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Posts Tagged ‘reissue’

NIN Pretty Hate Machine Reissue

OUT NOVEMBER 22


Pretty Hate Machine

On November 22, UMe and Bicycle Music Company will release a remastered version of Pretty Hate Machine,
the 1989 debut studio album by Nine
Inch
Nails
. The album was previously reissued in 2005, but this will be the first remastering overseen by
Trent Reznor. The album includes completely remastered music, updated artwork and a cover of the
Queen song “Get Down, Make Love”
originally available
on the “Sin” single in 1990. In a post on Nin.com, Reznor
explains:

“I’m happy to finally announce the re-issue of the first Nine Inch Nails record “Pretty Hate Machine,” releasing
worldwide 11/22. UMe and Bicycle Music Group managed to locate the original mixes, so I went in the studio with
Tom Baker and remastered it for a greatly improved sonic experience. In addition, Rob reinterpreted Gary Talpas’
original cover to make for a fresh new package.

It’s been an interesting trip watching the fate of this record float from one set of hands to another (a long and
depressing story) but it’s finally wound up in friendly territory, allowing us to polish it up a bit and present it to you
now. We had fun revisiting this old friend, hope you enjoy.

TR”

Pretty Hate Machine Reissue Track Listing:

01 Head Like a Hole
02 Terrible Lie

03 Down In It
04 Sanctified
05 Something I Can Never Have
06 Kinda I Want To

07 Sin
08 That’s What I Get
09 The Only Time

10 Ringfinger
11 Get Down, Make Love

Nine Inch Nails
Tour Dates

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Nine Inch Nails News
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Nine Inch Nails
Concert
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Jerry Garcia Acoustic Band: Unreleased Live Album & Reissue

NEWLY REMASTERED AND PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED MATERIAL OUT NOVEMBER 16


Ragged But Right

Before the Grateful Dead, the Warlocks, and even Mother McCree’s Uptown Jug Champions, Jerry Garcia
played in the Black Mountain Boys, a band he formed in the early 1960s with the exceptionally talented Sandy
Rothman
and David Nelson. Together only a short time, they played the kind of bluegrass, country,
gospel, and old-time music that swept through coffeehouses coast-to-coast in the post-Beat, pre-Beatles era that
Garcia called: “the folk scare.”

The trio came together again in 1986 to form the Jerry Garcia Acoustic Band with John Kahn (upright
bass), Kenny Kosek (fiddle), and David Kemper (drums). The group’s brief but glorious arc
spanned more than two dozen shows in 1987 and 1988, which mostly featured them opening for the Jerry Garcia
Band.

The beloved group is spotlighted with a newly remastered version of 1988′s long out-of-print Almost
Acoustic
, the sextet’s sole release, and the much awaited arrival of its sequel, Ragged But
Right
. Each will be available November 16 at all physical retail outlets for a suggested list price of
$13.98. In an exclusive offer from Dead.net, the albums can be purchased together with a deluxe booklet that
includes an essay by Steve Silberman that details Garcia’s lifelong love for traditional string-band music
as well as a
history of the JGAB for $23.98.

ALMOST ACOUSTIC

1. “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot”
2. “Deep Elem Blues”
3. “Blue Yodel #9 (Standin’ On The Corner)”
4. “Spike Driver Blues”

5. “I’ve Been All Around This World”
6. “I’m Here To Get My Baby Out Of Jail”
7. “I’m Troubled”
8. “Oh, The Wind And Rain”
9. “The Girl At The Crossroads Bar”
10. “Oh Babe, It Ain’t No Lie”
11. “The Ballad Of Casey Jones”

12. “Diamond Joe”
13. “Gone Home”
14. “Ripple”

RAGGED BUT RIGHT

1. “Ragged But Right”
2. “Short Life Of Trouble”
3. “I Ain’t Never”
4. “Trouble In Mind”
5. “Drifting With The Tide”

6. Introductions
7. “Deep Elem Blues”
8. “Rosa Lee McFall”
9. “Two Soldiers”
10. “If I Lose”
11. “Bright Morning Star”
12. “Goodnight Irene”
13. “It’s A Long, Long Way To The Top Of The World”

14. “Drifting Too Far From The Shore”
15. “Turtle Dove”


Paul McCartney & Wings:Band on the Run Reissue 11/02

FEATURING REMASTERED RARE BONUS
AUDIO & VIDEO CONTENT WITH SPECIAL
PACKAGING


Band on the Run

MPL and the Concord Music Group are pleased to announce the re-release of Paul McCartney & Wings
iconic Band on the Run on November 2, 2010. Heralded as one of the greatest albums of all time, the
GRAMMY winning, smash # 1 album – originally released December of 1973 – yielded the immortal title track and
world-wide hit “Jet,” becoming Wings’ most successful and celebrated album ever.

