The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Godsmack, Awake 25th anniversary 2LP smoky-green vinyl reissue in stores now

VIA PRESS RELEASE | The 25th Anniversary edition of Godsmack’s landmark sophomore album, Awake, is available now as a digital deluxe and on deluxe 2LP smoky-green color vinyl and CD via Republic/UMe. This commemorative edition includes a special holographic lithograph of the cover art and features five bonus tracks, including “Why,” which was featured on the Any Given Sunday soundtrack, and a Black Sabbath cover of “Sweet Leaf.”

Following their multi-platinum self-titled debut in 1998, Godsmack returned two years later in 2000 with an album that not only met but surpassed all expectations. The release delivered a powerful collection of songs that quickly became fan favorites, including “Bad Magick,” “Awake,” and “Greed,” and cemented the band’s reputation as one of the defining acts of their era. Building on the momentum of their breakthrough success, the sophomore album’s title track earned Godsmack their first Billboard No. 1 hit, while another standout single, “Vampires,” garnered the band their first GRAMMY® nomination. The reissue celebrates a defining moment in Godsmack’s career, showcasing the enduring legacy of an album that continues to resonate with fans worldwide.

Additionally, Godsmack recently announced their massive GODSMACK — THE RISE OF ROCK WORLD TOUR 2026, a sprawling North American run featuring special guests Stone Temple Pilots and Dorothy. Promoted by Live Nation, the tour will bring Godsmack’s signature high-octane live show to amphitheaters nationwide. The tour kicks off Sunday, May 10, in Bristow, VA, at Jiffy Lube Live and makes stops across the U.S. and Toronto, Canada, including Austin, Chicago, Denver, Phoenix, and California, before wrapping Saturday, September 26, at Ford Idaho Center Amphitheater in Nampa, ID.

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Graded on a Curve:
Alice Cooper,
Love It to Death

Celebrating Michael Bruce on his 78th birthday.Ed.

Alice Cooper, 1971; it’s almost enough to break your heart. Alice put out two LPs that year, Love It to Death and Killer, and both include a handful of incredibly great hard rockers combined with their fair share of duds, including a boring nine-minute workout on Love It to Death (“Black Juju”) and the equally coma-inducing eight-plus minute “Halo of Flies” on Killer.

I know bands were often contractually obligated to produce two LPs per annum back then, and that may or may not have had something to do with the limited number of fabulous tracks on both LPs. But imagine, just for a moment, had Alice Cooper put out just one album in 1971, an album containing the best songs from both LPs. The finished product would have been brilliant, and one of the best rock LPs of all time.

Alas, you can’t turn back the clock—if you could, I’d move it back to the glory days, when I could smoke tons of pot and not get paranoid—and we’re stuck forever with two woulda-coulda been tremendous albums marred by too many weak tracks to be called great.

As for the band, they got their start in Los Angeles on Frank Zappa’s Straight label, but following the disappointing sales of their sophomore LP (1970’s Easy Action) they up and moved to Pontiac, Michigan, where they fit in perfectly with bands like the Stooges and the MC5. Cooper himself blamed the band’s failure to make a mark in LA to drugs; “L.A. just didn’t get it,” he stated. “They were all on the wrong drug for us. They were on acid and we were basically drinking beer. We fit much more in Detroit than we did anywhere else.”

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TVD Radar: Dylan LeBlanc, Cautionary
Tale
10th anniversary yellow vinyl reissue
in stores 5/15

VIA PRESS RELEASE | “The third album from the Muscle Shoals singer-songwriter unfolds with the wariness of a social and spiritual outsider who broods his way to graceful defiance.”NPR

Louisiana singer-songwriter Dylan LeBlanc is excited to announce a special 10th Anniversary re-release of his acclaimed album Cautionary Tale, which is due out on May 15, 2026 via Single Lock Records. To herald the announcement, he has unearthed a demo of fan-favorite track “Roll The Dice (Bedroom Demo).”

Of the song, he shares: “This is a bedroom demo from my house at the time in Nashville, Tennessee. Being young and prideful, I was trying to figure out how to manage my relationships.

‘If pride was a mountain I’d be walking tall but the valley down below is a deadly fall’ just came out because it felt like what was happening to me. There was a version of myself I wanted to be for someone else that I desperately needed to find for the first time for unselfish reasons. It’s a song about second chances.”

