Delivering a Musical Journey: Led Zeppelin – Coda (Deluxe Edition)

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As record reviews go, this isn’t going to walk the normal path. Let’s face it, you don’t want another edition of Zeppelin’s last studio album. Jimmy Page had remastered that a while back and done a fantastic job. What you really need to hear are the companion discs. In essence, listening to those has caused me to re-evaluate how I view that entire record.

In 1982 when Coda was first released, I wasn’t interested. John Bonham had died and it seemed to me that Coda was a record put together without a focal point. Led Zeppelin had always been about releasing a full and cohesive album with every song being a part of a larger picture, and songs taken from past sessions throughout their career didn’t fit the bill. In fact, I didn’t own a copy of Coda until I bought the Complete Studio Recordings (1993). The 93’ version of Coda was expanded to include “Baby Come On Home”, “Travelling Riverside Blues”, “White Summer/Black Mountain Side” and “Hey, Het What Can I Do” from the 1990 Box Set, but hadn’t included anything to make me reconsider my previous position. That was a long time ago, and it took the Jimmy Page Listening Event on July 21st to totally reconsider my point of view.

Perspective is a strange thing. My original analysis of Coda still holds up if you place it up against Zeppelin’s previous work. However, if you tweak your thinking a little and look at Coda as an original soundtrack to a comprehensive biography – boom – it becomes mind blowing. The companion discs shine such a light.

Side one alone is stunning, containing alternate takes on some familiar songs. “If It Keeps On Raining (When The Levee Breaks)” has Robert Plant’s vocals take on a lower more ominous tone full of echo resulting in a more haunting impression. “Bonzo’s Montreux” is slightly deconstructed with a more earthy touch that allows for John Bonham’s power house drums to flow and show genius. “Baby Please Come Home” sees the whole band in fine form with John Paul Jones giving extensive Hammond flourishes while Plant exercises his inner Otis Redding.

As the album continues, it’s this perspective that allows for the full comprehension of what Led Zeppelin accomplished in only ten short years. The band has been history for 35 years now but this version of Coda, as its name suggests, is the best final statement Jimmy Page can give. It balances a line between showing a legendary musical legacy and just being one hell of an entertaining ride.

On July 21st, while at the Masonic Temple in Toronto, Jimmy Page suggested we would be taken on a “musical journey.” Coda and its companion discs definitely deliver on that promise.

You can hear Jeff Woods entire Jimmy Page interview on Q107 tonight between 9 & 10 pm.

Sarcastic SOB with Deadly Accurate Aim! or Nick Lowe – Jesus Of Cool

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There was a movement in the late 70’s that played directly to the most cynical of pop fans. It wasn’t punk or new wave, although some fans tried to lump them into that category; it wasn’t power-pop, except the music certainly was reminiscent of the tag. This music was literate and subversive while taking influences from 60’s pop bands like the Beatles, Beach Boys, Motown, Phil Spector and STAX, but lyrically it was far more sarcastic and very willing to bite the so-called “hand that feeds them.”

This is the world where Nick Lowe lived for a while. His single “Cruel To Be Kind” (from Labour Of Lust) could be played on AM radio, but most of his songs were strictly FM bound, or not to be played on radio at all. This was because Labour Of Lust, much like Elvis Costello’s This Year’s Model, featured songs that attacked both radio and the music industry in general. Yet you had to love him for it. He was crafting perfectly awesome pop songs (back when pop wasn’t a word used to describe musical masturbation) without patronizing you with stupidity in the process. It was brilliant!

Unfortunately, the movement didn’t last long enough to forever remain in the hipster consciousness and it all but disappeared for a time. However, some great things have happened since the turn of the century. People who were influenced by these great sounds started singing the praises of these albums and independent record companies started picking up what the big guys had dropped. So here we are with several choices to grab not just a great album, but a substantial one.

If you’re crate digging in North America, finding Jesus Of Cool might be a little difficult as it was re-titled Pure Pop For Now People. Apparently, Columbia Records just had to screw with things for the American audience even exchanging one song (“Shake and Pop”) for another (“They Call It Rock”) and changing the running order entirely. Used copies will cost you under $10.

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It wasn’t until 1989 that a CD (as well as a vinyl re-release) version of the record was released by Demon Records in the UK. The CD had a different cover, while the vinyl returned to the original cover. The CD can be purchased under $10 used but the ’89 vinyl has one reseller asking over a $100 for a new copy.

