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Travis – The Man Who [20th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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Travis2CD deluxe with the 19 B-sides on the second CD
After their successful debut album of murky pop, Travis seemingly felt a need to tinker with the formula. The product of this change is The Man Who, a quiet album filled to the brim with atmospheric and introspective ballads. Acoustic guitars and tranquil melodies rule here, as this release is an entirely different affair than the band’s revved-up debut. Fortunately for Travis, this disc became a massive U.K. hit, spawning no less than five hugely successful singles. The album highlight is “Why Does It Always Rain on Me?,” a sweeping singalong that took England by storm and became one of the biggest hits of 1999. However, despite the public’s warm embrace of this album, fans of the “old” Travis may be disappointed.

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Gone are the arena-ready stompers and the dirty, grimy singalong pop that comprised Good Feeling. Instead, what is left is merely adequate; The Man Who offers pleasant background music, but no truly gripping moments. It’s lite rock for late-’90s Britain that’s, unfortunately, easily forgettable

Disc 1
1. Writing to Reach You (03:41)
2. The Fear (04:12)
3. As You Are (04:14)
4. Driftwood (03:33)
5. The Last Laugh of the Laughter (04:20)
6. Turn (04:24)
7. Why Does It Always Rain on Me? (04:25)
8. Luv (04:55)
9. She’s So Strange (03:15)
10. Slide Show (10:31)

Disc 2
1. Green Behind the Ears (03:40)
2. Only Molly Knows (03:19)
3. Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah (03:50)
4. High as a Kite (02:32)
5. Be My Baby (05:16)
6. Where Is the Love? (04:19)
7. Village Man (03:18)
8. Driftwood (Live at the Link Café / 1999) (04:07)
9. The Urge for Going (06:04)
10. Slide Show (Live at the Link Café / 1999) (03:14)
11. River (03:56)
12. Days of Our Lives (05:44)
13. We Are Monkeys (03:06)
14. Baby One More Time (In Session) (03:32)
15. Coming Around (03:09)
16. Just the Faces Change (02:26)
17. The Connection (03:44)
18. Rock ‘n’ (Salad) Roll (02:00)
19. The Weight (05:12)


B-52’s – Cosmic Thing [30th Anniversary Expanded Edition] (2019)

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B52sCosmic Thing: 30th Anniversary Expanded Edition remasters the original 1989 album alongside five bonus remixes of the album’s biggest singles, including the smash hits “Love Shack” and “Roam,” and adds a live disc drawn from two sets in Texas in 1990.
No one could have predicted the runaway success of Cosmic Thing; in fact, in the years leading up to the album’s release, things seemed particularly bleak for the band. Guitarist Ricky Wilson, the older brother of vocalist Cindy Wilson, died of AIDS shortly after completing work on the group’s fourth album, Bouncing Off the Satellites (1986). The remaining members – Cindy Wilson, vocalists Kate Pierson and Fred Schneider and guitarist Keith Strickland – abstained from…

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…promoting the record, and save for a public service announcement for AMFAR in 1987, did not make any public appearances for years. (During that time, fellow Athens, GA group R.E.M. successfully broke into the mainstream, helping set the stage for a bigger splash should The B-52’s come back.)

And splash they did: with production duties split between Nile Rodgers (“Deadbeat Club,” “Roam”) and Don Was (“Love Shack,” “Channel Z”), Cosmic Thing was the group’s most accessible work to date. Aided by videos with constant rotation on MTV, “Love Shack” and “Roam” both reached No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, and the record sold more than 4 million copies in America, peaking at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 album chart.

Disc 1: Remastered/expanded album

  1. Cosmic Thing
  2. Dry Country
  3. Deadbeat Club
  4. Love Shack
  5. Junebug
  6. Roam
  7. Bushfire
  8. Channel Z
  9. Topaz
  10. Follow Your Bliss
  11. B-52’s Megamix
  12. Love Shack (Edit)
  13. Channel Z (Rock Mix)
  14. Roam (Extended Mix)
  15. Roam (12″ Mix)

Tracks 1-10 released as Reprise 25854, 1989
Track 11 from Reprise U.K. 12″ promo SAM 710, 1989/U.K. 12″ B-side to “Deadbeat Club” – Reprise W9526T, 1990
Track 12 from Reprise single 22817, 1989
Track 13 from Reprise 12″ single 21299, 1989
Tracks 14-15 from Reprise 12″/CD single 21441, 1989

Disc 2: Live In Texas, 1990 (previously unreleased)

  1. Cosmic Thing
  2. Bushfire
  3. Quiche Lorraine
  4. Dance This Mess Around
  5. Dry County
  6. Private Idaho
  7. Give Me Back My Man
  8. Deadbeat Club
  9. Mesopotamia
  10. Strobe Light
  11. Roam
  12. 52 Girls
  13. Love Shack
  14. Rock Lobster
  15. Whammy Kiss
  16. Channel Z

All tracks recorded live @ C.W. Mitchell Pavilion, The Woodlands, TX – 8/4/1990 except 15, recorded live @ Coca-Cola Starplex, Dallas, TX – 8/3/1990

Sigur Rós –Ágætis byrjun (A Good Beginning) [20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition] (2019)

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Sigur Ros…includes a live recording of their June 12th, 1999 concert at Íslenska Óperan (Icelandic Opera House), which has been remixed by former keyboardist Kjartan Sveinsson with Birgir Birgisson who originally recorded the performance, plus rarities and demos.
Two years passed since Sigur Rós’ debut. By this time, the band recruited in a new keyboardist by the name of Kjartan Sveinsson and it seems to have done nothing but take the band to an even higher state of self-awareness. Even on aesthetic matters, Sigur Rós entitle their sophomore effort not in a manner to play up the irony of high expectations (à la the Stone Roses’ Second Coming), but in a modest realization. This second album — Ágætis Byrjun — translates roughly to Good Start.