This month, LeBlanc is also hitting the road on a US tour, which kicks off on March 13 in his hometown of Shreveport, Louisiana, followed by SXSW in Austin. Find all dates here.

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Graded on a Curve:
GTR, GTR

Progressive rock will never die, but come the eighties panicky progressive rock musicians thought it had, and it led them to do the unthinkable—produce lame, MOR, watered-down pop prog (or in some cases just pop) music that was, and I find this almost impossible to fathom, even more unbearable than the pompous prog-opuses they’d inflicted on the world through their heyday in the early to mid-seventies.

From Tales of Topographic Oceans to “Owner of a Lonely Heart”—in no kind of world could that be called an improvement, and I’d sooner shoot myself in the dick than listen to the former.

GTR never got the traction that Asia or the post-Gabriel Genesis got, and for that reason, it’s a bit easier to hear the quiet desperation—at least the prog rockers turned pop-ulists in Asia and Genesis were scoring hits and getting paid. And one reason could be that GTR held on to at least some of the tenets of progressive rock. Unfortunately, they had no knack for writing hits.

GTR–a five-piece “supergroup” featuring Yes guitarist Steve Howe and Genesis guitarist Steve Hackett (hence the band name), along with journeyman vocalist Max Bacon, sessions bassist Phil Spalding, and sometime Marillion drummer Jonathan Mover—might have seemed like a great idea, but the guitar fireworks you’d expected never happen and the songs are formulaic, generic AOR shlock.

Musician reviewer J. D. Considine’s review of GTR in Musician was both succinct and spot-on. It read, in its entirety, “SHT.” Part of the blame lies with Buggles/Yes/Asia keyboardist Geoff Downes, who produced and went out of his way to highlight the clichéd vocals of prog-everyman Bacon, who never heard a song he couldn’t overemote on. The rest of the blame lies with the songs, which sound like they were written by a committee steadfastly dedicated to writing lowest-common-denominator progressive rock-lite, Starship-meets-Asia swill.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 3/16/26

UK | BPI: UK recorded music market tops £1.5 billion as new generation of British acts make chart impact. The UK recorded music market exceeded £1.5 billion in annual revenue for the first time, according to new BPI figures for 2025. The trade revenue figures coincide with a new generation of artists—including Olivia Dean, Lola Young, Myles Smith, Skye Newman and PinkPantheress—helping to boost the domestic performance of British music. Total revenue, which combines income from streaming, physical music, digital downloads, synchronisation and public performance rose by 5.0% year-on-year to a nominal high of £1.57 billion. This outpaced the annual growth achieved the year before, with the market now growing for 11 consecutive years. The result was also in line with the 4.9% year-on-year volume increase for the UK music market reported by the BPI for 2025.

East Devon, UK | New record shop Funky Seagull opened in Sidmouth, East Devon: A new “funky” record shop has opened in East Devon. The new shop in Sidmouth, named Funky Seagull, opened on Thursday, March 12. Located at 63 High St, Sidmouth, it is next door to The Chattery and opposite the Co-op. Owner Paul, who worked in the music retail industry for nearly 20 years, will be running the shop. Funky Seagull will only be selling new records, spanning all genres from classic albums to indie, pop, hip-hop, dance, punk, post-punk, and metal. The store will also stock a range of pop culture merchandise, including drink bottles, keychains, badges, and mugs. Paul will also be selling Funko Pops, as well as Star Wars and Marvel action figures. A selection of music-related books has also been chosen for the store.

Pinellas Park, FL | Pinellas Park’s Sound Exchange store to close next month: “I am one human being and I cannot do it any more—managing two stores, two staffs, two sets of inventory, two of everything.” Pinellas County is about to lose one of its cornerstone record stores. Sound Exchange, which has had a location in Pinellas Park since 2001, will close at the end of April. The independent retail outlet at 8625 66th Street N., Pinellas Park opened in 2017, replacing an earlier incarnation on Park Boulevard. The anchor store, in Tampa, has been in business since 1987. “…We had a great 2025; the store is not failing in any way,” she insisted. “It’s just, I am one human being and I cannot do it any more—managing two stores, two staffs, two sets of inventory, two of everything. Because I’m working every day. When I’m not at the stores, I’m working from home, and it’s just not sustainable for a single person to do. Or to do well.”