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Spending that kind of money on a new copy really isn’t necessary, as some great things happened for the Jesus of Cool on its 30th anniversary. Complete remasters were done in 2008 on both sides of the Atlantic with a companion disc added to a gatefold cover. Yep Rock actually released two versions of the vinyl set. One was in standard black wax and the other came in red and yellow translucent vinyl. You can still find them at your finer record retailers and they shouldn’t set you back more than $30.

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The companion disc also includes an earlier version of “Cruel To Be Kind” that had not previously been released.

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In all, it’s an outstanding record you should give a try… after all, there is nothing quite like a sarcastic SOB with deadly accurate aim. Believe me his shot at fans of the Bay City Rollers is worth the price of admission all by itself.

 

 

” I’m Havin’ a Sheer Heart Attack” or Queen – The Studio Collection (Vinyl Box Set)

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From time to time I’ve been known to ‘rock out’ to the glorious sounds of Queen. Sure they could be way over the top, but they were the very best at it. Well, Queen has given us the opportunity to do it all over again with a new vinyl box set.

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The albums have been completely remastered by Bob Ludwig and pressed on coloured 180 gram vinyl using the half speed lacquered process. Each records colour is designed to match up with its albums original artwork.

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The set will also include a 108 page hard cover book containing hand written lyrics, memorabilia and extensive notes on each album as well as download cards for high quality digital at 320 kps.

Queen The Studio Collection will be released on September 25th and is available for pre-order at all the usual retailers and the Queen online store.

“I Know It Sounds Absurd…” or Supertramp – Breakfast In America

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Selling a million records in Canada is not the easiest thing to do. In a country of only 30 million, it’s a pretty big thing to get Diamond status. In 1979, Breakfast In America pulled it off in the same year of its release. For many people it was and is the equal of all those giant sellers by The Eagles, Fleetwood Mac and yes, even Michael Jackson. Not bad for a band that was considered to be a light weight FM prog band that quite suddenly became everyone’s favorite artists. In those moments before glam-metal and new wave, Supertramp was being played on every radio station on both the AM and FM dial. From the cool kids to the geeks, everyone knew the words to “The Logical Song.”

With those kind of numbers you would have expected that Breakfast In America would have been given the royal treatment. If you’re a fan of CD and audio blu-ray, then sure, you got yourself lots of remastered goodies to play with; but vinyl has been more gimmick than actual special treatment.

You can easily find the original vinyl pressing while crate digging and it will cost you next to nothing. My own copy isn’t showing its age, which is pretty miraculous seeing as how the early teenage version of me must have played it several thousand times.

In 1982, Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab put out a pressing that is still in high demand. Resellers are asking for over a hundred dollars for used copies.

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Mobile Fidelity did a complete remaster in 1990 for a 24 karat gold CD release. It still fetches over $75 for used copies in great shape.

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It wasn’t until 2000 that another remastered vinyl edition was released by Simply Vinyl on 180 gram wax.

Ten years later the box set came out with a bunch of things… but good luck getting a copy for under $150. It contained 2 CD’s, a DVD and a 180 gram vinyl version of the record. Honestly, that price is steep. A single 180 gram vinyl edition was released at the same time.

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2013, saw the last of the more recent releases with two new offerings. The first was a blu-ray copy of the album marked as ultra high audio, no video content.

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At the same time Breakfast in America was also released as a pretty awesome looking vinyl picture disc.

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The disappointing thing in all this is that if they had done a similar treatment to Breakfast In America as they did to Crime Of The Century just last year, a lot of fans would have been extremely happy. Oh well, maybe for the 40th anniversary in 2019 they’ll get it right.

Jimmy Page – My long winded, only suitable for a blog observations on the visit of a rock icon…

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The cult of celebrity is a strange beast in the era of social media. Everyone can be journalist and critic once they find a forum for their opinion, and every artist wears a target when they step into the light. Hell, you don’t even need to be a celebrity, just saying something contradictory to the wrong person and the twitter verse can go all crazy on you. The smallest scrap of information can have its context twisted and reformed into an excuse to for a vicious commentary on whatever subject fits a petty narrative. Hence a friendly article on the remastered catalogue of Led Zeppelin has the comments section going nuts with accusations of a most nasty nature; starting with ridiculous nonsense and ending with a similar point – cash grab. As if Jimmy Page or any member of Led Zeppelin has need of your money.