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So as talented as Von might have been, this time out is probably even more worthy of dramatic debut expectations. Indeed, Ágætis Byrjun pulls no punches from the start. After an introduction just this side of one of the aforementioned Stone Roses’ backward beauties, the album pumps in the morning mist with “Sven-G-Englar” — a song of such accomplished gorgeousness that one wonders why such a tiny country as Iceland can musically outperform entire continents in just a few short minutes. The rest of this full-length follows such similar quality. Extremely deep strings underpin falsetto wails from the mournfully epic (“Viðar Vel Tl Loftárasa”) to the unreservedly cinematic (“Avalon”). One will constantly be waiting to hear what fascinating turns such complex musicianship will take at a moment’s notice. At its best, the album seems to accomplish everything lagging post-shoegazers like Spiritualized or Chapterhouse once promised. However, at its worst, the album sometimes slides into an almost overkill of sonic structures. Take “Hjartað Hamast (Bamm Bamm Bamm),” for instance: there are so many layers of heavy strings, dense atmospherics, and fading vocals that it becomes an ineffectual mess of styles over style. As expected, though, the band’s keen sense of Sturm und Drang is mostly contained within an elegant scope of melodies for the remainder of this follow-up. Rarely has a sophomore effort sounded this thick and surprising. Which means that “Good Start” might as well become of the most charming understatements to come out of a band in years.

John Foxx – Metamatic [Deluxe Edition] (2018)

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John FoxxAlthough a minimalist approach informed John Foxx’s first solo album, the new “Deluxe Edition” reissue of Metamatic expands what was two sides of vinyl to a three-CD, 49-track box set. After leaving Ultravox following their early 1979 American tour, he quickly signed with Virgin Records and began recording with a couple of synthesisers and a rhythm machine. A bass guitar cropped up intermittently. The album’s lead-off single “Underpass” used only six of the recording studio’s available eight tracks. Despite the pared-down sensibility, Metamatic was organic and imbued with a human sensitivity.
Ultravox reconfigured their line-up by recruiting new frontman Midge Ure. Foxx told theartsdesk that “what Midge had done was a very…

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…skilled conversion of what we had arrived at into a more popular form.” The made-over Ultravox’s first single, “Sleepwalk”, was issued in June 1980 and “Vienna” would chart in early 1981.

Foxx was moving faster than the band he left behind but Metamatic had a protracted birth process. He signed with Virgin in May 1979, was given his own imprint Metal Beat and started working at North London’s Pathway Studio (usually identified with pub rock and punk bands). The release of an album titled Fusion / Fission was announced for October 1979. Its tie-in single was to be “Like a Miracle”/“Metal Beat”. Test pressings were manufactured, but with “A New Kind of Man” as the A-side. Eventually, Metamatic and “Underpass” were issued in January 1980.

At this point, Foxx’s contemporary context was the emerging synth-pop milieu. Amongst the period’s fellow travellers in making music with newly affordable synthesisers were The Normal, whose “T.V. O.D.” single had come out in May 1978, The Human League with “Being Boiled” (June 1978) and Thomas Leer’s “Private Plane” (September 1978). Gary Numan’s Ultravox-influenced Tubeway Army released “Down in the Park” in March 1979, the best-selling Replicas album (April 1979) and the hit single “Are ‘Friends’ Electric” (May 1979). By this point, the Human League were, like Foxx, with Virgin and their debut album came out in October 1979: maybe a reason Metamatic was put back (they could play live to promote their records – he could not). Foxx’s “Underpass” duly became a minor hit.

Heard now, Metamatic feels as much about melody as the then-current musical tools. “He’s a Liquid” and “Touch and Go” had been played live by Ultravox so, clearly, Foxx was honing some of the album’s songs before they were recorded; there was pre-planning. There’s also a timelessness, born from to the combination of Foxx’s chops as a songwriter and the use of pre-digital synths which had to be configured manually. The sounds and arrangements Foxx came up with were his own. The only track which has dated is “Metal Beat” due to its borrowings from elements of Kraftwerk’s “Showroom Dummies” and “The Robots”. Overall, Metamatic is poppy, romantic, and refracts the aura of concrete-filled urban environments and the power they exert.

Rather than effecting dehumanisation, these manufactured cityscapes created situations where, in “He’s a Liquid”, “he pulls, she pushed, they read the bible about the flood, she draws the curtains, ‘cos now she’s certain he’s a liquid.” For “No-One Driving”, “someone’s gone liquid in the sheets.” Transfigurative sensuality was still possible in a potential dystopia.

Metamatic has been reissued before. A 2001 single-disc version distractingly appended non-album singles and B-sides after the original conclusion of Side 2. A 2007 repackaging took it to two CDs, did not monkey with the flow of the album’s ten tracks by keeping them as Disc One’s sole contents and collected 13 tracks on a second disc. The new Disc One also reproduces the original album without bonuses. What is heard now is a precise remastering undertaken from the master tapes in 2014.

For the maximalist “Deluxe Edition”, most of Disc Two is as per tracks 1 to 13 of the second disc of the Demon Records 2007 reissue of the album, though they are sequenced slightly differently. Five of the new Disc Two’s 18 tracks are previously unheard.

Disc Three’s 21-tracks are previously unissued and mostly instrumentals recorded at the album sessions. Where there were no titles, Foxx’s notebooks from the period have been used to provide them. Amongst the unearthed curios is “Miss Machinery”, an aggressive early version of the B-side “20th Century”.

The bulk of these instrumentals are impressionistic, suggesting Foxx had more on his mind than creating a song-based album. While there are nods to Cluster, the overriding sense is of a spikier trial run of the more ambient music he began exploring around 1997. Hints of the pastoral and psychedelic lines he took in 1981 and 1982 are absent.

With a striking design by regular Foxx collaborator Jonathan Barnbrook (also the designer of the sleeve for David Bowie’s The Next Day), this is a stylish package and the illustrations of Foxx’s synthesiser settings are enlightening. Its booklet, though, lacks liner notes and details of exactly when individual tracks were recorded. Everything was taped at Pathway between June and November 1979, but it would have been good to track the album’s creation. Even with these oversights, the “Deluxe Edition” Metamatic is the definitive entry point into the solo career of this fascinating British musical maverick.