Florence, IT | Move On Records is the perfect example of how cool Italian record stores can be: What makes Move On particularly ambitious is the setting. The store sits just across from the iconic Florence Cathedral, better known as the Duomo. When you love vinyl, discovering a new record store can be as energizing as hearing a great new song. That’s why, whenever you travel, whether for work or pleasure, it’s worth seeing what the local record scene has to offer. Sometimes you uncover something special, like pulling the best prize from a holiday grab bag. That’s exactly what happened on a recent stop in Florence. Move On Records takes a bold, unconventional approach to the idea of a “record store.” On the ground floor sits a classic pub celebrating the rich heritage of Italian beer. …But things really get interesting upstairs.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

I stand outside of the McDonald’s / I’m, uh, flexing my muscles ’til I explode / I hope they see me in the drive-thru lane / I, I hope they see me in the drive-thru lane

I stand outside of the LL Bean / I’m trying to get some free woman sweaters / You know what I mean? / I hope they see me in the drive-thru lane / I hope, I hope they, I hope they, I hope they

I don’t wanna pay for anything / Clothes and food and drugs for free / If it was 1970 / I’d have a job at a factory

I am a man that’s made of meat / You’re on the internet looking at feet / I hate almost everything that I see / And I just wanna disappear

I’m subscribed to your mom’s OnlyFans / I spent five bucks a month to get pictures of her flappy giblets / And I spent another ten dollars a month to chat with her on the AI chat program / It feels great

Welcome to the second Friday the 13th in a row of 2026. Let’s avoid incoming drones, and let’s make this week great.

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TVD Live Shots: Ballyhoo! with Artikal Sound System and Tobyraps at XL Live, 3/7

WORDS AND IMAGES: TODD JUDD in HARRISBURG, PA | Three acts, one sold-out room, and a night that had absolutely no chill from start to finish. Tobyraps set the tone early—a rapper doing push-ups mid-verse will do that—before Artikal Sound System locked down the room with thick riddims and Logan Rex’s powerhouse vocals, leaving the crowd in disbelief. Then Ballyhoo! did what Ballyhoo! does best: delivered their signature chaotic, high-energy party that reminded everyone in the building exactly why live music is worth every penny.

The night’s music kicked off with Tobyraps (real name Ryan Tobbe), and I’ll admit I hadn’t heard his music before. That quickly changed. Toby is a rapper, songwriter, and motivational artist from Cleveland, Ohio, known for his upbeat, community-focused music and freestyle skills. His style has been described as Lil Dicky meets Watsky, and that comparison fits well.

He had the crowd engaged from the start—dropping push-ups, sit-ups, and sprinting across the stage while delivering his verses. His energetic performance and playful flow made him the perfect warm-up for what would become a great night of music.

Next up was Artikal Sound System (A.S.S.). Chris Montague, Fabian Acuña, and Christopher Cope came running onto the stage with a hilarious, choreographed dance to the cheers of the crowd. At the same time, Adam Kampf stepped behind the drums and Logan Rex strolled onstage as the band launched into “Self Sabotage.”

I’ve seen A.S.S. twice before, both times at festivals—Cali Vibes and Reggae Rise Up—so I was excited to experience them in a more intimate venue like XL Live. The question was whether their high-energy festival performance would translate into a smaller room. It absolutely did.

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TVD Radar: Craig Wedren, The Dream Dreaming Deluxe in stores 4/10

VIA PRESS RELEASE | After wrapping a sold out fall tour with his band, the acclaimed post-hardcore art rock pioneers Shudder To Think, musician Craig Wedren has announced the release of The Dream Dreaming Deluxe on April 10 via his Tough Lover imprint.

The new release from the acclaimed frontman and prolific film & television composer—known to TV audiences as the composer behind the wildly popular series Yellowjackets, among many other projects—is an expanded version of his acclaimed 2024 album which includes the original 11-song album, 5 unreleased tracks, and another 5-song acoustic EP with string quintet, recorded live at the legendary Henson Studios (now Chaplin Studios) in Los Angeles. Today, he also shares the first tease of the deluxe with “Nothing Bad” alongside the official video for the single directed by Craig Wedren, Shon Hedges, and Frank Barrera.

Wedren shares: “Increasingly, we have multiple “at-bats” when putting out a record—the initial release, the deluxe version, plus whatever other clever variations evolve from there. A lot of deluxe releases are bloated and boring, of course. But some of my favorite recent albums have been weirder, redux mutations of the initial, ‘definitive’ product.