Yes, they want to sell records and climb album charts. Yes they would love to have their work remain relevant and important to the people who have purchased it. But, and I admit to only speculating on this point, with the kind of wealth they attained back in the 1970’s, money would become secondary to their art and the appreciation they have received for it.

With that in mind, here’s the story of how Jimmy Page spent a couple days in Toronto promoting the last three studio albums of the remastered Led Zeppelin catalogue. Evidently he made quite a few people happy, and to use that most annoying and obvious cliché, he made the haters… well… hate.

On July 20th Jimmy Page did a radio interview with host of “Legends of Classic Rock” Jeff Woods live on Q107. It was a pretty cool interview if you care to hear it. The next day, Page did a book signing (stamping) at Canadian ‘big box’ book store Indigo that saw some fans lining up early in the morning to purchase his book and meet him. This is where some of the internet flaming started.

Some people complained about having to purchase a book for the signing, and others objected to the fact that Page was using a stamp of his famous individual Zeppelin symbol rather than a signature. Oddly, the people complaining were not the ones getting to meet Page himself but people that heard about it on the news.

To the first complaint, of book purchase for signing – this is pretty common practise by the book store itself and anyone attending any event at Fan Expo, Comic Con, or well, anywhere, usually expect that a signature will cost you a few bucks. There is an entire “collectors” industry built around it; people who are not fans get signatures and get dump loads of money selling it to fans that have missed out. This very blog spends some time looking at collectibles and their value – it’s just I don’t sell it! Maybe my estate will after my passing, but I love the stuff too much to give it up. I buy with one of two intentions: gifting it to someone who will love it as equally as I would or keeping it for my family’s private use.

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The second complaint of stamping instead of signing might seem a little strange, but I believe fans don’t go for a signature. It’s the experience of meeting one of the biggest rock legends on the planet, and walking out with something cool in the process. Believe me, if someone gave me a copy of Page’s book with his personal Zep stamp, I would be a very happy camper.

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It is about here where I start to enter the picture in my own little way. On my birthday, of all days, I received an e-mail asking me if I would like to attend “An Intimate Listening Event” hosted by Jimmy Page, which was invitation only and open to fewer than 200 people. I was more than a little shocked to be asked as it was only going to cost me a few typed words to listen to some Led Zeppelin stuff I had never heard before and watch his interview from only a few feet away from where he was sitting.

I can’t stress enough the difference between listening to a radio, and seeing (or doing) an interview with someone live. Magazine articles can relay atmosphere, but not tone and inflection. Televised interviews can relay tone, but atmosphere and surroundings are missed. Think of it as the difference between a phone call, a video chat, a letter or being in front of someone for a conversation. They all work well in their own way, but clearly you would rather be there to take it all in and experience it for yourself.

However, if you weren’t there, let me do my best to tell you about it. (Or, if you want to hear it in its entirety, you can tune into Q107 on August 2nd to hear the full interview with Jeff Woods.)

The Masonic Temple played host to Led Zeppelin’s first Canadian show back in 1969 when it was named the Rock Pile. It is a pretty cool place to see a concert at any time although it is now owned by a communications company that have converted most of the backstage areas into meeting rooms named after famous artists that have appeared at one time or another. In other words, there are no more concerts.

When I arrive at the venue my phone and tablet are confiscated. In return I’m given a return tag for my stuff, and a cool lanyard resembling the backstage pass of years past. It’s a drag losing my tablet, not because I want to make shitty recordings of songs before their release date, but I really want to record the interview. Fortunately, a piece of paper and pen can do wonders to catch a couple points.

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Long before the days of rock concerts, the Masonic Temple was exactly what its name suggests, home to the Freemasons. One room still holds to that history – the Red Room. Take an antique elevator up to the fifth floor and you walk into a wee bit of the past. The walls are lined with elaborate wooden chairs with a higher throne in the centre of each row in addition to the freemason symbol hanging on the wall. The ceiling still has chandeliers that once might have held candles, giving the whole room a bit of a medieval feel. The fact that the room lighting is red also adds to the eerie appeal. Contrasting this scene is those “hard on your ass” metal chairs with minimal padding you find in school libraries. The kind that look comfortable until you stand up and your tail bone screams a whole different story.