King Crimson – The Power to Believe [40th Anniversary Series] (2019)

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KC…features an enhanced, expanded master of the album. Three additional tracks from the sessions – the ‘Sus-tayn-Z I & II’ and ‘Superslow’ have been also been included as expansions.
The Power to Believe (2003) marks the return of King Crimson for the group’s first full-length studio release since ConstruKction of Light (2000). While it draws upon material featured on the live Level Five (2001) and studio Happy with What You Have to Be Happy With (2002) extended-play discs, there are also several new sonic sculptures included. Among them is the title track, which is divided into a series of central thematic motifs much in the same manner as the “Larks’ Tongues in Aspic” movements had done in the past.

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This 21st century schizoid band ably bears the torch of its predecessors with the same ballsy aggression that has informed other seminal King Crimson works — such as In the Court of the Crimson King (1969), Red (1974), and more recently THRAK (1995). This incarnation of the Mighty Krim includes the excessively talented quartet of Adrian Belew (guitar/vocals), Robert Fripp (guitar), Trey Gunn (Warr guitar/Warr fretless guitar), and Pat Mastelotto (percussion).

Under the auspices of Machine — whose notable productions include post-grunge and industrial medalists Pitchshifter and White Zombie — the combo unleashes a torrent of alternating sonic belligerence (“Level Five”) and inescapable beauty (“Eyes Wide Open”). These extremes are linked as well as juxtaposed by equally challenging soundscapes from Fripp on “The Facts of Life: Intro” as well as Belew’s series of “The Power to Believe” haikus. The disc is fleshed out with some choice extended instrumentals such as “Elektrik” and “Dangerous Curves,” boasting tricky time signatures that are indelibly linked to equally engaging melodies. Both “Happy with What You Have to Be Happy With” and “Facts of Life” stand out as the (dare say) perfect coalescence of Belew’s uncanny Beatlesque lyrical sense with the sort of bare-knuckled, in your face aural attack that has defined King Crimson for over three decades.

If the bandmembers’ constant tone probing is an active search to find the unwitting consciousness of a decidedly younger, rowdier, and more demanding audience, their collective mission is most assuredly accomplished on The Power to Believe — even more so than the tripped-out psychedelic prog rock behemoth from whence they initially emerged.

Gomez – Liquid Skin [20th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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GomezAbbey Road’s Frank Arkwright has delved into the archives to remaster “Liquid Skin” from the original tapes; include 5 previously unreleased tracks, 4 previously unreleased alternate versions and 9 live tracks recorded at The Fillmore in San Francisco in 2000.
In the wake of Brit-pop’s unraveling and the legitimization of prog rock by Radiohead and Spiritualized, Gomez was seen as the future of Brit-rock upon their debut. Bring It On was caught between those two poles: traditionalist on one hand, yet striving for a larger goal. Gomez’s secondhand appropriations of American music, crossed with ambling arrangements and a hazy atmosphere indigenous to home recordings, won them a larger audience who expected…

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…the group’s second album, Liquid Skin, to be a great breakthrough. They may be disappointed to find that it’s not.

Instead, Liquid Skin is a cleaner, more streamlined version of the debut; it’s clear that the band made the move from the garage into a professional studio. In doing so, they wound up with a dead ringer for Pearl Jam’s No Code, in which America’s best traditionalist band of the ’90s strove for a glorious, pan-ethnic mess and pretty much succeeded. Liquid Skin doesn’t rival No Code, not just because Gomez isn’t as passionate, but also because Pearl Jam didn’t sound as self-conscious or predictable when they decided to stretch out. Throughout the record, Gomez betrays their age, playing music that they believe to be experimental or rootsy, but not quite going far enough in either direction. This was true of Bring It On as well, but the cleaner sound and improved focus brings these factors to the forefront. And, frankly, that’s not such a bad thing, either. In this context, they might not seem as adventurous (and, therefore, important), but they do bring back varying strands in interesting ways. They still seem to be trying too hard, and treading water in doing so. Still, Liquid Skin will satisfy fans of the first record, just as it will undoubtedly frustrate those who didn’t get with them the first time. — AMG

CD1
1 Hangover
2 Revolutionary Kind
3 Bring It On
4 Blue Moon Rising
5 Las Vegas Dealer
6 We Haven’t Turned Around
7 Fill My Cup
8 Rhythm & Blues Alibi
9 Rosalita
10 California
11 Devil Will Ride

Previously unreleased demos
12 Throwin’ Myself Away
13 Nobody’s Girl
14 Someday
15 Brother Lead
16 Summer

CD2
Previously unreleased alternate versions
1 High On Liquid Skin (Demo)
2 We Haven’t Turned Around (No Orchestra)
3 Rosalita (Kit Version)
4 Las Vegas Dealer (Ben Vocal)

Live at The Fillmore, San Francisco, 2000
5 Hangover
6 Blue Moon Rising
7 Rhythm & Blues Alibi
8 Rosemary
9 Do’s & Don’ts
10 Las Vegas Dealer
11 We Haven’t Turned Around
12 Devil Will Ride
13 Bring It On
14 Gomez in a Bucket

Fastball – All the Pain Money Can Buy [20th Anniversary Edition] (2018)

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FastballOmnivore’s 20th anniversary reissue of ‘All the Pain Money Can Buy’ contains nine bonus tracks, including B-sides, covers of the Replacements and Burt Bacharach, and a host of demos.
Fastball’s charms came into sharp focus on All the Pain Money Can Buy. Stripping away the grungy guitars that defined 1996’s Make Your Mama Proud, Fastball decide to indulge in a power pop fantasia, snatching elements from the British Invasion, ’70s AM pop, psychedelia, new wave, power pop, and adult alternative rock. Co-producer Julian Raymond certainly assisted in this shift, but it’s also evident that songwriters Tony Scalzo and Miles Zuniga — the pair never wrote together, choosing to alternate songs instead — decided to stretch their muscles, writing a few songs in distinct…

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…styles (“G.O.D. [Good Old Days]” is a horn-driven piece of bubblegum that evokes “Build Me Up Buttercup”), but also choosing to blend their influences. Notable among the latter is Scalzo’s “The Way,” a simmering, cinematic pop gem that climbed its way to number five on Billboard’s Hot 100. Its success pigeonholed Fastball as a one-hit wonder, a designation that was neither true — Scalzo’s easy-rolling “Out of My Head” went to number 20 on its way to being an adult album alternative staple — nor fair. Perhaps All the Pain Money Can Buy carries some trappings of the post-grunge salad days of the early ’90s — certainly, its very title suggests it’s a collection of angst — but at its core, it’s a colorful, catchy collection of tunes rooted in classic pop. Zuniga’s “Fire Escape” is driven by hooks that chime like the Byrds, while his “Sooner or Later” punches like prime Elvis Costello, sounds that find a contemporary balance with his lite-soul duet with Poe (“Which Way to the Top?”) and Scalzo’s hits.