I like having access to all of the bonus material that comes with an artist’s output in our current age—it can make an album feel like a dynamic, living thing, rather than a frozen moment in time. I’m happy to sacrifice a little of the mystery that used to be de rigueur for artists, in exchange for insight into process, inspiration, and backstory. That said, the THING is still the music, and if your record sucks, why waste anybody’s time with all the rest of it.

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Graded on a Curve: Lightnin’ Hopkins, Lightnin’ Hopkins

Remembering Lightnin’ Hopkins in advance of Sunday’s birthdate. —Ed.

Lightnin’ Sam Hopkins remains one of the crucial figures in the annals of the blues. By extension, he recorded a ton, and owning all his music will require diligence and a seriously long shelf. However, there are a few albums that are a must even for casual blues collectors, and his self-titled effort from 1959 is one of them. Recorded by historian Samuel Charters in Hopkins’ apartment while he played a borrowed guitar, it served as the door-opener to years of prominence. A highly intimate gem of nimble-fingered deep blues feeling, Lightnin’ Hopkins is available through Smithsonian Folkways, remastered from the source tapes in a tip-on jacket with Charters’ original notes.

To call Lightnin’ Hopkins the byproduct of rediscovery isn’t inaccurate, but it does risk stripping the contents of its unique story. Unlike Son House, Skip James, Bukka White, and John Hurt (all from Mississippi), Texan Hopkins had only been inactive for a few years when Samuel Charters found and recorded him in Houston, and if he’d been playing since the 1930s, he was still very much in his musical prime.

Hopkins debuted on record in 1946 for the Aladdin label of Los Angeles in tandem with pianist Wilson “Thunder” Smith, the partnership bringing him his sobriquet. From there, a solid decade of studio dates (and some R&B chart action) commenced; his additional sides for Aladdin fill a 2CD set, and the sessions for Gold Star take up two separate CD volumes. Additionally, there were worthy recordings for Modern, Sittin’ in With, and majors Mercury and Decca. 1954 brought a massive spurt of wild, highly amplified material for the Herald label; it contrasts sharply with the one-man circumstance of Lightnin’ Hopkins.

If commercial recording industry prospects had dried up by ’59 and Hopkins’ guitar was in hock, there was no trace of rustiness from inactivity, though the comfort level does increase as these songs progress (the bottle of gin Charters bought likely had something to do with it). What’s shared with his prior electric band stuff is a recognizable, eventually signature style based in the conversation between rural blues verve and more citified boogie motion (in this he shares much with John Lee Hooker).

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TVD Radar: Todd Rundgren, The Complete Live At The Ridgefield in stores 3/20

VIA PRESS RELEASE | A decade on from its initial appearance back in 2016, one of the most in-demand of all Todd Rundgren live albums is being reissued—in complete form, for the first time—on vinyl and in a special 2 CD + DVD package on March 20.

Recorded live at the Ridgefield Playhouse in Ridgefield, CT on December 15, 2015, this incredible concert experience includes some of Todd’s best known songs including “Hello It’s Me” and “Bang On The Drum,” plus fan favorites that haven’t been performed live in decades! In addition, several songs here are new to the CD release—“Love Science,” “Soothe,” “God Said,” and a dynamic soul medley were all omitted from the original issue.It’s a sensational show, opening with a triumphal “I Saw The Light” and, to the surprise of many fans, all but ignoring his most recent album, Global, to deliver an oldies-heavy show instead. But he does not seem to be doing it willingly—indeed, early in the show, Rundgren all but castigates his audiences for ignoring his last few decades of work, and clinging only to the old, old favorites.

Not that he made things easy for his band, either. Joining Rundgren on stage were John Ferenzik (keyboards, guitar), Jesse Gress (guitar and vocals), Prairie Prince (drums), and Kasim Sulton (bass and vocals), and rehearsals for this tour saw them expected to learn some 50 different songs, while Rundgren kept each evening’s set list to himself until right before the gig. But the ploy worked. Two weeks into the tour, and the musicians sound as fresh tonight as they might have at the very beginning of the tour.

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Graded on a Curve: Hüsker Dü,
New Day Rising

Celebrating Greg Norton on his 67th birthday.Ed.

Hard and fast rules so let’s dispense with the long instrumental intro and get right down to the nitty-gritty; on 1985’s New Day Rising, St. Paul, Minnesota power trio Hüsker Dü permanently set themselves apart from the hardcore pack by leavening the genre’s speed freak aesthetic with increasing dollops of real melody.