Band on the Run will be available in a variety of formats originating with the single disc digitally remastered,
essential 9-track standard edition. The 3 disc (2CD, 1 DVD) special edition features nine bonus audio tracks
(including the top 10 smash “Helen Wheels”), rare footage of the McCartneys in Lagos and behind-the-scenes at the
famous album cover shoot, original Band on the Run promotional video clips, the One Hand Clapping television
special (highlighted by studio performances filmed at Abbey Road in 1974) all with beautifully enhanced
packaging.

Collectors will be especially thrilled by the 4 disc (3CD, 1 DVD) deluxe edition which adds an extraordinary 120-
page hard bound book containing many unseen and unpublished photos by Linda McCartney and Clive Arrowsmith,
album and single artwork, downloadable hi-res audio versions of the remastered album and bonus audio tracks, a
full history of the album complete with a new interview with Paul and expanded track by track information for all
four discs. The deluxe edition also includes a special Band on the Run audio documentary (originally produced for
the 25th Anniversary edition.) The original remastered album and bonus audio content will also be issued in a 2
disc 180gm audiophile vinyl edition that comes with an MP3 download of all 18 tracks. Lastly, the standard and
deluxe versions of Band on the Run will be available digitally worldwide.

BAND ON THE RUN TRACKLIST:
Remastered Album
1. Band on the Run

2. Jet
3. Bluebird
4. Mrs Vandebilt
5. Let Me Roll It
6. Mamunia
7. No Words

8. Picasso’s Last Words (Drink to Me)

9. Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five

Bonus Audio Tracks
1. Helen Wheels
2. Country Dreamer
3. Bluebird [from One Hand Clapping]
4. Jet [from One Hand Clapping]

5. Let Me Roll It [from One Hand Clapping]

6. Band on the Run [from One Hand Clapping]

7. Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five [from One Hand Clapping]

8. Country Dreamer [from One Hand Clapping]

9. Zoo Gang

Audio Documentary

Remastered documentary disc originally produced for the 25th Anniversary release of Band on the Run.
Featuring interview contributions from Paul McCartney, Linda McCartney, Denny Laine, Geoff Emerick, Tony
Visconti, Al Coury, Clive Arrowsmith, James Coburn, John Conteh, Kenny Lynch, Michael Parkinson, Christopher Lee,
Clement Freud
, and Dustin Hoffman.

DVD

1. Band on the Run Music Video

2. Mamunia Music Video

3. Album Promo
Featuring Band on the Run, Mrs Vandebilt, Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five, Bluebird

4. Helen Wheels Music Video

5. Wings In Lagos
6. Osterley Park
7. One Hand Clapping

Paul McCartney
Tour Dates

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Paul McCartney News
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Paul McCartney
Concert
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Dirty Projectors: Bitte Orca Reissue North American Tour

2 CD & DIGITAL REISSUE OUT SEPTEMBER 28


Dirty Projectors

Bitte Orca, one of the most critically hailed albums of 2009, is set for expanded release on 2xCD
& digital Sept. 28, 2010.

The new limited edition Bitte Orca two-disc set comes with premium
packaging
and a bonus disc with unreleased live material and b-sides. Included on the bonus disc is an EP-length live acoustic
performance recorded at New York’s Other Music in June of 2009. Also included are previously vinyl only b-sides
from the ‘Ascending Melody’ 7″ and ‘Stillness is the Move’ 12″. To top it off, the bonus disc concludes with a brand
new cover of Bob Dylan’s “As I Went Out One Morning”.

Download “Temecula Sunnrise (Live at Other Music)” here.

In support of the expanded Bitte Orca, the band will hit the road for an extensive tour of North America
starting in
Washington, DC on Sept. 7. Full dates are below.