Removed from the post-grunge era, what’s striking about All the Pain Money Can Buy is that fine, sturdy craft, which is evident both in the songs and production. No longer seeming like part of the Zeitgeist, the album appears to be part of a long, proud tradition of tuneful guitar pop.

Live – Throwing Copper [25th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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LiveThe band’s 1994 album is remastered & expanded with four bonus tracks (one original “hidden track” and three previously unreleased cuts “Hold Me Up,” “We Deal in Dreams,” and “Susquehanna”) and on a 2CD Super Deluxe box adding the previously unreleased “Live at Woodstock ’94” set. 
On Throwing Copper, Live tightened their sound, added crashing crescendos for dramatic effect, and injected some anger into their sound and songwriting. They also eased up a bit on the Eastern philosophy; the result is a more cohesive, memorable record overall, and quite an improvement from the sometimes overly precious Mental Jewelry. And for all of Mental Jewelry’s ideologies, Throwing Copper is ultimately a more passionate and successful album,…

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…thanks to tracks like “I Alone,” “Selling the Drama,” and “All Over You,” all of which received heavy radio play. The rebirth-themed “Lightning Crashes,” the album’s biggest hit, was written in memory of Barbara Lewis, a classmate who was killed by a drunk driver in 1993. Other standouts include the Kurt Cobain/Courtney Love-inspired “Stage,” the apocalyptic “White, Discussion,” the bass-driven, obsessive “Iris,” and the dark “Dam at Otter Creek.” Of course, Ed Kowalczyk couldn’t resist throwing in a song like “T.B.D.” (for the Tibetan Book of the Dead), based on Aldous Huxley’s slow descent into death, aided by heroin.

Its melodrama is a bit much, even for Live, and is just a sign of things to come on their next album, Secret Samadhi. But Throwing Copper is still a huge improvement from Mental Jewelry, and is the least overtly preachy Live album to date.


Banco de Gaia – The Magical Sounds of Banco de Gaia [20th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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Banco de GaiaAfter the disaster of Big Men Cry and a traumatic American tour with Moby, it was time for Banco de Gaia to take stock. A move to Somerset allowed him to set up a new studio, and all the label intrigue from the last release drove him to find a new American partner in Six Degrees, and to set up his own label, Disco Gecko Recordings, for European releases.
Two years in the making, The Magical Sounds of Banco de Gaia travels freely between genres and continents, from the European violins of “Glove Puppet” to the Kenyan rain song that forms the basis of the next piece, “No Rain.”
So maybe it’s world music, or global trance; but it’s not intentional. “I used global samples without even realizing it,” he says. “I’m more…

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…interested in atmospheres. The texture is evocative rather than upfront. There are no 3-minute pop hooks; you can’t whistle much of it in the shower.”

What you can do with “The Magical Sounds of Banco de Gaia” is sink deep into the rhythms – which does not necessarily mean you can dance to it. Marks adds layers of percussion (“I sometimes don’t know when to stop”) to create a fully anchored groove with surprising polyrhythms and syncopations. “I can’t listen to a lot of dance music,” he admits. “The groove is too stripped down. I like the more complex rhythms of rock, jazz, or Latin American music, where sometimes you can’t even tell what the core rhythm is!”

The 20th anniversary edition comes garlanded with an extra disc featuring an unreleased remix from the time, a stunning live medley, a fan remix discovered on Soundcloud, two modern remixes by fellow Disco Gecko artists (dr trippy and Simon Power) plus a live recording from WOMAD festival. “WOMAD was in Reading back then and we played in the sports centre which was basically a big concrete box. In the middle of summer. A very hot summer. I went on only wearing shorts and was soaked in sweat before the drums even came in. Great times.”

Gregory Isaacs – Mr. Isaacs [Deluxe Edition] (2019)

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Gregory IsaacsFirst released in 1977 the Mr Isaacs album established the template for Gregory Isaacs’ subsequent superstar status. Conceived by Gregory and producer Ossie Hibbert as an album project it contained three of the Cool Ruler’s greatest hits ‘Smile’, ‘Slave Master’ and ‘Set the Captives Free’. Re-mastered by Kevin Metcalfe this 36 track CD set includes more Gregory, DJ Cuts plus complete Leggo Dub album plus extra version.
The Cool Ruler is not known primarily as a cultural roots singer. Instead, his bread and butter has always been a particular brand of seductive lover’s rock, always delivered at languid tempos in a reedy, not-particularly-attractive voice. So the largely political content of Mr. Isaacs, while not unprecedented, was still something…

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…of a departure from the norm when it was originally released in the ’70s on the Jamaican Cash & Carry label. It succeeds for a couple of reasons, not the least of which is the rock-solid playing of the Revolutionaries. But Gregory deserves credit for understanding that trenchant political statements are sometimes most effective when delivered with the least amount of drama. The lines “I was given as a sacrifice/To build a black man’s hell and a white man’s paradise” are all the more biting when sung in Gregory’s cool, lilting tenor-lesser interpreters would have clenched up and emoted; he lets the words speak for themselves and offers a vocal counterpoint instead of hammering the message home. “Story Book Children” is sweet and wistful; “Handcuff,” like “Sacrifice,” simmers with quiet outrage. And there are a couple of love songs, too, just so you don’t forget you’re listening to the Lonely Lover.  — AMG