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So here we are in this weird spectacle. There are aging rockers, mixing with suits, contest winners and music journalists. Some suits have brought instruments “to the office” in hopes Page will jam with them. I over hear three separate conversations to this effect. A couple fans bring their guitars into the venue itself hoping for a signature. People are jockeying for aisle seats just to shake the “Rock Legend’s” hand. There is such a taste of the bizarre surrounding me I’m half expecting Rod Serling to start the proceeding by giving a monologue that finishes with “and you’ve arrived at your destination – The Twilight Zone.” Instead the evening’s events begin with the host of “Legends Of Classic Rock” Jeff Woods introducing Jimmy Page who has arrived with a T-Rex size bodyguard.

Clad in leather jacket Page explains that he has selected a few songs found on the companion discs on the Deluxe Versions of the Led Zeppelin remasters. It is to be a “musical journey.” The lights dim, velvet drapes open and a screen depicts the image of a reel to reel and the music kicks in. Some heads begin to sway, but mostly, the audience sits transfixed not by the photos of the band as they once were in their heyday, but by the re-examined sounds of familiar songs. More evident than the individual musicians in the band is Page’s production. Like Zeppelin in the live setting, Page improvises and experiments in the studio and the results are startling. “If it Keeps On Raining” (the working title for “When The Levee Breaks”) from Coda, changes from desperation into a song of darkness. Robert Plant’s voice is both haunting and menacing, draped in a distant echo effect.

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The familiar high pitched vocal burst that starts “In The Evening” instead rumbles like an oncoming storm as Page’s guitar enters you have the dramatic impact of a nearby lightning strike.

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I’m left thinking that this isn’t a box set of half-baked songs and unfinished ideas; instead it a fully realized creation of songs that exist in an alternate universe; tunes that may very well have sounded this way originally if not for some twist of fate. It becomes quickly apparent that Led Zeppelin could have sounded different on record had Jimmy Page on a whim decided to explore a different sound technique.

This becomes evident in the interview portion of the evening as he discusses “Bonzo’s Montreux” and the perceived steel drum sound that is a song highlight. Page clarifies that in fact it was a studio effect he came up with. Apparently, John Bonham loved the effect as it made him sound like he could play steel drums right in the middle of his personal drum orchestra.

This is how the interview goes for its duration. Little anecdotes reveal the larger picture and add to the Led Zeppelin mythos. The music may have stopped being made back in 1980, but Jimmy Page has never stopped being a part of it. For him, Led Zeppelin is not simply a legacy, it is the air he breathes. Since the O2 reunion concert in 2007, he took control of Celebration Day and followed it with the complete remasters of the entire Led Zeppelin studio catalogue. This required him to go through miles of analogue tape and re-examine every last detail. Included on the remastered Coda companion disc is “Sugar Mama” a song originally recorded during the Led Zeppelin I sessions; which isn’t some demo; it’s a completed song that just didn’t fit with the vibe of the debut record.

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As the last notes ring, the Woods and Page interview portion of the evening begins. At once Page’s personable storytelling grips the audience, with various stories revolving around the Led Zeppelin mythos.

Woods then pulls out the question that everyone wants answered – why did it end? We all know that Bonham died, but Woods goes further, using the example of the Who continuing after the death of Keith Moon.

Page replies with an explanation that continues to build on the legacy of Zeppelin as both a unique and influential band, suggesting a “synchronicity” “synergy” and a virtual “ESP” that existed between band members. That if you look back at concert bootlegs, you see that the band’s penchant for improvisation made it so that fans never got the same show twice. The result was a group of musicians who had fun and remained relevant for their entire duration. His voice begins to drift off a bit as he finishes “ten years of these concerts, all of the improvisations, that when you have lost one of the key members of it, you wouldn’t be able to continue.” Snapping back, he then jokes about training a new drummer on the many ways to play a single Led Zeppelin song.

A few minutes later and it is all finished. Page offers a wave to the crowd and then vanishes. Passing by me with little more than a foot between us, I swear I catch a smile from him. Then again, maybe I’m just imagining that part as it could have been the folks behind me.

Five floors down, on the same Masonic Temple floor Zeppelin played 45 years ago, an offering of hors d’oeuvres, beer and wine is served to attendees… there are shared reminisces about the evenings events and smiles all around. It might not be the epic “Rock ‘N’ Roll backstage pass party” of a bygone era”, but it is a good way to end the night.