BITTE ORCA (EXPANDED EDITION)

DISC ONE
1. Cannibal Resource

2. Temecula Sunrise
3. The Bride
4. Stillness Is The Move
5. Two Doves
6. Useful Chamber
7. No Intention
8. Remade Horizon
9. Fluorescent Half Dome


DISC TWO
1. Fluorescent Half Dome (Live at Other Music)
2. Temecula Sunrise (Live at Other Music)
3. Two Doves (Live at Other Music)
4. Cannibal Resource (Live at Other Music)
5. No Intention (Live at Other Music)
6. Ascending Melody
7. Emblem of The World
8. Wave The Bloody Shirt
9. Bitte Bitte Orca

10. Stillness Is The Move (Lucky Dragons Remix)
11. As I Went Out One Morning

TOUR DATES

09-07 Washington, DC – 9:30 Club *

09-08 Philadelphia, PA – Trocadero *
09-11 New York, NY – Terminal 5 *
09-13 Boston, MA – Wilbur *
09-14 Montreal, Quebec – Le National **
09-15 Toronto, Ontario – Opera House **
09-17 Chicago, IL – Metro **
09-18 Milwaukee, WI – Pabst Theatre **
09-19 Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue **
09-23 Pomona, CA – Glass House ^
09-24 Los Angeles, CA – Wiltern ^
09-25 San Francisco, CA – Fillmore ^
09-28 Portland, OR – Aladdin ^
09-29 Portland, OR – Aladdin ^
09-30 Seattle, WA – Showbox ^
10-05 Durham, NC – Page Auditorium
10-20 New York, NY – Madison Square Garden w/ Phoenix, Wavves


* w/ Owen Pallett<br
** w/ Happy Birthday

^ w/ Dominique Young Unique

Dirty Projectors
Tour Dates

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Dirty Projectors News
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Dirty Projectors
Concert
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Richard & Linda Thompson: Shoot Out The Lights Reissue

DUO’S LEGENDARY FINAL ALBUM REISSUE DUE OCTOBER 12


Shoot Out The Lights

Shoot Out The Lights is Richard and Linda Thompson‘s final album together and, ironically, the folk-rock couple’s most
artistically acclaimed and commercially successful. The album was recorded, scrapped, and rerecorded before finally
emerging in 1982, arriving just around the time that the couple split up. Despite the separation, they embarked
upon a U.S. tour to promote the album, delivering emotionally charged performances at every turn.

Rhino Handmade reissues the couple’s legendary swan song as a two-disc deluxe edition that includes the original
album along with a bonus disc of 11 unreleased live performances from the tour. Due out October 12,
Shoot Out The Lights (Deluxe Edition) is available for pre-order in mid-September exclusively at
www.rhino.com for a suggested list price of $39.98. Fans can
sign up at Rhino.com now to be notified when the pre-order goes live using this link: www.rhino.com/article/shoot-out-the-lights-reloads.

Track Listing

Disc 1
1. “Don’t Renege On Our Love”
2. “Walking On A Wire”
3. “A Man In Need”
4. “Just The Motion”
5. “Shoot Out The Lights”
6. “Back Street Slide”
7. “Did She Jump Or Was She Pushed?”

8. “Wall Of Death”


Disc 2 – Live
1. “Dargai” *
2. “Back Street Slide” *
3. “Pavanne” *
4. “I’ll Keep It With Mine” *
5. “Borrowed Time” *
6. “Did She Jump Or Was She Pushed?” *
7. “I’m A Dreamer” *
8. “Honky Tonk Blues” *

9. “Shoot Out The Lights” *
10. “For Shame Of Doing Wrong” *
11. “Dimming Of The Day” *


*Previously Unissued


The Rolling Stones Plan a Reissue for ‘Exile on Main St.’

The members of Rolling Stones, Keith Richards and Mick Jagger along with Don Was who is their recent producer had a discussion on the band’s 1972 album and the re-release’s that were never previously heard of. It was in the early 1970’s that Rolling Stones came out with their album “Exile on Main St”.
This [...]

Modest Mouse The Moon & Antarctica Reissue On Vinyl 4/17

MODEST MOUSE CELEBRATE THE 10th ANNIVERSARY OF THE MOON & ANTARCTICA

WITH LONG AWAITED VINYL REISSUE OF LANDMARK ALBUM ON APRIL 17

Modest Mouse

Epic/Legacy Recordings will celebrate the 10th anniversary of The Moon & Antarctica, the highly
acclaimed major label debut from American indie rock band Modest Mouse, with the long
awaited vinyl reissue of the landmark album on April 17.

