Music Reissues Weekly: Magazine - Real Life, Secondhand Daylight, The Correct Use of Soap

MAGAZINE The first three albums from Howard Devoto’s post-punk marvels hit the shops again

The first three albums from Howard Devoto’s post-punk marvels hit the shops again

“Let's walk down memory lane the Magazine way. Let's regurgitate fifth-rate Low [the David Bowie album] period pieces. Let's plonk plonk plonk with ponderous sub-Pink Floydery. Let's do the wallpaper waltz. This is not pushing back the barriers. It's frighteningly bland conservatism.”

Music Reissues Weekly: The Yardbirds - The Ultimate Live at the BBC

THE YARDBIRDS - THE ULTIMATE LIVE AT THE BBC New ways to see British band

New ways to see this most significant of British bands

“The last we had was a bit of a flop. I own up about it, it was quite bad.” Speaking to the BBC’s Brian Matthew on 4 April 1967, Yardbirds’ frontman Keith Relf is candid about the chart fate of his band’s last single, October 1966’s “Happenings Ten Years Time Ago.”

Music Reissues Weekly: Isaac Hayes - Hot Buttered Singles

ISAAC HAYES - HOT BUTTERED SINGLES Plugging a gap in the story of the soul giant

Plugging a gap in the story of the soul giant

After the chart success of his second album, June 1969’s Hot Buttered Soul, it was inevitable that any single had to represent Isaac Hayes in a different way to the LP. The album’s 12-minute version of “Walk on by” would not work as a seven-incher. There was also “By the Time I Get to Phoenix,” which clocked in at over 18 minutes. They did, though, become the A- and B-sides of a tie-in single. But only after significant editing.

Music Reissues Weekly: Gerry and the Pacemakers - I Like It! Anthology 1963-1966

GERRY AND THE PACEMAKERS I Like It! Anthology 1963-1966

How the key Merseybeat hitmakers were left behind as pop moved on

The name is so familiar it inhibits analysis. Gerry and the Pacemakers – Gerry Marsden and his band, a group with a designation pronouncing they made the pace, were with the trends. For a while, the case can be made that this is how it was. After The Beatles smashed into the charts, Gerry and the Pacemakers occupied the rung below them as the UK’s second-most commercially successful new band.

Music Reissues Weekly: Rain - Tomorrow Never Comes: The NYC Sessions 1967-1968

RAIN: TOMORROW NEVER COMES: THE NYC SESSIONS 1967-1968 The final chapter in the story of Merseybeat pioneers The Undertakers

The final chapter in the story of Merseybeat pioneers The Undertakers

The Undertakers were central to the Merseybeat boom. The best of what they issued on single in 1963 and 1964 captured the raw, stomping sound adored by Liverpool’s audiences. But hits were elusive and they dropped off the musical map at the end of 1964. The Beatles never forget The Undertakers though. In 1968, former Undertaker Jackie Lomax was signed to their label Apple.

Music Reissues Weekly: Arvo Pärt - Tabula Rasa

ARVO PÄRT - TABULA RASA A foundational album returns

A foundational album returns

In 2022, Spritualized’s Jason Pierce described his musical goal as "trying to find somewhere between Arvo Pärt and The Stooges.” Amongst the most arresting and explicitly Pärt-styled results of this quest to link the minimalist composer with Iggy Pop‘s pre-punk confrontationists was the affecting "Broken Heart," from his band’s 1997 third album Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space.

Music Reissues Weekly: The Devil Rides In - Spellbinding Satanic Magick & The Rockult

THE DEVIL RIDES IN - SPELLBINDING SATANIC MAGICK Pop & rock embrace the dark side

When pop and rock embraced the dark side

Just over two weeks before Christmas 1967, The Rolling Stones issued Their Satanic Majesties Request. The album’s title appeared to serve time on the peace-and-love, flowers-for-everyone good vibes of the psychedelic era. A year later, the Stones’ next LP, Beggars Banquet, went further. It opened with "Sympathy for the Devil." “Just call me Lucifer…or I'll lay your soul to waste,” sang Mick Jagger.

Music Reissues Weekly: Why Don’t You Smile Now - Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65

Important collection focusing on the future Velvet Underground man’s period as a music business employee

The Velvet Underground first played before an audience on 11 December 1965. A year earlier, their two founder members Lou Reed and John Cale were beginning a period of schlepping around New York and New Jersey as supposed members of an equally dubious band called The Primitives. The job was to promote a single titled “The Ostrich,” just issued under that name.

Music Reissues Weekly: New Jill Swing

First-ever collection documenting new jack swing’s female counterpart

As the name of a music genre, new jack swing was coined in an issue of the Village Voice dated 18 October 1987. Writer Barry Michael Cooper was profiling producer, songwriter and member of the R&B trio Guy, Teddy Riley when he created a tag exemplifying the mix of R&B and hip-hop which had hit super-big in 1986 with Janet Jackson’s Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis-produced Control. Riley was on the same wavelength, and Cooper recognised a groundswell.

Here comes the flood: Bob Dylan's 1974 Live Recordings

★★★ HERE COMES THE FLOOD: BOB DYLANS'S 1974 LIVE RECORDINGS Night after night: Sony's latest gargantuan release from the vaults

Night after night: Sony's latest gargantuan release from the vaults

Lighters at the ready, because here comes the flood. Drawn from 16-track tape, 1/4in reels and lo-fi sound board cassettes that are now a half century old, the 27 CDs of 431 performances, 417 of them previously unreleased, of Dylan and The Band’s 1974 arena tour of the US, is a set that challenges the listeners’ staying power perhaps more than it celebrates an epochal tour.