 and Reckoning last year), the set will include a previously unreleased bonus disc. This time around, though, it's going to be comprised of unearthed demos (the previous deluxe sets had live shows added). The set is due from EMI* on July 13. Pre-order now and

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Categories: News Tags: REM

Reissue Theory: Wang Chung, "Mosaic"

May 14, 2010 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

So...um, Wang Chung is reuniting. There aren't really that many ways to set such a thing up. Sure, there's this enthusiastic press release, detailing a new record and a tour - but other than that, there's not much to say, I suppose. Granted, that's probably because Wang Chung (comprised of non-Asians Nick Feldman and Jack Hues) are seen by many as a one-hit wonder for inescapable party anthem "Everybody Have Fun Tonight" - a song that arguably hasn't aged all that well (the departed Blender

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Categories: News Tags: Reissue Theory, Wang Chung

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

Reissue Theory: Naked Eyes

May 12, 2010 By Mike Duquette 6 Comments

Eighty-two years ago today, a Kansas City, Miss. couple named Bert and Irma Bacharach welcomed a son, Burt, into the world. In 1957, the young songwriter met a lyricist, Hal David, at a meeting in the Brill Building in New York City. The rest, as they say, was history, with some of the most enduring popular songs of century flowing from their pens. This is a difficult fact to grasp if you're a young person. Nowadays, people couldn't really care less who writes the songs that make the whole

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Categories: News Tags: Naked Eyes, Reissue Theory

Reissue Theory: "Stoney and Meatloaf"

May 11, 2010 By Joe Marchese 9 Comments

This week sees the release of Hang Cool, Teddy Bear, the 11th studio offering from Meat Loaf. The outsized rock personality skyrocketed to fame with 1977's Bat Out of Hell, the theatrical rock opus penned by Jim Steinman and produced by Todd Rundgren. As Meat prepares to unleash his latest work (cheekily placing a roman numeral "IV" on the album's back cover, making it clear that he intends Hang Cool as another Steinman-less sequel to Bat), could there be a better time for a Reissue Theory-style

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Categories: News Tags: Meat Loaf, Reissue Theory

A "Four Score" from Intrada

May 11, 2010 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

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Get ready to run up a staircase with excitement: Intrada has announced the first-ever score release of Vince DiCola's Rocky IV. The fourth, perhaps most over-the-top sequel in the long-running franchise pitted Sylvester Stallone's heavyweight champ against a feared opponent from the Soviet Union. Like its predecessor, Rocky IV was buoyed by a handful of pop hits, including two Top 5 smashes for Survivor ("Burning Heart") and James Brown (the vaguely left-field "Living in America"). Often

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks

More Reissues Cutting Through

May 10, 2010 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

cc broadcast2

A Flock of Seagulls aren't the only '80s act getting a reissue from Cherry Pop. The label is prepping May 24 reissues of the first two records by another one-hit-wonder-with-a-whole-lot-more, Cutting Crew. Though they're best known for "(I Just) Died in Your Arms," the band enjoyed two other Top 40 hits ("One for the Mockingbird" and "I've Been in Love Before," a Top 10 single) and a minorly-successful sophomore release in their day. Cherry Pop is releasing both of these records - Broadcast

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Categories: News

Better Tending to the Flock

May 10, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

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The U.K.-based reissue label Cherry Pop Records announced an upcoming reissue of Listen, the sophomore LP by seminal New Wave band A Flock of Seagulls, for a June 22 release. The set features the original album plus two remixes and three B-sides. Now, a lot of catalogue fans have taken issue with Cherry Pop reissues - some of their reissues (as is regrettably the case with other smaller labels) don't sound like they're even mastered from the original tapes, and the bonus track situations

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Categories: News

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

Release Round Up: More from Hip-o

May 8, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

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A rare weekend post to keep you up on two new Hip-o Select titles readied for order yesterday. One's a singles compilation for an R&B great, and the other is a two-for-one set from a noted reggae act. Get the specs (and two more Hip-o titles you might not know about) after the jump.