Out-of-print on vinyl for the past five years, 12″ copies of The Moon & Antarctica have become prized
collector’s items.

Available in time for Record Store Day 2010, The Moon & Antarctica, newly-struck on 12″ heavy double
vinyl, has been remastered using the band-approved 2004 CD master. The album features restored original artwork
and replicates the infinite lock groove found in the original vinyl pressings of 2000. The new vinyl reissue includes a
download card for The Moon & Antarctica.

Recorded from July through November 1999, The Moon & Antarctica, the third Modest Mouse album, was
first released on both vinyl and CD in June 2000. A milestone for the band and a sublime presence on the
American pop music landscape, The Moon & Antarctica turned up on many year-end best-of lists.

The highly influential Pitchfork Media ranked the album #3 for 2000, #7 for 2000-2004, and #6 for the decade
(2000-2010). Better Propaganda named The Moon & Antarctica #23 for the decade, Rhapsody ranked it #4
on their Alt/Indie’s Best Albums of the Decade” list and Entertainment Weekly, who ranked it #37 (out of 100) in
“The New Classics” list (from 1983-2008) calling the “…major-label debut from the Northwest indie heroes…an
angular, experimental treasure….”

A success in both the mainstream and the underground, The Moon & Antarctica was certified gold by the
RIAA as of March 9, 2009.

Fans may pre-order the album online at
www.modestmouse.com or
www.modestmousemusic.com

Modest Mouse Tour Dates :: Modest Mouse News :: Modest Mouse Concert Reviews


Fela Kuti Reissue Begins

KNITTING FACTORY RECORDS TO BEGIN COMPLETE FELA KUTI REISSUE SERIES

FIRST RELEASE TO BE THE BEST OF THE BLACK PRESIDENT WITH EXCLUSIVE DVD ON OCTOBER 27, 2009

FIRST TIME ALL 45 TITLES WILL BE RELEASED ON VINYL IN NORTH AMERICA

FIRST OFFICIAL RELEASE OF ENTIRE CATALOGUE OF FELA’S 1960s BAND: KOOLA LOBITOS

BROADWAY MUSICAL FELA! TO OPEN NOVEMBER 23 AT EUGENE O’NEIL THEATRE

Fela Kuti

Knitting Factory Records is very excited to announce that over the next 18 months, all 45 Fela Kuti titles will be remastered and re-released in unique digi-packs with the original artwork. This reissue series will mark the first time all of the titles will be released on vinyl in North America, and also the first official release of the entire catalog of Fela’s 1960s highlife band Koola Lobitos. The first release of the series will be The Best Of The Black President on October 27, 2009, which compiles 13 of the most popular Fela compositions. The deluxe edition of the CD will come with a DVD featuring segments from the film Music is the Weapon, performances from the Berlin Jazz Festival, “Teacher Don’t Teach Me Nonsense” from the Glastonbury Festival and interviews with choreographer/director Bill T. Jones and Fela biographer Carlos Moore.

Tony Award-winner Bill T. Jones is the director and choreographer of the new Broadway musical, FELA!, based on the life and music of the legend. The critically acclaimed musical will open at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre in New York on November 23. Sold-out crowds were left dancing in the aisles during its premiere last summer at Off-Broadway 37 Arts, as the world renowned Antibalas and other members of the NYC Afrobeat community, under the direction of Aaron Johnson, performed Fela’s music live onstage.

“The timing couldn’t be more perfect,” says Knitting Factory Records’ Ian Wheeler. “With the play opening, it made the most sense to start the reissue series in the fall. We are taking great care working with Fela’s estate to make the reissue series the most true to the artist’s original concepts than ever before. We have a lot of fun ideas up our sleeves too.”


Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, previously Ransome-Kuti, was born in Abeokuta, Nigeria, in 1938. His father, like his grandfather, was a minister of the Protestant church, and director of the local grammar school. His mother was a teacher, but later became a politician of some considerable influence. His parents sent him to London in 1958, but rather than study medicine like his two brothers and his sister, Fela chose to register at the Trinity School of Music, where he was to spend the next five years. He formed Koola Lobitos with other Nigerian musicians living in London.

