The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: John Carpenter, Halloween: The Complete Expanded Collection box set in stores 10/3

VIA PRESS RELEASE | John Carpenter’s soundtracks for the most recent Halloween trilogy, made alongside his frequent collaborators Cody Carpenter and Daniel Davies, marked the legendary director and composer’s return to film scoring after nearly two decades away.

2018’s Halloween, 2021’s Halloween Kills, and 2022’s Halloween Ends were all directed by David Gordon Green, who engaged Carpenter early in the pre-production process, ultimately enlisting him as both an executive producer and soundtrack composer for the trilogy. Now, for the first time, expanded editions of all three scores are being made available by Carpenter’s longtime label, Sacred Bones Records. Halloween: The Complete Expanded Collection, a deluxe box set collecting the definitive editions of all three scores, plus standalone versions of the expanded Halloween, Halloween Kills, and Halloween Ends soundtracks, will be out on October 3, 2025. These releases are available to pre-order and pre-save, alongside two previously unheard tracks.

In listening to the recent Halloween scores, the collaborative spirit among the composing trio is one of the first things that jumps out. The now-famous bowed guitar part on Halloween’s “The Shape Hunts Allyson,” like all the guitar parts strewn across the trilogy, is played by Daniel Davies. John calls Daniel “the adventurer” of the group, and credits him with introducing sounds he’d never have considered.

Cody, who his father refers to as a “musical savant,” is an equally essential presence. It’s his steady, methodical hand that helps give shape to the ideas that fly around when these three get in a room together. The scores for the new films may be centred on familiar themes, but they’re also a lot more sonically diverse and musically audacious than anything John could have pulled off in 1978, when he made the original Halloween.

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TVD Radar: Celia Cruz, Ray Barretto & Adalberto Santiago, Tremendo Trio reissue in stores

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Craft Latino announces a special reissue for the 1983 GRAMMY-nominated salsa classic Tremendo Trio, which unites three of Latin music’s greatest talents: legendary bandleader and percussionist Ray Barretto, beloved vocalist Adalberto Santiago, and the “Queen of Salsa,” Celia Cruz.

Returning to vinyl on October 3 for the first time since its original release, and available for pre-order, this star-studded album is packed with salsa dura dancefloor favorites, including “Nadie se salva de la rumba,” “Así empezó él son montuno,” and “Margie.” This edition of Tremendo Trio was cut from the original analog tapes by Dave Polster and Clint Holley at Well Made Music and pressed on 180-gram vinyl. Fans can also enjoy the remastered album in both standard and HD digital audio, available now. Additionally, a limited-edition “Tremendo Rojo” color vinyl variant (only 300 copies) is available as a stand-alone or a bundle option that includes a collectible Fania Retro Logo T-shirt, exclusively online at Fania.com.

This release arrives as part of Craft Latino’s centennial celebrations honoring Celia Cruz and her extraordinary contributions to the musical landscape. Widely regarded as one of the most influential Latin artists of all time, Cruz was an internationally beloved star who sold over 10 million records over the course of her five-decade career. A ten-time GRAMMY nominee, she received numerous accolades, including the National Medal of the Arts, a Smithsonian Lifetime Achievement Award, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and a posthumous GRAMMY Lifetime Achievement Award.

Cruz was also inducted into both the Billboard Latin Music Hall of Fame and the International Latin Music Hall of Fame, among others. In 2024, she made history as the first Afro-Latina to appear on US currency through the American Women’s Quarter Program. Throughout the year, Craft Latino is commemorating Cruz with a series of vinyl and digital reissues, playlists, video content, and more.

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Graded on a Curve:
Raspberries,
Starting Over

Remembering Eric Carmen, born on this day in 1949.Ed.

It’s a miracle that anyone survives adolescence. And I’m not talking about drugs or driving 110 mph while on drugs or any of the other healthy activities normal teens engage in—no, I’m talking about potentially lethal sperm build-up. Speaking just for myself, I was a lusus naturae of unsated lust, and often found myself leering at vacuum cleaners. One day I discovered that my skull was producing an oily discharge, and it took a physician to inform me that I was literally secreting sperm through the follicles of my hair.

It was a lonely and demeaning condition, but fortunately I had the Raspberries. They were more than just the greatest power pop band ever—they were the Masters and Johnson of Rock. No other rock band has ever given more eloquent voice to the victims of adolescent hormonal overload. In such ardent and urgent songs as “Go All the Way,” “Tonight,” “I Wanna Be With You,” “Ecstasy,” and “Let’s Pretend,” The Raspberries spoke to the only subject that really mattered to poon-crazed teens like me—namely getting some, and preferably tonight.