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Categories: News, Reviews

Back Tracks: Barry Manilow, Part 1 (1973-1984)

May 7, 2010 By Joe Marchese 1 Comment

Where Barry Manilow is concerned, it's best to let the facts speak for themselves. A Grammy, Emmy and Tony Award winner, Manilow scored his first Billboard No. 1 album in 1977, his most recent in 2006. His string of hit singles extended from 1974's chart-topping "Mandy" to 1983's Top 20 "Read 'Em and Weep," with 38 songs hitting the Top 40. He's recorded over 25 studio albums and released countless more live discs, compilations and soundtracks, and regularly plays to sell-out houses after over

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Categories: News Tags: Back Tracks, Barry Manilow

Long Live Live Music

May 6, 2010 By Mike Duquette 8 Comments

It's going to be kind of a slow day at The Second Disc, as your roving reporter has tickets to see a-ha play to a sold-out crowd in New York City. Their Ending on a High Note Tour has been a top draw for '80s pop fans, but it's also led to a lot of thought concerning concerts and what they mean to us - not just as a reissue fan, but as a lover of music in general. While The Second Disc may be a haven for all the expanded and remastered news and commentary you can shake your SACD player at, I

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Categories: News Tags: Open Forum

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

Reissue Theory: Version Especial por Cinco de Mayo

May 5, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

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Today is Cinco de Mayo, so The Second Disc is going to bring you two of the most unusual Spanish-oriented pop music endeavors in recent memory. These are two deluxe editions with very different sounds, but they're connected not only by record label group but their wacky reinterpretation for Spanish audiences. Viva la musica after the jump!

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Categories: News Tags: Reissue Theory, Sting

News Round-Up: Steve Winwood, India.Arie and The Stooges

May 3, 2010 By Mike Duquette 2 Comments

There's some new info to post about Revolutions: The Very Best of Steve Winwood, the upcoming four-disc Steve Winwood box that may or may not be as good as the last Winwood box. This comes from a comment by an admin on Winwood's official Web site. Also, note that the Amazon selling price is a not-terrible $39.98: All the material in this box set was transferred from the original analogue master tapes at 24-bit, 192k resolution in 2010 using the highest quality Prism A-D conversion. The albums

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Categories: News Formats: Box Sets Tags: Steve Winwood, The Stooges

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

Boxed In

April 28, 2010 By Mike Duquette 6 Comments

led zeppelin2

Reaction to the recently-released tracklist for John Mellencamp's On the Rural Route 7609 box set has been a bit mixed, and for good reason. It's hard to greet a four-disc box set full of album tracks and just over a dozen unreleased outtakes with a price tag of nearly $100. But it's becoming clear that there's a bigger issue here at stake than Mellencamp fans getting soaked. Friends, the entire concept of a box set is in a state of crisis. It's been a long two decades since compact disc box

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Categories: News Formats: Box Sets Tags: Open Forum

Reissue Theory: System of a Down - "Toxicity"

April 28, 2010 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

toxicity2

Lots of coverage on The Second Disc deals with music that has stayed part of the collective consciousness for decades. But it's been stated before that fans and labels should always look into the recent past to find classics worth reissuing. Toxicity, the second LP by Armenian-American metal band System of a Down, is one of those records. Of all the five LPs SoaD released in their brief tenure before embarking on an indefinite hiatus, Toxicity hits the hardest. It's one of those

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Categories: News Tags: Reissue Theory, System of a Down

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

Back Tracks: Paul McCartney

April 23, 2010 By Mike Duquette 6 Comments

mj mac3

Every now and then a catalogue-oriented story breaks into the mainstream. This week, we've had one of those moments: Paul McCartney is moving his back catalogue distribution to Concord Music Group from increasingly beleaguered EMI. Reissues will commence in August with a new pressing of Band on the Run, his high watermark with former band Wings. Of course, for someone of McCartney's caliber, this is not the first time his albums have been reissued. EMI did a massive remastering of 16

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Categories: News Tags: Back Tracks, Paul McCartney

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: Tom Lehrer, "The Tom Lehrer Collection"

April 22, 2010 By Joe Marchese 4 Comments

tom lehrer2

The career of Tom Lehrer is an improbable one.  A Harvard mathematics instructor by day and musical satirist by night, Lehrer was never particularly prolific.  His entire output amounts to around 50 songs and a handful of albums which have been repackaged over the years.   Most of his oeuvre was recorded between 1953 and 1965.  Yet he was the recipient of a lavish 3-CD Rhino box set collecting most of his work in one place (The Remains of Tom Lehrer, Rhino R2 79831), and with that set now

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