My Morning Jacket – The Tennessee Fire [20th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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My Morning Jacket…the package boasts the original 16-song “Tennessee Fire” LP alongside a bonus disc featuring 13 previously unreleased songs. The bonus tracks include demos (“Lil Billy”), alternative versions (“Evelyn is Not Real”, “Heartbreakin’ Man”), and newly revealed numbers (“John Dyes Her Hair Red”, “Finger on the Frog”). 
My Morning Jacket is a four-piece band from Louisville, KY, led by singer/songwriter Jim James. The songs on Tennessee Fire evoke warm (and somewhat lonely) memories of a gothic country night. Electric and acoustic guitars, harmonica, lap-steel, drums and bass all join his unique (Neil Young meets Wayne Coyne) voice in a huge pool of reverb. At first you wonder if the sound will overtake the songs, but after the first…

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…chorus you realize that the beauty of these simple and emotive songs is only enhanced by the addition of this effect, and by the end of the first song, you can’t even tell that it’s there. Released to (world) wide critical acclaim, Tennessee Fire provides proof (200 proof) that heartfelt American music is alive and well, and living in KY. A must for anyone who loves the sound of alt-country mixed with wide-open spaces.

Disc 1
1. Heartbreakin Man (03:11)
2. They Ran (02:48)
3. The Bear (04:39)
4. Nashville to Kentucky (02:58)
5. Old Sept Blues (02:28)
6. If All Else Fails (03:58)
7. It’s About Twilight Now (04:06)
8. Evelyn Is Not Real (03:04)
9. War Begun (03:06)
10. Picture of You (03:16)
11. I Will Be There When You Die (04:42)
12. The Dark (03:22)
13. By My Car (04:04)
14. Butch Cassidy (03:55)
15. I Think I’m Going to Hell (05:06)
16. Instrumental (02:42)

Disc 2
1. John Dyes Her Hair Red (03:34)
2. Flew in on a Dead Horse (03:54)
3. Yellow and Strobe (02:09)
4. Lil Billy (Jim Demo) (03:05)
5. Evelyn is Not Real (First Version) (03:00)
6. All This Joy Brings Different Feelings (02:53)
7. Finger on the Frog (02:43)
8. Gifts (04:10)
9. Weeks Go by Like Days (Alt. Version) (02:29)
10. Plasma Ball (02:58)
11. Breathin’ Afterbirth (02:32)
12. Heartbreakin Man (First Version) (03:27)
13. I Think I’m Going to Hell (Two Meter Session) (04:41)
14. If All Else Fails (First Version) (03:39)
15. The Bear (First Version) (03:55)
16. The Bear (Third Version) (04:38)

Cindy Lee Berryhill – Straight Outta Marysville [Expanded Edition] (2019)

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Straight Outta Marysville…includes 6 previously unissued bonus tracks.
After 5 years out of the spotlight, Cindy Lee Berryhill returned in 1994 for the ambitious Garage Orchestra. Sadly, just after that album’s release, her boyfriend and future husband, Crawdaddy! magazine founder Paul Williams, suffered a traumatic brain injury after a bicycling accident. It would take until 1996 for Straight Outta Marysville to arrive. It was worth the wait.
Taking off where Garage Orchestra began Straight Outta Marysville contains much of the same inventive writing and playing, with Cindy Lee’s vocals from and center.
Berryhill is like the baseball pitcher who tosses fine games every fourth or fifth outing. If you happen to see one of those games, you’d have…

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…no idea why the pitcher couldn’t perform like that all of the time. By the same token, if you only heard Berryhill’s best tracks, you’d think she was a major singer-songwriter, or at least on the verge of becoming one. That’s what happens here: when she cuts the schtick and just concentrates on the heart of the matter, as on “California” or “Unwritten Love Song” (her most soulful vocal ever), she sounds like a real contender.  — AMG

Cindy Lee Berryhill – Garage Orchestra [Deluxe Edition] (2019)

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Garage Orchestra“Garage Orchestra” returns with the original 10 songs plus 9 previously unissued bonus tracks.
…Cindy Lee Berryhill burst onto the music scene in 1987 with her acclaimed debut Who’s Gonna Save the World? and followed it up two years later with the Lenny Kaye produced Naked Movie Star. However, the world would have to wait until 1994 for her next release, the ambitious Garage Orchestra.
Earning a 4-star review from Rolling Stone, Garage Orchestra was a departure from the more folk-rock leanings of her first two albums, with Cindy Lee’s singing and playing being augmented by instrumentation from strings, brass, woodwinds, and even toy piano, marimba, and tympani. Her songs had more of a ’70s singer/songwriter…

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…vibe this time around, and many had declared it the best album of her career thus far.

***

Although Cindy Lee Berryhill’s first two albums positioned her as a folky with some stray Patti Smith leanings, Cindy Lee Berryhill is, at heart, a closet Beach Boys fan. Her third album, Garage Orchestra, drops the folk-rock leanings of the first two records in favor of a singer/songwriter feel akin to early-’70s Beach Boys classics like Surf’s Up and Holland, with Berryhill’s guitar and piano ably supported by a much larger cast of musicians who color the tracks with vibes, strings, horns, and percussion. Berryhill’s trilling voice and oddball lyrical preoccupations are the same, however; the quirky shaggy-dog story “Gary Handeman” and the incredibly odd “UFO Suite” are among Berryhill’s funniest and strangest songs, while the Barenaked Ladies-like “I Want Stuff” and the gentle Brian Wilson homage “Song for Brian” cover the album’s emotional poles. Much more solid than her first two records, both of which had some filler, Garage Orchestra is Berryhill’s first completely solid and intriguing effort. — AMG

Catchers – Mute [25th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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Catchers…includes the bonus ‘Shifting’ EP, the ‘We Speak in Flames’ rarities CD, and the ‘Live 1994-1996’ album, which was recorded in Paris’ Passage du Nord-Ouest and the Bataclan.
All too often quality acts surface and sink without so much as a sound. Only months or years later, while surfing the web or digging through import bins, does anyone realize something’s been missed. In 1995, Catchers gained some notoriety in Europe with their debut Mute, a release that would have fit nicely on the label of the same name. Faced with the possibility of next-big-thing status, one band member responded, “We’re not a trendy image of the times, we’re more substantial than that.” The Irish quartet toured the states for six weeks in support of Mute, and promptly faded…

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…back into obscurity. That Catchers managed only a blip on the radar screen in the U.S. is still more proof that popularity and quality often exist independently of each other. Like releases from such shoegazer acts as Ride and My Bloody Valentine, Mute is cold and distant, yet filled with emotion. Make no mistake; the similarities between Catchers and the aforementioned end there.