The Raspberries formed in Cleveland, Ohio in 1970, the year after the Cuyahoga River caught fire: an ill omen in hindsight, for despite their polished Beatles and Mod-influenced sound, irresistible melodies, arresting guitar hooks, and heavenly vocal harmonies, the Raspberries never scored a No. 1 hit on the singles or album charts before breaking up in 1975. The band’s first single, 1972’s brilliant “Go All the Way,” rose all the way to the No. 5 spot. They were never to come as close to the top of the pops again.

While the Raspberries’ first three albums (1972’s Raspberries and Fresh, and 1973’s Side 3) contain all of the odes to teen lust the band is most famous for, I have always preferred their farewell LP, 1974’s Starting Over. Disappointing sales of Side 3 led to the replacement of bassist Dave Smalley and drummer Jim Bonfanti by Scott McCarl and Michael McBride, respectively, and McBride’s Keith Moon-like drumming in particular lent the band a much harder kick. Starting Over also has a slightly—and I do mean slightly—scruffier sound than its predecessors, and the combination of McBride’s drum pummel and less glossy production gives the album a sound that is more power than pop.

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TVD Radar: The Zombies, Odessey And Oracle Mono Remastered in stores 9/26

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees and “British Invasion” pioneers, The Zombies, announce the release of Odessey & Oracle Mono Remastered on September 26.

The album, the first of four definitive physical reissues from their catalog, includes the classic songs “Time Of The Season,” “Care of Cell 44,” and “This Will Be Our Year” and is a regular entry in “Best Albums of All Time” lists in publications like Rolling Stone, NME, and Mojo magazine. The release, which coincides with The Zombies’ documentary, Hung Up On A Dream, marks the first time the band’s original mono mix, remastered from studio tapes, has appeared on LP since the record’s British issue in 1968, presenting the album as they originally intended it to be heard. Pre-order the album on all formats here.

Recorded primarily at London’s legendary Abbey Road Studios in 1967, Odessey & Oracle was self-produced in Mono on a shoestring budget by primary songwriters Rod Argent (keyboards/vocals) and Chris White (bass/vocals). Under last-minute pressure from their record label, the album was hastily remixed in the newly emerging Stereo format, which sacrificed key elements from the Mono recording, most notably the beloved horn parts in “This Will Be Our Year.”

The band today also shares the first track off the album, the mono remastered version of “This Will Be Our Year,” with the horn parts restored. Although never released as a single, this deep cut has found a new life thanks to prominent uses in TV and film, including memorable scenes in Mad Men, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, and Schitt’s Creek, and covers by artists like Foo Fighters, OK Go, and Susanna Hoffs. Its positive and uplifting message has been embraced by couples as a popular wedding song and has become a staple of New Year’s playlists.

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Graded on a Curve:
The Stranglers,
Rattus Norvegicus

And then we come to the strange case of The Stranglers’ 1977 debut album Rattus Norvegicus, which I detest with a hard gem-like flame and yet find myself drawn to at the same time, the way you might to watching a guy’s dick split open like an overcooked hot dog, which if I’m being honest is a fate I keep hoping befalls the whole band and especially lead vocalist Hugh Cornwell and occasional lead singer bassist Jean-Jacques Burnel, whose shared sexism, overinflated sense of self, and constant steroidal bellowing annoy me almost as much as the organs and synthesizers and saxophone that make me wonder how anyone could have ever called The Stranglers a punk band.

They’re pure showbiz, baby.

Rattus Norvegicus became one of the biggest sellers of the punk era, which I find inexplicable. And I’m hardly alone, although the album has plenty of champions. On my side, you’ll find Robert Christgau (who commented on their sexism before dismissing them forever as “too dumb”) and Julie Burchill and Tony Parsons, who eviscerate The Stranglers in their wonderfully scabrous little 1978 book The Boy Looked at Johnny: The Obituary of Rock and Roll. The duo serially describe The Stranglers as “plodders,” “thick as shit,” and an “old-fashioned almost medieval band of manky minstrels” before concluding, “The only thing The Stranglers are anti—is women.”

