Reissue music labels, some old, some new, seem to be gaining in prominence. The reasons for that are both artistic and commercial. CDs are on their way to joining 8-track cartridges and cassettes, vinyl records are having yet another comeback, and more and more indie labels are popping up to rescue what they consider artistically valuable material from obscurity.
Joni Mitchell is continuing her series of archival releases with 'Archives, Vol. 3: The Asylum Years (1972-1975).,' due out this fall.
David Bowie’s 1974 album Diamond Dogs is set for a vinyl reissue later this year to mark the record’s 50th anniversary., the last of his glam rock albums.
To commemorate its 25th anniversary, Genesis’ multi-platinum-selling greatest hits album is being made available on vinyl for the first time.
A new version of 'Pleased To Meet Me' will be a three-CD, one-vinyl-LP set featuring 29 tracks of unreleased material, including demos, rough mixes, and outtakes.
'Yes Album' is getting a super deluxe edition with a newly remastered version along with rarities, two previously unreleased concerts, and fresh mixes by Steven Wilson.
To celebrate the 20th anniversary of Lost In Translation, a special soundtrack vinyl is coming for Record Store Day 2024.
Reissue specialist Rhino Records is preparing a deluxe 50th-anniversary edition of Grateful Dead’s jazziest album 'From The Mars Hotel.'