Lead single “Cotton Dress” finds vocalists Dale Grundle and Alice Lemon trading lines over a bounding melody (not hiding behind walls of guitars), as if completely unaware of each other. In “Beauty No. 3” and “Sleepyhead,” their harmonies drift through dreamy soundscapes with seeming indifference. “Apathy” brings crunchy guitars and an off-kilter circus keyboard riff into the mix, both played as if in a vacuum. Such effected detachment could make Mute as pretentious and incoherent as a teenage tribute to Bauhaus or Joy Division. But the result is hollow without being empty, leaving the listener to bask in the haunting grace of this hard-to-find treasure.

Elliott Smith – Figure 8 [Deluxe Edition] (2019)

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Figure 8…The bonus tracks of Figure 8 include the titular, faithful cover of the ‘School House Rock’ classic, written by Bob Dorough, that gave the album its name but was only released as a b-side on the UK ‘Son of Sam’ single along with the rollicking gem ‘A Living Will.’ Three songs from the rare French promo 3 Titres Inedits are included: the Beatles-y ‘I Can’t Answer You Anymore,’ ‘Pretty Mary K (Alternate Version)’ and ‘Happiness (Acoustic).’ An acoustic version of ‘Son of Sam’ is also featured along with Smith’s gorgeous cover of The Beatles’ ‘Because,’ which was featured in the film American Beauty and on its soundtrack and included on the Japanese edition of Figure 8. That track along with ‘Son of Sam’ (Acoustic) are the only ones that were previously available digitally.

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Judging only by his earlier, bare-bones indie-label albums, it seemed highly unlikely that Elliott Smith would turn into the ambitious arranger and studio craftsman of his lushly textured Dreamworks debut, XO. A big part of that shift, of course, was the fact that Smith had major-label finances and equipment to work with for the first time; this allowed him to fuse his melancholy, slightly punky folk with the rich sonics of pop artists like the Beatles and Beach Boys. Smith continues in that direction for the follow-up, Figure 8, an even more sonically detailed effort laden with orchestrations and inventive production touches. With a couple of exceptions, the sound of Smith’s melancholy has largely shifted from edgy to sighingly graceful, although his lyrics are as dark as ever. Even if the subject matter stays in familiar territory, though, the backing tracks are another matter — a gorgeous, sweeping kaleidoscope of layered instruments and sonic textures. Smith fleshes his songs out with assurance and imagination, and that newfound sense of mastery is ultimately the record’s real emphasis; there’s seemingly a subtle new wrinkle to the sound of every track, and yet it’s all easily recognizable as trademark Smith. Even if it is a very impressive statement overall, Figure 8 isn’t quite the masterpiece it wants to be — there’s something about the pacing that just makes the record feel long (at over 52 minutes, it is the longest album in Smith’s catalog), and it can sometimes float away from the listener’s consciousness. Perhaps it’s that Smith’s songwriting does slip on occasion here, which means that those weaker tracks sink under the weight of arrangements they aren’t equipped to support. Still, most of the songs do reveal their strengths with repeated plays, and it’s worth the price of a few nondescript items to reap the rewards of the vast majority. Fans who miss the intimacy of his Kill Rock Stars records won’t find much to rejoice about here, but overall, Figure 8 comes tantalizingly close to establishing Elliott Smith as the consummate pop craftsman he’s bidding to become. — AMG


Elliott Smith – XO [Deluxe Edition] (2019)

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Elliott-SmithXO has been expanded to include nine tracks recorded and released during the XO era and features a handful of excellent B-sides released on the UK singles for ‘Waltz #2’ and ‘Baby Britain:’ the instrumental ‘Our Thing,’ the rocker ‘How to Take a Fall,’ the brooding ‘The Enemy Is You’ and the full band version of ‘Some Song (Alternate Version).’ It also includes a demo of ‘Waltz #1’ and an early version of ‘Bottle Up and Explode!,’ as well as a remix of ‘Baby Britain’ and a radio edit of ‘Waltz #2.’ It’s rounded out with ‘Miss Misery,’ Smith’s Oscar-nominated song from Good Will Hunting that was included as a bonus track on the Japanese edition of XO.
A year before his major-label debut, XO, was released, it seemed unlikely that Elliott Smith…

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…would even be on a major, let alone having his record be one of the more anticipated releases of 1998. He had certainly earned a great deal of critical respect with his low-key, acoustic indie records and was emerging as a respected songwriter, but he hadn’t made much of an impression outside of journalists, record collectors, and indie rockers. An Oscar nomination can change things, however. “Miss Misery,” one of Smith’s elegantly elegiac songs for Gus Van Sant’s Good Will Hunting, unexpectedly earned an Academy Award nomination, and he was immediately thrust into the spotlight. He was reluctant to embrace instant celebrity, yet he didn’t refuse a contract with DreamWorks, and he didn’t shy away from turning XO into a glorious fruition of his talents. Smith’s songs remain intensely introspective, yet the lush, Beatlesque production provides a terrifically charming counterpoint. His sweetly dark melodies are vividly brought to life with the detailed arrangements, and they sell Smith’s tormented songs — it’s easy to get caught up in the tunes and the sound of the record, then realize later what the songs are actually about. That’s a sign of a good craftsman, and XO proves that not only can Elliott Smith craft a song, but he knows how to make an alluring pop record as well.