They also write, “Erected on the tried-and-true foundations of the Manly Virtues, i.e., misogyny, latent homosexuality and heavy physical exercise, preferably in the communal shower, “Rattus Norvegicus” caught them in the raw.” If I could have said it that well, I’d have said it.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 8/11/25

Liverpool, UK | Liverpool’s oldest record shop appeals for memorabilia of its long-lost second city store: The Musical Box in Tuebrook is appealing for customers to help in finding archives of its long-lost second store. The shop on West Derby Road, which has been run by four generations of the same family, can proudly claim to be Liverpool’s—and England’s—oldest record shop. Dating back to 1947, it’s been a go-to for generations of music lovers ever since and served famous customers including teenage mates John Lennon and Pete Best. But the much-loved Tuebrook shop wasn’t the only one opened by current owner Tony Quinn’s nan Dorothy. There was a second Musical Box on Prescot Road in Old Swan, between 1960 and 1979, which was run by Tony’s mum Diane. Now 88, Diane still remembers chatting to Merseybeat star Rory Storm when she was working there, as well as Ken Dodd and a very young Holly Johnson.

Lexington, KY | A music lover’s mecca in Lexington set to turn the page: Lexington favorite CD Central is set to close in early September and reopen under new ownership and a yet-to-be-unveiled name. Just minutes after opening time, CD Central owner Steve Baron is already on the phone with an eager customer. “Oh, yeah. It looks like it did come in. I got it right here for you,” Baron says. The early start is hardly a surprise, given the fan base the beloved music shop has built up over three decades on South Limestone near University of Kentucky campus. And Baron says business is still great—in large part thanks to the surprisingly durable resurgence of vinyl—but he believes it’s time to think about retirement. The reaction to that announcement, he says, has given him a sense of how much the store has meant to its many patrons. “The outpouring of support and and sadness at its closing is really been overwhelming…”

Oakland, CA | Flipside Sounds under new, but familiar, ownership: Since 2018, Garrett County native Patrick Franc has been running Flipside Sounds in Oakland, providing a curated selection of vinyl records for the community and visitors to peruse. Franc claims to have grown up during the “Golden Age of Rock.” “They say your music taste usually forms by the time you are 14 or 15 years old,” he said. “That would have been around the time of Woodstock, and the beginning of the 1970s. So what I did, just started collecting my own records, and I kept collecting records all the way through adulthood.” …“As I was getting closer to retiring from the corporate world, I was dreaming more and more of opening a vinyl store of my own,” he said. “At that time, my expectations were very modest. Vinyl was not en vogue; it started falling out in the 1980s when CDs came. By the ’80s into the ’90s, you could hardly find a record.”

San Francisco, CA | Rooky Ricardo’s Dick Vivian in Need of Support After Cancer Diagnosis: If you’ve ever walked into 429 Haight St.—or 419 Haight, or 448 Haight—to browse for records, you’ve undoubtedly encountered Dick Vivian. Since 1987, the vinyl bon vivant has owned and operated Rooky Ricardo’s Records, which received official legacy status from the city in 2017. Both the shop—which champions music from the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s with a special affinity for soul and girl group 45s—and Vivian himself have become San Francisco icons. Just ask GQ, which profiled Dick in 2013. …Rookys is one of the oldest record stores in San Francisco; it’s survived two displacements, multiple rent hikes, two tech booms, one financially devastating scam and a pandemic. And now, Vivian has continued to run the shop despite a Stage 3 pancreatic cancer diagnosis in March.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

I’m a sailor on this dark and dreadful sea / And I need courage just the same as you need me / And I’ve been fishing for a cup of sympathy / But I keep getting waves that just won’t let me be

And I’m gonna be late getting home tonight / If the tide won’t come in / And I’ll be tired from the journey / But I’ll be seeing you again / Thank God for you and me and the deep, deep blue sea

It’s a hot August day. I’m back from my trip, jet lagged, happily working away, eating cucumbers and watermelon.

Here’s a bunch of new songs I’ve been peeping and a few oldies. Hi to all who have shown me their warmth and affection.

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TVD Radar: Goldie, Timeless 30th anniversary 2LP reissue in stores 11/7

VIA PRESS RELEASE | London Records proudly celebrates the 30th anniversary of Goldie’s era-defining debut album, Timeless, with a remastered and repressed vinyl edition of the seminal record.

Timeless is widely considered one of the most important in electronic music history. It was Goldie’s groundbreaking debut, which brought the genres of jungle and drum and bass—as well as Goldie himself—to a level of worldwide cultural impact and mainstream significance like never before.

To commemorate this landmark anniversary, a series of very special limited edition physical versions of Timeless will be released: 2LP White Vinyl, 2LP Gold-on-Clear Vinyl, and Transparent Blue Cassette. These are available for pre-order and will be released on November 7.