The results are still bracing, but New Day Rising is friendlier than most hardcore, and more welcoming too. Parts of it are even nice, nice in the way that the iconic album cover (two dogs, one beautiful body of water, a sunrise) is nice.

Most of the “nice” comes to us thanks to drummer/vocalist Grant Hart, who was the Jekyll to Bob Mould’s Hyde in what amounted to a schizophrenic division of band labor. Hart provided the melody, sweetness and light. Bob Mould provided the buzz saw guitar and angst; he may not have doing the fashionable by spitting bile at Reagan’s America, but his personal life sounded a hot mess. As for Greg Norton, he had a very cool mustache. And he played bass guitar.

New Day Rising is a sonic world away from Hüsker Dü’s 1982 debut Land Speed Record, a landmark in speedcore that more than lives up to its bragging title. But like their SST label mates the Minutemen and Meat Puppets, Hüsker Dü soon chafed against the formal constraints of hardcore.

Unlike said bands, however, Hüsker Dü didn’t abandon hardcore altogether. Instead they set themselves to the business of expanding hardcore’s horizons by employing catchy riffs and hooks, and the results are to be heard on such sweet (and bordering on silly) Hart-penned cuts as “Books About UFOs,” which features a piano of all things. Betcha Ian MacKaye didn’t see that one coming.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 3/13/26

Dayton, OH | Blind Rage Records to close, leaves lasting mark on Dayton music scene: ‘Other people picked up the slack and saw that this is just a thing you can do.’ Blind Rage Records—a DIY hub for Dayton’s punk and hardcore scene—will close March 22, owner Gwen Downing-Groth announced on social media. “Thank you to everyone that ever came to the shop, bought records, traded records, sold us records, shared laughs, cried with us, moshed with us, truly f— lived with us,” she wrote in the post. “Blind Rage was always about being for the community and I still feel it was a massive success and take an immense amount of pride in all we accomplished over the past (just shy of) six years.” Blind Rage will throw live and in-store events throughout the month, sending off the shop in true DIY, indie and punk fashion. This includes a stacked show Saturday, March 21—with many familiar faces from previous bills—followed by a quiet denouement on its final day.

Buffalo, NY | Black Dots Records & Bar, with Live Music in the “Garage Room.” It takes a lot to surprise me these days. But just the other night I came across an unexpected occurrence that really made me happy. It was Saturday, and my buddy and I decided to head out to have a couple of beers. We started off at one of my favorite bars—Turning Bridge Tavern in Back Rock. From there, we headed to Gypsy Parlor to get some food. At around 10:30pm, we decided to call it a night, and began walking to the car. As we passed by Black Dots Records & Bar, I noticed that they were still open, as people were still browsing the rows of vinyl. And that’s when I remembered that there was in fact, a bar in the back of the record shop. Not only was there a bar, there was also a performance area in the far back “garage room.”

Seattle, WA | Sub Pop Records leaving Denny Triangle for Seattle’s waterfront: The age-old independent record label Sub Pop Records, based in Seattle, will relocate from its Denny Triangle store to Seattle’s waterfront on April 1. Sub Pop announced it will move to a 2,688-square-foot store inside the nearly 115-year-old Maritime Building at 908 Alaskan Way for its new Sub Pop Waterfront location. A sign was posted in the window of the label’s former Amazon re:Invent tower space, a building on Amazon’s campus that houses 5,000 employees, indicating it was “closing up shop” and heading South. The record label closed its store inside Amazon’s re:Invent tower on March 8 after five years in the space, according to The Puget Sound Business Journal.

Everett, WA | Apollo Exos, hub for brews and tunes, will expand: When Sotirios Rebelos started collecting records again, he couldn’t stop himself. As a kid, vinyl was an integral part of his life. But when he got busier as an adult and slowed down his record buying, he realized he missed that aspect of his life—something he said kept him in focus. The next thing he knew, he was scrolling through online forums and buying entire collections from people as he built up a massive catalog of records on his own. “I couldn’t stop,” Rebelos said. “And I’m like, might as well open up a record store.” Since it opened in August 2024, his shop, Apollo Exos Records—a beer bar and record shop in Everett’s downtown core—has become a hub for brews and tunes.

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TVD Radar: Power to the People: John & Yoko Live in NYC in cinemas 4/29

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Trafalgar Releasing is proud to announce Power to the People: John & Yoko/Plastic Ono Band with Elephant’s Memory and Special Guests – Live at the One To One Concert, New York City, 1972 is coming to big screens worldwide this spring. The film is produced by and released in partnership with Mercury Studios.

