Taken together, it's a rewarding, carefully constructed tribute to Jeff Mangum's distinctive songwriting voice.
This remarkably consistent collection renders sounds in a fluid and volatile technicolor that's missing from even the project's classic records.
The mysterious electro outfit Drexciya created not only some of Detroit's most original, enduring electronic music, but one of techno's greatest myth systems.
Type has reissued Thomas Köner and Andy Mellwig's landmark experimental techno album.
Since 1990, the Leeds, England-based post-rock group Hood have created a blend of something modern and timeless.
The Swedish band, which mixes psychedelia, prog, and extreme metal, reissues three ambitious studio albums and a live DVD from the early years of the millennium.
A dozen years after its release, Bright Eyes' defining LP, is reissued by Saddle Creek.
Cleaners From Venus, the lo-fi pop project of the English musician Martin Newell, offered a mix of rough edges, distanced vocals, definite hooks, and unexpected mixing choices.
This reissue of the Maryland post-hardcore group Moss Icon's [BLANK] is essential because they were a band that forged their own universe.
Stoner-rock legends Sleep's storied one-song, hour-long third album is finally available through a remastered, re-illustrated reissue.
My Bloody Valentine's output during the band's miracle years still feels like a gift.
This limited singles box for the 1992 debut LP from the L.A. rap group highlights their dizzying mix of SoCal 420 culture, jazzy bohemianism, and self-conscious rap smarts.
A fifth reissue of a 30-year old album needs something remarkable to make fans bite, and EMI promised just that for this edition of ABBA's risk-taking final record.
Paul McCartney's [BLANK] is a domestic-bliss album, one of the weirdest, earthiest, and most honest ever made.
The excellent second installment of Clone's four-part Drexciya retrospective continues in much the same manner as Vol. 1.
[BLANK] fills a dozen discs in almost as many hours, laying substantial groundwork for every electronic drone artist and harsh noise terrorist to come.
The Numero Group label applies its careful and thorough approach to the music of 1990s slowcore stalwarts Codeine, with dazzling results.
Last year, the seminal American composer and arranger put out Arrangements, Vol. 1 on his Bananastan label.
Okemah, Okla.'s most famous export might have turned 100 this July if Huntington's disease hadn't wasted him back in 1967.
But weirdly it functions surprisingly well as an album, documenting changes in his sonic evolution and singular sense of humor along the way.
As a solo artist, GZA was essentially everything that distinguished Wu-Tang Clan from other crews: strictly chess, kung-fu, battle raps, investigative reports, mysticism.
Merge's remastered reissues of Bob Mould's early-1990s post-Hüsker Dü records wonderfully presented documents of a punk legend starting over.
This sprawling set comprises all seven [BLANK] albums, three DVDs, and five-and-a-half hours' worth of rarities.
The 25th anniversary reissue of Paul Simon's [BLANK] shows how the album gave a human face to the perception of South Africa during apartheid.
After four albums, an EP, stray tracks, and some videos, the Books called it quits this year.
The final installments in Mute's 25th anniversary Bad Seeds reissue campaign cover a period of great upheaval and rejuvenation.
The soundtrack to David Lynch's surreal 1977 cult film is given a lavish vinyl reissue by Sacred Bones.
This career-spanning box set to mark [BLANK]'s 40th anniversary is often startling, usually wonderful, and more affecting than expected.
Ride managed one thing My Blood Valentine never accomplished after Loveless: facing the crippling expectations and making a tremendous follow-up record.
Ten years on, Andrew W.K.'s album-length party is still raging, and it's been fleshed out with a deluxe reissue that includes live cuts and demos.
The final album in Royal Trux's deal with Virgin Records, a record Virgin didn't put out, is the most openly celebratory yet perversely strange entry in the duo's canon.
This reissue of her 1980 LP shows how Spiegel always contemplated orbits, heavenly bodies, and the cosmos through her compositions, while remaining affectionately human.
This set gathers the three 2011 mixtapes from Toronto R&B singer Abel Tefsaye and adds three new songs along with new mixes and mastering.
The four volumes of William Basinski's ambient masterpiece have been gathered into a gorgeous and impressive 9xLP, 5xCD box set.
This limited six-disc set of the 1967 classic includes remasters, alternate versions and mixes, practice sessions recorded at Andy Warhol's Factory, and a live recording.
Two decades later, the Olympia-based punk band's debut EP still sounds like a revolution.
Listening to the remastered box set of Massive Attacks's debut album 21 years after its initial release is like reading an old William Gibson novel.
Interpol's 2002 full-length debut is given a stellar 10th Anniversary reissue complete with demos and B-sides.
Smashing Pumpkins took it upon themselves to make a record that only teenagers could love and for many it was the only one they needed.
Heard now on this 2xLP reissue, [BLANK] still stands as a paranoid, mysterious, and challenging statement that somehow managed to scale the industry.
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