In addition, a unique collaboration with The Vinyl Factory sees Goldie return to the source, joining friend and fellow drum and bass pioneer Grooverider at the record pressing plant, to hand-press a run of 500 limited edition Timeless records. These exclusive editions feature hand-stamped sleeves and custom colorways selected by Goldie himself. These are available for purchase starting today, and 10% of proceeds will be donated to War Child, supporting children affected by conflict around the world—a cause close to Goldie’s heart.

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TVD Radar: Sylvester, Step II disco ball clear glitter vinyl reissue in stores 10/10

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Craft Recordings proudly celebrates pioneering singer, songwriter, and queer icon, Sylvester, with two special reissues of his 1978 disco sensation, Step II. Featuring exuberant dancefloor bangers like “Dance (Disco Heat)” and the enduring anthem “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real),” the long-out-of-print album returns to its original format—in style—on Disco Ball Clear Glitter vinyl.

A bonus-filled Deluxe Edition (CD/digital) adds seven classic and new remixes of the above-mentioned tracks, including Tonic Funk’s never-before-heard “Space Funk” Club Mix of “Dance (Disco Heat)” plus Bright Light Bright Light’s fresh take on “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)”—the latter of which is available to stream today . The CD version also offers new liner notes from Joshua Gamson, author of The Fabulous Sylvester: The Legend, the Music, the Seventies in San Francisco (Picador, 2005). All formats are available on October 10th, available to pre-order or pre-save today.

Far ahead of his time, Sylvester (1947–1988) was a trailblazing artist, known for his soulful falsetto vocals, androgynous appearance, and dazzling live performances. Born Sylvester James Jr. in 1947, the mononymous singer-songwriter was raised in Los Angeles’ Watts neighborhood, where he trained his voice in the Pentecostal church. But he was eager to live his truth. As a teenager, Sylvester left home, living openly as a gay man and challenging gender norms at a time when queer lifestyles were still criminalized in parts of the country.

In 1970, Sylvester settled in San Francisco, where he performed as a part of the avant-garde drag troupe, The Cockettes, and released two albums with his funk-rock group, Sylvester and The Hot Band. Though he failed to find commercial success in a band setting, he shifted his energy to a solo career, teaming up with backing vocalists Martha Wash and Izora Rhodes (better known as “Two Tons O’ Fun,” who later became The Weather Girls).

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Graded on a Curve:
The Pretty Things,
Greatest Hits

Celebrating Viv Prince in advance of his birthdate tomorrow.Ed.

Mention England’s The Pretty Things, and most people will immediately direct your attention to 1968’s S.F. Sorrow, one of Western Civilization’s first rock operas (it preceded The Who’s Tommy by six months). Me, I prefer the band’s earlier, hard-driving R&B songs like “Rosalyn,” “Midnight to Six Man,” and “L.S.D.”

The pre-S.F. Sorrow Pretty Things specialized in a frenetic raunch-n-roll that split the difference between the Rolling Stones and Them. Powered by Phil May’s feral vocals and May’s stab to the heart guitar, the band’s sound was gritty as a mouthful of gravel, and you can hear them (as well as the band’s later psychedelic material) on 2017’s double LP Greatest Hits. Its 25 songs track the band from its R&B and blues-based early years through 1970’s Parachute, and make clear that Pretty Things were key players in the history of English rock ’n’ roll.

The 1964-66 Pretty Things were every bit the bad boys the Stones and The Who were, and quickly won a reputation for sowing chaos wherever they went. May claimed to have the longest hair in the UK; drummer Viv Prince’s mad behavior anticipated those of Keith Moon (and finally got hims sacked from the band). The band’s penchant for mayhem culminated in a 1965 stint in New Zealand, where they provoked as much outrage (and bad publicity) as The Who would later.

The early Pretty Things are best remembered for the 1964 song “Rosalyn,” which David Bowie covered on his 1973 LP Pinups. Bowie’s version reproduces the song’s primitive Bo Diddley beat, but Bowie’s vocals are positively enervated next to May’s Dionysian alley cat yowl. Ditto Pretty Thing’s 1964 hit “Don’t Bring Me Down.” Their version is furious, harmonica-fueled thing, and May goes at it in a full-throttle snarl. Bowie reproduces the song’s anarchic energy, but his singing’s prim, thin, mannered. It’s a case of savage vs. fop, and the savage wins hands down.