 

P.S. I’ll post the “published” review when it appears next week.

 

Listening Event… hosted by JIMMY PAGE

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So here is the deal folks!

Last night I attended a listening party hosted by Jimmy Page who is promoting the remasters of the last three Zeppelin records. I’ve written a story for the people who sent me and will post it after it is published by them next week. However, I will be posting an entirely different story on the same event here… when I get back home from a few days off with the family.

Mining The Unconscious Depths or Tame Impala – Currents

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A few years back Grandaddy and The Thrills tried their hands at expanding our musical psyche by creating a more atmospheric brand of pop using electronic elements to create complex landscapes. Tame Impala has just taken that idea and upped it by a large margin. Perhaps it’s the drugs; maybe the work of a deeper genius; whatever it is, Kevin Parker has taken Tame Impala into a hazy dance utopia and Currents is the staggering result.

Parker has admitted in interview that the concept for this album came from a mix of mushrooms, coke and the classic Bee Gees “Stayin’ Alive.” This makes perfect sense as Currents removes the fun elements of disco and replaces it with a laid back reflective quality. The funk is slowed to a point where dance is done in a slow fluid sway. Instead of John Travolta doing a 12:30 AM splits with arm raised, you picture a 5 AM sway of people who refuse to let the party die.

Parker sings “giving in to all this bullshit / is this what you want? / is this who you are?” on the song “The Less I Know The Better.” However the atmospherics reduce the sentiment to more of a lazy refrain than an accusatorial question. A sort of “I’m quite tired, and this is so a conversation for tomorrow” thing.

Currents has an emotional resonance that rises slowly from unconscious depths only to reach an epiphany when you stop trying to grasp it. Like a great sunrise, it is best if you just lie back and enjoy the moment.

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Currents was available in limited coloured vinyl… but it sold out. Oh well…

Five Great Albums From 2015 (so far!)

So the mid way part of the year has passed and with a bit of time to reflect, here are my top 5 of 2015 so far. It is hard to rank, as so many great records have been spinning their way into my psyche. So I reserve the right to change my mind later.

5) Wolf Alice – My Love Is Cool

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Built around strong guitar work and soaring vocals, Wolf Alice bridges the gap between the 90’s alt-rock revival and the more modern Brit-Rock led by the Arctic Monkeys and their recent disciples Royal Blood. It would have been fun to play Guitar Hero to their tunes.

4) Best Coast – California Nights

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Gone is the warm washing fuzz of reverb on everything that had the words lo-fi and surf rock attached to their records, and in is a more ‘nineties-esqe’ alt-rock tone that could be slipped into a mix between the Lemonheads and Garbage. California Nights has a way of sinking under your skin and making you want to play them over and over again.

3) Leon Bridges – Coming Home

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He’s got the brass sounding like the legendary Memphis Horns, a deep groove reminiscent of Duck Dunn and the minimalist guitar leads that you might swear were coming off Steve Cropper. Then you mix in a style that slides in a suave 60’s Bacharach martini dance party and you get a glimpse of the power possessed in Coming Home. In essence, Bridges is the ‘new old soul.’

2) Courtney Barnett – Sometimes I Sit And Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit

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Sarcastic and playful in the most observational of ways, Courtney Barnett makes stinging shots sound like a musical sit-com. Characters inhabit a ‘Seinfeld-esqe’ place where nothing seems larger than life and decisions don’t necessarily lead to conclusions. However, the journey is one hell of an adventure.

1) Alabama Shakes – Sound & Color

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If Alabama Shakes debut Boys & Girls was a first shot across the bow against musical mediocrity, then Sound & Color is a full on declaration of war. Not content to merely ride the wave of being the best rock ‘n’ soul or Southern rock band to currently grace the planet, they expand and grow. It’s the kind of growth and experimentation one got from Radiohead when they leapt from The Bends to OK Computer; or in other words – WOW!

A Kaleidoscope Of Sound or Zeus – Busting Visions

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A kaleidoscope pumps out from the stereo and a good day gets better. That is how I started the morning off. Reaching for some black vinyl, I clean it, spin it and my kids beg me to stop singing along as Zeus break into “Are You Gonna Waste My Time?” from their 2012 LP Busting Visions. Mesmerizing textures built around sound craft shake the morning cobwebs from my cranium. Who needs caffeine when they have Zeus on the turntable?