Massive Attack – Mezzanine [20th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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Massive Attack…The 1998 album has been remastered (by Tim Young at Metropolis) and comes with an album of previously unreleased dub mixes by the Mad Professor. These remixes were originally intended to be released on a Mad Professor ‘Mezzanine’ remix album – yet in the end, only a few of his remixes were issued as single b-sides.
Increasingly ignored amidst the exploding trip-hop scene, Massive Attack finally returned in 1998 with Mezzanine, a record immediately announcing not only that the group was back, but that they’d recorded a set of songs just as singular and revelatory as on their debut, almost a decade back. It all begins with a stunning one-two-three-four punch: “Angel,” “Risingson,” “Teardrop,” and “Inertia Creeps.” Augmenting their samples…

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…and keyboards with a studio band, Massive Attack open with “Angel,” a stark production featuring pointed beats and a distorted bassline that frames the vocal (by group regular Horace Andy) and a two-minute flame-out with raging guitars. “Risingson” is a dense, dark feature for Massive Attack themselves (on production as well as vocals), with a kitchen sink’s worth of dubby effects and reverb. “Teardrop” introduces another genius collaboration — with Elizabeth Fraser from Cocteau Twins — from a production unit with a knack for recruiting gifted performers. The blend of earthy with ethereal shouldn’t work at all, but Massive Attack pull it off in fine fashion. “Inertia Creeps” could well be the highlight, another feature for just the core threesome. With eerie atmospherics, fuzz-tone guitars, and a wealth of effects, the song could well be the best production from the best team of producers the electronic world had ever seen. Obviously, the rest of the album can’t compete, but there’s certainly no sign of the side-two slump heard on Protection, as both Andy and Fraser return for excellent, mid-tempo tracks (“Man Next Door” and “Black Milk,” respectively).

***

…All eight of the Mad Professor remixes included on the anniversary reissue are previously unreleased and include his dub mixes of two tracks not originally featured on Mezzanine but from the same period – Metal Banshee – a dub version of ‘Superpredators’ which was a cover of Siouxsie and the Banshees’ ‘Metal Postcard’ – and ‘Wire’, a track they recorded for the soundtrack of the film Welcome to Sarajevo. — SDE

Frank Zappa – Orchestral Favorites [40th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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Orchestral FavoritesOrchestral Favorites is an odd release in the Zappa catalogue – one that started its life in a very different configuration. The music, recorded live in September 1975 with a full orchestra and Terry Bozzio on drums, was intended to be released as part of a larger project called Läther (posthumously released in 1996). But after a series of lawsuits surrounding Zappa and his former label, the material was eventually issued without Zappa’s approval (nor his usual quality control standards) in 1979. Original versions lacked artist credits and liner notes, and featured cover artwork that Zappa went on to disparage.
The 3-CD edition of Orchestral Favorites: 40th Anniversary features new, high-resolution…

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…transfers from the original master tapes.

To prepare the set, Joe Travers and Ahmet Zappa returned to the original master tapes from that September 18, 1975 show at UCLA’s Royce Hall. During their search, they uncovered the original master tone reel that allowed them to properly set up the playback and transfer of the masters. As UMe notes in its press release, “Zappa reworked Orchestral Favorites for the CD format in 1991, and it has been reissued several times since his death. But the matching of the new master to the project tone reel means that the album can now be presented as he intended.”

The 40th Anniversary Edition of Orchestral Favorites not only include that original, 5-song album (newly remastered), but it also feature a further two discs comprising the entire September 18 performance! The 20-song set features some of the most intriguing Zappa material ever set to tape. As Ahmet Zappa said in a statement, “The [program] repertoire consisted of complex and challenging music that originates from all time frames of FZ’s career. Older themes that predate the original Mothers Of Invention, to brand new pieces hot off the pen, mixed in with some good ol’ FZ-directed improvisation.”

Disc 1 – Original Album
1. Strictly Genteel
2. Pedro’s Dowry
3. Naval Aviation in Art?
4. Duke of Prunes
5. Bogus Pomp
Bonus Track
6. Strictly Genteel (Keyboard OD Version)

Disc 2 – Performance from September 18, 1975
1. Show Star/Bogus Pomp Explained
2. Bogus Pomp
3. Revised Music for Low-Budge Symphony Orchestra
4. The Story of Pedro’s Dowry
5. Pedro’s Dowry
6. The Story of Rollo
7. Rollo

Disc 3 – Performance from September 18, 1975 (continued)
1. Black Napkins Instructions
2. Black Napkins
3. Dog/Meat
4. The Players
5. Naval Aviation in Art?
6. “Another Weirdo Number”
7. Lumpy Gravy (Extract)/Improvisation
8. Evening At The Hermitage
9. “A Special Guest Artist”
10. Duke Of Prunes
11. “Absolutely Disgusting”
12. The Adventures Of Greggery Peccary
13. Strictly Genteel

Gregg Allman – Laid Back [Deluxe Edition] (2019)

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Gregg AllmanLaid Back first arrived in stores on the Capricorn label a few months following the release of The Allman Brothers Band’s acclaimed Brothers and Sisters. While both albums were recorded roughly concurrently, with the artist once likening Laid Back to his “mistress,” the sound of the LP was quite different than the work with his famous band despite guest appearances from Jaimoe, Butch Trucks, and Chuck Leavell. Co-produced by Johnny Sandlin, the Allman Brothers’ producer and Gregg’s old bandmate in The Hour Glass, it explored Gregg’s soul, R&B, and gospel influences and even featured horn and string orchestrations. Guests outside of the band’s sphere included background vocalist Cissy Houston and saxophone great David “Fathead” Newman.

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Upon its release in October 1973, Laid Back reached No. 13 on the Billboard chart and yielded his hit solo version of the AMB’s “Midnight Rider.”

The album will be reissued as a remastered and expanded deluxe set on 2CDs and digitally, with an additional 26 tracks (16 of which are previously unreleased), for a grand total of 34 tracks.  These bonus tracks encompass demos, alternate takes, early and rough mixes, rehearsal takes, demos, live performances, and outtakes.