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TVD Radar: The
Podcast with Dylan Hundley, Episode 191: Natasja Alers

Natasja Alers is the co-director of Grauzone Festival, a multidisciplinary event in the Netherlands that brings together post-punk, experimental music, visual art, and film.

She’s also a sculptor, DJ, and painter with a background in ceramics, installation, and collage. Grauzone alumni include Echo & the Bunnymen, Lebanon Hanover, Anja Huwe (Xmal Deutschland), A Place to Bury Strangers, DAF, and many more, which speaks to the range of Natasja’s vision as a curator and artist.

Born in The Hague, she studied at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam and later in Berlin. Her work has previously been on display at Design Museum Den Bosch, Collectible Art Fair, Art Zuid, PAN Amsterdam, Big Art, Rademakers Gallery, and foreign exhibitions in cities such as Berlin, Brussels, Antwerp, and Copenhagen. Natasja’s work is included in private and museum collections worldwide.

We spoke about all these things, plus her upcoming public installations, which encompass her environmentalist efforts, her deep dedication to Grauzone, and all it stands for.

Radar features discussions with artists and industry leaders who are creators and devotees of music and is produced by Dylan Hundley and The Vinyl District. Dylan Hundley is an artist and performer, and the co-creator and lead singer of Lulu Lewis and all things at Darling Black. She co-curates and hosts Salon Lulu which is a New York based multidisciplinary performance series. She is also a cast member of the iconic New York film Metropolitan.

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Graded on a Curve:
Peter Gabriel,
Peter Gabriel

Weird sounds inside the gold mine. Those are the words that come to mind when I listen to the fractured, “rhythm first” art rock of 1980’s Peter Gabriel, the third in Gabriel’s quartet of self-titled albums. It’s world music-influenced sound and heavy reliance on studio innovation might lead you (naturally enough) to think the ubiquitous Brian Eno was at the helm, but it was actually Steve Lillywhite in the producer’s booth, and Lillywhite who had a major influence on the album’s unique sonic textures.

“Rhythm first” was Gabriel’s credo, and when it came to the drums that drive the LP, he had rules. “Artists given complete freedom die a horrible death” was the law he laid down to drummers Phil Collins and Jerry Marotta. No cymbals were rule Number One. To give the drums a unique sound, Lillywhite employed a “gated reverb” sound he first employed while producing Siouxsie and the Banshees. I’m not technically qualified to describe this innovation. You’ll have to Google it.

The results give Peter Gabriel as unique a sound as the Talking Heads’ Remain in Light, which was released some five months later. Strange rhythms were obviously in the air. If Peter Gabriel isn’t as iconic as Remain in Light, it’s still a remarkable LP, and for the same reasons—sonic experimentation doesn’t mean diddly-squat if you don’t have great songs. Remain in Light just happens to have more of them. It also doesn’t help that Gabriel’s third LP is, let’s face it, a big fat bummer.

Dark, darker, darkest—Peter Gabriel mustn’t have been in a sunny mood when he put together the songs for Peter Gabriel. Atlantic Records head honcho Ahmet Ertegun is said (by Gabriel) to have asked, “Has Peter been in a mental hospital?” And Atlantic Records A&R John Kalodner ultimately deemed the album “not commercial enough” for release, forcing Gabriel to look to Mercury Records to get the LP into US record stores, where (the joke was on them) it sold well. And to think people were always calling David Byrne crazy.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 8/8/25

Lexington, KY | Lexington’s CD Central to close after 30 years in business: A longtime staple of Lexington’s music scene is preparing to close its doors. CD Central, the beloved independent record store on South Limestone, announced in a Facebook post that it will shut down next month after 30 years in business. The store’s owner says the decision to sell was personal, not financial, and a new team plans to open a different business at the same location. As the store winds down operations, CD Central will no longer accept trade-ins or purchase used CDs or vinyl. Customers are encouraged to redeem gift cards as soon as possible and pick up any special orders currently on hold. The store also asks that local bands with consigned music reach out to arrange pickup or payments before the final closing date.

Wilmington, NC | Gravity Records Keeps On Spinning: Matt Keen, owner of Gravity Records in Wilmington, said music has been a part of his life since long before he can remember. Keen began playing the violin at the age of 3 and eventually became proficient on other string instruments. Inspired by his grandfather, a small business owner, Keen turned down a music scholarship to the UNC School of the Arts to attend business school at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. While taking classes, he worked at Manifest Discs & Tapes, the go-to place for music, movies and more in the late 1990s. Keen eventually became the manager of Manifest, and when the owner decided to close up shop, Keen saw the opportunity to go into business for himself. “I was 24 years old, taking an extended break from college and not sure what I wanted to do with my life. But I knew I didn’t want to stop working at a record store,” he said.