Representing the only full-length concerts John Lennon, with Yoko Ono, performed after leaving The Beatles, Power To The People: John & Yoko Live in NYC is a multiscreen concert film of two massive Madison Square Garden live shows. This is a film restoration twenty years in the making, with every frame physically and digitally cleaned by hand. This definitive version has been newly restored, re-edited, and remixed by the Lennons’ seven-time GRAMMY® Award-winning team, led by Sean Ono Lennon.

Tickets for Power To The People: John & Yoko Live in NYC go on sale Friday, March 20—coinciding with John and Yoko’s 57th wedding anniversary. Fans can visit powertothepeoplefilm.com to purchase tickets. Audio will be in 5.1 Surround or Dolby Atmos® at select locations. Visit the official event website now and sign up for the most current information and event updates.

John & Yoko/Plastic Ono Band with Elephant’s Memory and Special Guests performed these now-legendary sold-out One To One concerts on August 30, 1972, to a combined audience of 40,000 people, raising over $1.5M (equivalent to $11.5M in 2026) for children with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

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TVD Radar: Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Pictures at an Exhibition & Trilogy MoFi editions in stores 3/13

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (MoFi), the leader in high-fidelity audio reissues, is proud to announce the audiophile release of two cornerstones of the progressive-rock canon from British supergroup Emerson, Lake & Palmer (ELP): the 1971 live masterpiece Pictures at an Exhibition and the 1972 studio gem Trilogy.

The albums, which arrive on March 13, follow MoFi’s October 2025 reissue of the band’s 1971 prog staple, Tarkus, and the September 2025 release of their seminal self-titled debut. Each is presented as a numbered-edition 180g 33RPM LP (limited to 3,000 copies) and a numbered-edition Hybrid SACD.

Sourced from the original tapes (1/4” / 15 IPS / Dolby A analog copy to DSD 256 to analog console to lathe), the vinyl editions are pressed at Fidelity Record Pressing and housed in premium Stoughton gatefold jackets. These definitive reissues bring the visionary depth and virtuosic musicianship of Keith Emerson, Greg Lake, and Carl Palmer to the fore with spectacular dimensionality, breadth, and clarity.

There is a reason Greg Lake deemed Trilogy “such an accurate record” when looking back at it decades later. The trio’s third studio album teems with exacting arrangements and multi-hued colors that showcase the band’s willingness to experiment. Expanding by distilling the power of their debut and the epic leanings of Tarkus into a more accessible whole, Trilogy stands as the most representative example of the ensemble’s trademark styles.

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Graded on a Curve:
Iron Maiden,
The Number of the Beast

Celebrating Steve Harris on his 70th birthday.Ed.

Children of the Damned, heed my warning: Iron Maiden offers terrifying proof of why it’s a bad idea to mess with the Dark One. No, bassist and chief songwriter Steve Harris didn’t find himself scuttling around the studio ceiling during Iron Maiden’s recording of 1982’s landmark The Number of the Beast, nor did lead singer Bruce Dickinson get raped by a succubus with the body of Scarlett Johansson and the face of Gene Simmons. And no one in the band was fatally impaled by a flying mic stand while they were laying down “Hallowed Be Thy Name.”

It was worse! Lights reportedly turned themselves on and off in the studio! Equipment, which fails all the time, inexplicably failed! And what was producer Martin Birch’s punishment for meddling in the dark arts? He was involved in a traffic accident involving a mini-bus sardined with real live nuns. Papal penguin punishers! Who probably had to be restrained from ruler-whipping him to death! And the cost of repairs? £666! And he didn’t have collision insurance!

That’s some scary shit, and totally true, but it was worth it—The Number of the Beast is revered as a classic in the heavy metal genre, and no doubt there are lots of fifty-somethings out there who owe their very survival to it because how else would they have gotten through their awful teen years? Their parents sucked, school sucked, the pot was shitty, they were never going to get laid (it was a mathematical impossibility), but at least they had “Hallowed Be Thy Name”!

And it’s still saving lives today. The joke was on Satan! The album is a lifeline, and not a one-way ticket to suicide and the Pit, no matter how many little Christian idiots saw fit to burn it or beat it to death with hammers (they were afraid the fumes would drive them insane!).

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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