Reissue CDs Weekly: The London Pub Rock Scene, The Year The UK Turned Day-Glo

Box sets underlining how Brit-punk didn’t create a cleavage with the musical past

The standard recitation goes like this. In the early Seventies a London scene evolved, centring on bands playing in pubs. Music was taken back to the grassroots. Finesse was unnecessary. What happened was dubbed pub rock and it laid the ground for an even more basic style: punk rock. Pub rock fed into and helped foster punk rock.

Reissue CDs Weekly: The Stooges - Live At Goose Lake

THE STOOGES - LIVE AT GOOSE LAKE Iggy and pals roar through full ‘Fun House’

Blistering 1970 recording of Iggy and pals roaring through the full ‘Fun House’ album

So far this year, Live at Goose Lake August 8th, 1970 is 2020’s most exciting archive release. The album is a previously unknown soundboard recording of The Stooges playing at Jackson, Michigan’s Goose Lake Festival. The event was formally billed as Goose Lake Park – International Music Festival. Also on were Faces, Ten Years After, The Flying Burrito Brothers and The James Gang.

Reissue CDs Weekly: This Is Our Music - Jazz Out Of Norway

Double-disc testament to a nation’s fertile musical seedbed

The Turnamat is a type of washing machine made by AEG. In the composition titled “Turnamat”, Seventies-type synths, wobbly keyboard lines and hard-grooving drums give way to a brass-led interlude suggesting an acquaintance with the compositions of Lalo Schifrin. It’s as if a jazz-inflected soundtrack from 45 years ago has been shoved into a blender rather than a washing machine, then reconstituted and given a major buff-up.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Ready Or Not - Thom Bell's Philly Soul Arrangements & Productions

THOM BELL'S PHILLY SOUL ARRANGEMENTS & PRODUCTIONS 1965-1978 Homage to the great American sonic auteur

Overdue homage to the great American sonic auteur

A skim though the track listing confirms that this is no typical soul compilation. Actress and some-time pop singer Connie Stevens crops up. So does Johnny Mathis. Such seeming quirks are fitting as Thom Bell was never a typical arranger, producer or songwriter. There’s much more to the story than the timeless O’Jays and Stylistics hits he created for Gamble and Huff’s label Philadelphia International Records.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Be-Bop Deluxe - Axe Victim

BE-BOP DELUXE - AXE VICTIM Box-set makeover of Bill Nelson & Co’s impressive debut

Box-set makeover of Bill Nelson and Co’s impressive but ‘NME’-slated debut album

Bill Nelson’s views on his band Be-Bop Deluxe’s debut album are measured. In the essay accompanying its reissue, he writes “Axe Victim is one brief snapshot of a band in the process of becoming something else…a modest beginning, flawed but not without charm. And not the end of the story. I’ll always be grateful for the way that it helped launch a more appropriate vessel for my music, a ship which sails onward to this very day.” He sees the album as transitional.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Dudu Phukwana and the "Spears"

DUDU PHUKWANA AND THE 'SPEARS' Illuminating reissue of Joe Boyd-produced debut album

Dudu Pukwana’s Joe Boyd-produced debut album reappears, with added Fairport Convention input

Whether explicitly or indirectly, what’s written on a master tape box can tantalise. Revealing part of a picture creates a desire to want to know more. Take the example seen above. It’s for an album by South African alto saxist Dudu Pukwana.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Shellshock Rock

SHELLSHOCK ROCK Undiluted box-set salute to punk-era Northern Ireland

Undiluted box-set salute to punk-era Northern Ireland

The feather in this particular cap is a DVD of director John T. Davis’ 1979 film Shellshock Rock. Filmed from October 1978 to April 1979, its 50 minutes thrillingly catch the Troubles-era Ulster getting to grips with punk rock.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Oneness Of Juju - African Rhythms 1970-1982

ONENESS OF JUJU - AFRICAN RHYTHMS 1970-1982 Driving jazz, grooves, funk and electrifying percussion from James 'Plunky' Branch and Co

Driving jazz, grooves, funk and electrifying percussion from James 'Plunky' Branch and Co

“These are African rhythms, passed down to us from the ancient spirits. Feel the spirits, a unifying force. Come on, move with the spirits. Stand up. Clap your hands. Groove with the rhythms. Get down. Get off.”

So begins “African Rhythms”, originally released in 1975 as the opening cut from an album of the same name by Oneness Of Juju. It was issued on Black Fire, their own label.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Super Sonics - Martin Green Presents 40 Junkshop Britpop Greats

Britpop filtered by a man who knows

The gentleman pictured above is Martin Green. In 1995 he was a prime mover behind The Sound Gallery, a double-album compiling groovy British easy listening and library music from around 25 years earlier which until then had been (mostly) overlooked. It was as trailblazing a compilation as Lenny Kaye’s 1972 garage-psych set Nuggets.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Dennis Herrold

‘The Mystery Of Dennis Herrold’ is rockabilly heaven

It’s been a long strange trip for Dennis Herrold. The Virginia-born rocker’s sole single, December 1957’s “Hip Hip Baby” / “Make With the Lovin’”, was a full-bore rockabilly two-sider. Yet it made no waves despite being reviewed glowingly by music biz journal Billboard. “Hip Hip Baby” was “a la Presley on a fast moving rockabilly tune,” while “Make With the Lovin’” “packs plenty of sales savvy into another infectious rockabilly song.” The single sold barely any copies.