Vernon, BC | Vernon vinyl shop moving into downtown core: After five years in its previous location, the vinyl shop Collectors Direct has moved downtown. Record store Owner Edward Martins said the Vernon shop held its soft launch on Monday at its 30 Avenue location next to the Med Restaurant. “We wanted to get downtown so we would get more people to see our place, and we could share our products with more people,” said Martins. The shop sells everything from records, to CDs, posters, and collectible pieces. Collectors Direct’s previous Vernon location was on 53 Ave which they have had since 2020, Martins told Castanet the move to downtown is expected to help increase the store’s foot traffic. “Downtown is very vibrant, and we enjoy the atmosphere here,” said Martins.

Torrington, CT | Revolution Records: where the past plays on. On the corner of Willow and Franklin Streets in Torrington, Revolution Records doesn’t announce itself with fanfare. But inside, you’ll find a library of music from a bygone era. …“When I opened this store, I wanted it to feel like my bedroom when I was a teenager,” said John Dibella, who founded the shop six years ago before handing it over to his lifelong friend, Ted Pirro. Pirro, a music lover with shoulder-length silver hair, has spent most of his life working in record stores. More than a retail shop, Revolution Records has become something of a community center. Pirro calls his most devoted customers “hall of famers”—regulars who arrive without fail every week and chat for hours.

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TVD Radar: A Charlie Brown Christmas zoetrope vinyl and limited-edition pressings in stores 9/12

VIA PRESS RELEASE | 60 years ago, A Charlie Brown Christmas aired on TV screens across America, marking the birth of an instant hit and an enduring holiday tradition.

Based on Charles M. Schulz’s immensely popular Peanuts comic strip, the award-winning animated special was accompanied by a lively score from Bay Area jazz pianist, Vince Guaraldi, who paired original cues (“Linus and Lucy,” “Christmas Time Is Here”) with traditional holiday fare (“O Tannenbaum,” “What Child Is This,” “Hark, the Herald Angels Sing”). Now, more than half a century later, the soundtrack remains a perennial favorite and, with a 5x platinum certification, one of the best-selling jazz albums of all time.

To mark the 60th anniversary of A Charlie Brown Christmas and the 75th anniversary of Peanuts, Craft Recordings is celebrating with a range of collectible vinyl reissues, beginning with an eye-catching zoetrope pressing, available September 12.

Centered by an image of Charlie Brown and the Peanuts gang caroling in the snow, Side A features five snowy zoetrope scenes—each offering an animated moment from the holiday special as the record spins. Side B pays homage to the musical side of Peanuts, with an image of Schroeder, Lucy, and Snoopy at the piano, plus five zoetrope scenes that bring the Peanuts gang’s band to life—complete with dancing!

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TVD Radar: Wishbone Ash, Argus 180-Gram
45 RPM 2LP reissue in stores now

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Remastered from the original analog tapes by Sean Magee at Abbey Road Studios, pressed at Quality Record Pressings, and housed in a deluxe tip-on gatefold jacket.

Acoustic Sounds’ Analogue Productions label—renowned for setting new standards in fidelity and craftsmanship—has released Argus, the landmark 1972 album from British rock trailblazers Wishbone Ash. This deluxe and definitive 180-gram 45 RPM double LP edition has been meticulously mastered from the original analog master tape by Sean Magee at Abbey Road Studios, pressed on dead-quiet vinyl at Quality Record Pressings (QRP), and packaged in a tip-on, old-style gatefold double-pocket jacket from Stoughton Printing.

Acoustic Sounds founder Chad Kassem spoke on the significance of this release for him, saying, “I feel incredibly fortunate to reissue Argus—one of my favorite albums from youth—in such high quality. I still remember seeing Wishbone Ash live in Baton Rouge at Independence Hall on April 21, 1973. To now have the honor of bringing this record back into the world with the care and fidelity it deserves is truly a dream come true.”

A fan favorite and critical high point in the Wishbone Ash discography, Argus includes the iconic “Blowin’ Free” as well as beloved cuts like “Time Was,” “The King Will Come,” “Warrior,” and “Throw Down the Sword.” The album’s unique blend of bluesy roots, progressive ambition, and dual-lead guitar interplay shaped the sound of future rock greats including Thin Lizzy, Iron Maiden, Opeth, and Lynyrd Skynyrd—all of whom have cited the band as an influence.

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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