In the last few years they have been one of my favourite bands. Like the short lived 90’s acts Jellyfish and The Grays, they play highly developed power-pop that takes the Beatles and Big Star models and filters it through a Jeff Lynne/ELO lens. The results is a gathering of tunes that catch you musically on an emotional level without stooping into that “baby baby” bag of tricks plaguing the airwaves with ‘Disney-fied’ hits.

You can feel free to ‘rock out’ without your brain going into a syrupy malaise. “Love/Pain” starts off in a “Glass Onion” conversational place before building into an all instruments in climax. “Anything You Want Dear” pours in the power-pop confection with the fast/slow drama of relationships in flux. The one liners drop: “If you’re under water / Send a message in the bubbles.” I could and probably should go on, but the important thing is the music. You really should give it a listen.

For now there are only four options open – vinyl, CD, digital download and streaming. The 180 gram vinyl comes in a gatefold sleeve and has a download card included. It sounds freakin’ fantastic.

The only problem I have with Busting Visions is how to follow the damn thing up. Do I jump back to the 60’s, maybe the 90’s or, just play one of their other records? So many options and only one set of ears.

You can pick up Busting Visions at your local record retailer or online from Arts & Crafts.

Do Do Doo Lookin’ Out My Back Door or Credence Clearwater Revival – Cosmo’s Factory

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Swamp rock practitioners, steeped in soul and a heavy dose of blues, Credence Clearwater Revival were one of the brightest lights of the post-psychedelic era. They balanced great song writing with a penchant for picking stunning covers and in only four years put out seven studio albums that captured a wide range of emotional upheaval that ultimately captured the mood of their time.

Cosmo’s Factory itself is probably the best of their albums, with a virtual ton of FM classics including “Travelin’ Band” “Lookin’ Out My Back Door” “Run Through The Jungle” “Who’ll Stop The Rain” and the 11 minute cover of “I Heard It Through The Grapevine.”

Of course, it’s well documented that upheaval was also something the band faced within. In fact, the very reason I had never previously purchased CCR was in fact because John Fogerty told me not to. Well, not directly, but he sure had a hate on for all things CCR in the 80’s and made it clear that we shouldn’t. Being an impressionable teenager, I listened. Anyway, I’ve given up on figuring out the politics of this band and have finally decided to take the plunge.

And… what a plunge! Cosmo’s Factory has no less than 129 editions to date. So let’s take a peek at a few purchasing highlights and try to narrow the choices down.

The original 1970 vinyl pressing sold over 500,000 copies in its first six months of release. Needless to say you can find a copy pretty easily, how well it plays will be the real question. It can range from a couple bucks, to… well, again if it’s near mint, you can get a fair price.

Everything in the next decade was simple reissues until 1980. Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab did a complete remaster that year using their half speed recording process. Again, due to age you might find copies while crate digging but the costs will vary wildly. Near mint ‘vinyl and cover’ will set you back anywhere between $75 dollars and up. I even managed to find a reseller offering up an unopened copy for near $200 US.

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By 1984, the CD pounced on the market and in 1986 Digital Compact Classics did a complete remaster for a 24k Gold edition. These CD’s still sell for about $50 in the resale market.

It would be sixteen years before anything big happened again for vinyl lovers.

In 2002, Fantasy Records licensed Analogue Productions to do a remaster of Cosmo’s Factory. Doing strictly reissues from the original analog tapes, Analogue Productions is quite well known for quality work. Their 180 gram version of Cosmo’s Factory still sells for over $90 with some resellers asking for as much as $150. This is where things get interesting. The same two people responsible for this remaster, Kevin Gray and Steve Hoffman, were brought back to do the recent 2014 200 gram vinyl remaster. Furthermore, these two are also responsible for the quality of the 2015 180 gram vinyl Newbury Comics edition that was limited to 1000 copies in red translucent wax. Going through the audiophile sites I’ve seen a couple comments praising their work with one person declaring the recent remasters are superior to the original pressing. The 200 gram vinyl is widely available at record retailers and will set you back about $40 and Newbury still has copies of their 180 gram available for only $20 US.

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So of course it is a great record, and my copy sounds awesome, but now I have an overwhelming urge to get more.

Oh wait, that’s normal. I always have an overwhelming urge to get more.