Fela decided to take the Koola Lobitos to the United States in the mid 60s. In Los Angeles, he changed the name of the group to Fela Ransome-Kuti And Nigeria 70. At the club where they were playing, he met an African American girl, Sandra Isodore, who was a close friend to the Black Panthers. She introduced Fela to the philosophies and writings of Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver and other Black activists and thinkers, through which he was to become aware of the link existing between Black people all over the world. While in Los Angeles, Fela also found the inspiration he was seeking to create his own unique style of music, which he named Afrobeat. Before leaving America, the band recorded songs in this new style. When he returned to Nigeria, Fela once again changed the name of the group, this time to Fela Ransome-Kuti & Africa 70.


Fela soon became a virulent critic of colonialism and neo-colonialism soon grew famous as a spokesman for the great mass of people, in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa and the African Diaspora, disenchanted with the period of post-independence. His songs became satirical and sarcastic towards those in power, condemning both military and civilian regimes for their crimes of mismanagement, incompetence, theft, corruption and marginalization of the underprivileged.

In 1974, pursuing his dream of an alternative society, he built a fence around his house and declared it to be an independent state: The Kalakuta Republic. To the chagrin of the bourgeois section of the Nigerian society, this act of defiance was soon to spread throughout the entire neighborhood as more and more people were inspired by Fela’s stance. The authorities remained vigilant, fearing the potential power of his “state within a state.” On countless occasions, he was to suffer the consequences of his scathing denunciations with arrests, imprisonment and beatings at the hands of the authorities.

Fela presented himself as a presidential candidate in the 1979 elections that would return the country to civilian rule. His candidature was refused. Four years later, at the next elections, Fela once more stood for president, but was prevented from campaigning by the police, who again rampaged through his house, imprisoning and beating Fela and many of his followers. However, any further presidential aspirations were crushed when a coup brought Nigeria back to military rule.

In 1984, Fela served 20 months of a five-year prison sentence on trumped-up currency charges. He was only released when the judge confessed to having sentenced him with such severity because of pressure from the previous regime. The judge was dismissed from office and Fela was given his liberty.

Over the next decade, with an entourage of up to 80 people, now called Egypt 80, Fela made several visits to Europe and the United States. These tours were to receive tremendous public and critical acclaim, and made an important contribution to the worldwide popular acceptance of African rhythms and African culture.

Fela passed away in August 1997.


George Harrison:
Let It Roll: Songs of George Harrison

By: Ron Hart

align=right src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/Wednesday/HarrisonRoll.jpg">

Over the last ten years, Capitol/EMI has been notorious for treating its reissue campaign of George Harrison‘s post-Beatles catalog like some kind of under-appreciated stepchild whose parents force ugly new clothes and disgusting new food onto.
First was the 30th Anniversary reissue of the Quiet One’s masterpiece, All Things Must Pass, from early 2001, considered by many to be the single greatest work by a Beatle outside of the band itself. In addition to the ghastly “colorization” of the original album artwork that would even make the people who tarnished It’s A Wonderful Life cringe, whoever engineered the remaster somehow buried the vocals and guitars even deeper in the mix than original producer Phil Spector had already done initially with his Wall of Sound recording style. Then, there was the label’s 2005 hatchet job on Harrison’s sublime 1971 double-live album chronicling his acclaimed Concert for Bangladesh. While the remastering job of the actual live cuts themselves was great, they cut out the majority of the breaks between songs, destroying the natural flow of the concert that made you feel as though you were right inside Madison Square Garden when listening to the original LP. And worst of all, Capitol finally got its way with the album artwork. After losing its original battle with Harrison over the cover concept – that stunning, iconic image of a malnourished refugee child sitting cross-legged in front of an empty bowl of food, which the suits thought was too depressing and would hurt album sales and then wound up becoming a bestseller and winning the Grammy for Album of the Year in 1973—the label went with the cover they had wanted all along, an image of Harrison from the accompanying concert film, for the reissue (and doing so after Harrison’s tragic demise due to cancer in November 2001, thus adding a whole new layer of sleaze to the whole predicament). Meanwhile, the label’s 2006 reissue of 1973′s Living In The Material World as well as the box set covering the albums released on the guitarist’s own Dark Horse imprint were modest campaigns that somewhat offered a reprieve for fans otherwise annoyed by the label handling of the Quiet One’s catalog thus far, in that it vastly improved upon the original issues in both sound quality and packaging (although some beefier bonus material would have been nice).