CD 1

  1. Midnight Rider
  2. Queen of Hearts
  3. Please Call Home
  4. Don’t Mess Up a Good Thing
  5. These Days
  6. Multi-Colored Lady
  7. All My Friends
  8. Will the Circle Be Unbroken

Early Mixes

  1. Midnight Rider (Early Mix)*
  2. Queen of Hearts (Early Mix)
  3. Please Call Home (Early Mix)*
  4. Don’t Mess Up a Good Thing (Early Mix)*
  5. These Days (Early Mix)*
  6. Multi-Colored Lady (Early Mix)
  7. All My Friends (Early Mix)*
  8. Will the Circle Be Unbroken (Early Mix)*

CD 2

Demos, Outtakes & Alternates

  1. Never Knew How Much (Demo)**
  2. All My Friends (Demo)
  3. Please Call Home (Demo)*
  4. Queen Of Hearts (Demo)*
  5. God Rest His Soul (Solo Guitar & Vocal Demo)
  6. Rollin’ Stone (Catfish Blues) (Solo Guitar & Vocal Demo)**
  7. Will The Circle Be Unbroken (Solo Guitar & Vocal Demo)
  8. Multi-Colored Lady (Solo Guitar & Vocal Demo)
  9. These Days (Solo Guitar, Piano & Vocal Demo)*
  10. Shadow Dream Song (Solo Guitar & Vocal Demo)
  11. Wasted Words**
  12. These Days (Alternate Version with Pedal Steel Guitar)
  13. Multi-Colored Lady (Rough Mix)*
  14. These Days (Rough Mix)*
  15. God Rest His Soul (Rehearsal)
  16. Midnight Rider (Rehearsal)*
  17. Song For Adam / Shadow Dream Song (Solo Guitar & Vocal Demo)
  18. Melissa (Live at the Capitol Theatre)*

(*) denotes previously unreleased track

(**) denotes previously unreleased mix

John Williams – Superman: The Movie [40th Anniversary Edition] (2019)

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John WilliamsFollowing remastered releases of the scores to Superman II, Superman III and Superman IV: The Quest For Peace in 2018, La-La Land Records returns to the one that started it all: a brilliant new remastered edition of John Williams’ score to Superman: The Movie, landing just a few months after its 40th anniversary. As with those versions, Mike Matessino is at the helm, producing, mixing, assembling and remastering this new three-disc set. This time, the score is sourced from the newly-located original 2″, 24-track music masters, making this far and away the best-sounding version of this classic score ever released.
Williams’ music to Superman almost needs no introduction, but it’s worth noting what a towering achievement this score was for…

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…the veteran composer at a time when he was composing classic film themes with all the speed and strength of The Man of Steel himself. This screen adaptation of the legendary DC Comics superhero was the most ambitious ever, a planned two-film story shot simultaneously with producers Alexander and Ilya Salkind, The Omen director Richard Donner, and a galaxy of talent from established stars (Gene Hackman as the villainous Lex Luthor, Marlon Brando as Superman’s Kryptonian father Jor-El) and up-and-comers (including definitive performances by Christopher Reeve as Superman and Margot Kidder as Lois Lane).

Working from an epic script co-written by The Godfather novelist Mario Puzo, Donner stressed the importance of a genuine, believable story (“verisimilitude,” the director was keen to say) told fantastically, with realistic flying effects and emotional heft in the film’s craft – a worthy goal particularly in the wake of the release of Star Wars a year before. John Williams, of course, had won his third Oscar for the soundtrack to that film, and again reunited with The London Symphony Orchestra to create a bold musical accompaniment for Superman: The Movie. (This partnership with the LSO produced six incredible scores between 1977 and 1981: Star Wars, The Fury, Superman, Dracula, The Empire Strikes Back and Raiders Of The Lost Ark.) Williams’ Oscar-nominated work for Superman, anchored by multiple melodic leitmotifs and a love theme that was turned into a pop tune, became synonymous with the character for several generations; when Warner Bros. released their first Superman film in nearly two decades with 2006’s Superman Returns, composer John Ottman retained nearly all of Williams’ motifs.

Disc 1: Film Score

  1. Prelude and Main Title
  2. The Planet Krypton and The Dome Opens
  3. Destruction of Krypton (Extended Version)
  4. The Kryptonquake
  5. The Trip To Earth
  6. The Crash Site
  7. Growing Up
  8. Jonathan’s Death
  9. Leaving Home
  10. The Fortress Of Solitude (Extended Version)
  11. The Mugger
  12. Lex Luthor’s Lair (Extended Version)
  13. Helicopter Sequence
  14. The Burglar Sequence and Chasing Crooks
  15. Cat Rescue and Air Force One
  16. The Penthouse
  17. The Flying Sequence (Instrumental Version)
  18. Clark Loses His Nerve

Disc 2: Film Score continued and Extras

  1. The March Of The Villains
  2. The Truck Convoy Sequence
  3. To The Lair
  4. Trajectory Malfunction
  5. Luthor’s Lethal Weapon
  6. Superman Rescued and Chasing Rockets
  7. Golden Gate Bridge and The Rescue Of Jimmy
  8. Pushing Boulders and Flying To Lois
  9. Turning Back The World
  10. The Prison Yard and End Title
  11. Love Theme From Superman
  12. Prelude and Main Title (Alternate)
  13. The Planet Krypton (Alternate Segment)
  14. The Dome Opens (Alternate)
  15. The Fortress Of Solitude (Alternate Segment)
  16. The Mugger (Alternate)
  17. Prelude and Main Title (Film Version)
  18. I Can Fly (Flying Sequence Alternate Segment)
  19. Can You Read My Mind (Film Version)
  20. Trajectory Malfunction (Alternate)
  21. Turning Back The World (Extended Version)
  22. The Prison Yard/End Title (Film Version)

Disc 3: Original Soundtrack Album (released as Warner Bros. Records 2BSK-3257, 1978)

  1. Theme From Superman (Main Title)
  2. The Planet Krypton
  3. Destruction Of Krypton
  4. The Trip To Earth
  5. Growing Up
  6. Love Theme From Superman
  7. Leaving Home
  8. The Fortress Of Solitude
  9. The Flying Sequence/Can You Read My Mind
  10. Super Rescues
  11. Lex Luthor’s Lair
  12. Superfeats
  13. The March Of The Villains
  14. Chasing Rockets
  15. Turning Back The World
  16. End Title
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