Now comes Let it Roll: Songs by George Harrison, a single-disc retrospective released by the EMI group on June 16 touting itself as the first-ever collection spanning the length of George’s career. Compiled largely by George’s widow Olivia Harrison and engineered by legendary Beatles producer George Martin’s son Giles Martin, who did such an outstanding job in 2007 mashing up classic Fabs tracks for the soundtrack to Cirque de Soleil’s Beatles-themed production Love at the Mirage in Las Vegas, the 19-track collection focuses primarily on Harrison’s biggest successes as a singles artist, something he was much stronger at as opposed to his former mates John Lennon and Paul McCartney, who exhibited supremacy creating both killer hit songs and outstanding full-length albums to back them up. Harrison, meanwhile, produced albums that basically consisted of one or two really great songs backed by a majority of filler material that was neither here nor there. True, Harrison did produce some gems in his solo career beyond All Things Must Pass, notably 1973′s Living In The Material World (which, to its credit, EMI did a masterful job reissuing back in 2006) and his 1987 comeback album, Cloud Nine. Not to mention 2002′s posthumous swan song Brainwashed and his pair of experimental solo albums he released while still with The Beatles, 1968′s Moog-tastic Electronic Sound and 1969′s Indian-flavored drone-fest Wonderwall Music, both of which remain woefully out of print at press time.

While there have been George Harrison compilations in the past, none have chronicled the span of his entire career. And though Let It Roll is not exactly a completist’s ideal set, as this collection could have easily been beefed up to anthology status given there are much stronger points in Harrison’s solo catalog than, say, Ringo Starr, but it certainly does an excellent job in gathering the guitarist’s sonic crème de la crème. Sequenced not by chronology but almost seemingly by vibe, the 19 tracks that ultimately made the cut here interweave as though they have existed side by side on the same long player for all these years. For instance, the segue between Brainwashed‘s “Rising Son” and Cloud Nine‘s phenomenal tribute to his old bandmates, “When We Was Fab,” flows one into the other so perfectly. The same can be said for the blending of “Blow Away” off Harrison’s eponymous 1979 effort into the thankfully-included “Cheer Down” from the Lethal Weapon 2 soundtrack, not to mention “Give Me Love (Give Me Peace On Earth)” going into Let It Roll‘s title track, “The Ballad of Sir Frankie Crisp,” originally featured on All Things Must Pass. And while stubbornly elitist Beatles fans (like this writer) might wonder why the likes of “Old Brown Shoe” and “Blue Jay Way” were excluded from the fray here, the inclusion of his big three from his Fab Four output – “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” “Something” and “Here Comes The Sun” – is imperative to any collection with GH’s name on it, and the fact that the versions came from the Bangladesh concert album seems more appropriate for this project. Another great inclusion on this set is Harrison’s rarely-spoken-of cover of Bob Dylan’s “I Don’t Want to Do It,” which was originally featured on the soundtrack to 1985′s comedic bomb Porky’s Revenge (which should give you a good clue as to why it was little heard).

Sure, one can rail against the powers that be who oversaw the creation and production of Let It Roll and their failure to include such glaring absences as “You” off his 1975 EMI swan song Extra Texture and “Crackerbox Palace” from 1976′s diamond-in-the-rough Thirty Three & 1/3 – his first release on Dark Horse. It’s understood there are only 80 minutes on a CD, but these omissions – not to mention the exclusions of such rarities as Harrison’s working version of Ringo Starr’s “It Don’t Come Easy” or “Bangla Desh,” the 1971 charity single that spearheaded the famed concert and has only appeared on album once via 1976′s The Best of George Harrison collection – could have made this very good single-disc set into an excellent double-disc compendium.

Nonetheless, any Beatles fan, be they casual or hardcore, would benefit from adding Let It Roll: Songs by George Harrison to their CD shelves, as it is gorgeously packaged in a tastefully designed digipak with a 28-page booklet loaded with great information and amazing photos, making it one of the finer justices given to any kind of Beatle-related reissue in recent years (don’t even get me started on the John Lennon stuff). A quality George Harrison best-of has been a long, long time coming, and one can only be grateful that EMI has finally done right by this amazing man and his cherished legacy.

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