The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Twisted Sister, Hammerheads 1980 2LP purple marble vinyl in stores 12/26

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Back in 1980, Twisted Sister were still a few years from superstardom. They’d already been around since 1972, growing out of a band called Silver Star, who styled themselves as New Jersey’s New York Dolls. A year later, though, they changed their name and shifted their direction as well.

Constantly gigging, forever sharpening their sound, and undergoing a veritable plethora of line-up changes, Twisted Sister as we know them best would not emerge until 1982. But already they’d made appearances on major label comps, and they’d recorded, too, the first couple of live shows featured on 2016’s so-aptly titled box set Rock ‘N’ Roll Saviors – The Early Years. Now the most ferocious of those performances, from West Islip NY in1980, makes its stand-alone debut as Hammerheads—and what a show it is.

Opening with a positively roof-raising rampage through “What You Don’t Know (Sure Can Hurt You),” the 12 song concert sees these legends of crazed, cross-dressing hard rock mayhem absolutely slaying on stage, with—among so many more—future smash “Rock’n’Roll Saviors,” a fiery “Johnny B Goode,” and one of the all-time greats, “Born To Be Wild.”

It’s a devastating concert—the sound of a band that, still awaiting their first major break, has already put all the pieces in place. Now all they need do is wait for the world to catch up with them.

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Needle Drop: Graham Bonnet Band, Lost In Hollywood Again

There are voices in rock history that don’t just age; they gather texture, like a well-worn leather jacket that only gets cooler with time. Graham Bonnet possesses one of those voices.

When you think of the sheer power required to front bands like Rainbow, MSG, and Alcatrazz, you realize it takes a special kind of fortitude to keep that engine running decades later. With the release of Lost In Hollywood Again, recorded live at the legendary Whisky a Go Go on the Sunset Strip, the Graham Bonnet Band doesn’t just revisit history—they grab it by the collar and shake the dust off. And this isn’t a nostalgia trip; it’s a testament to the enduring vitality of hard rock when it’s delivered with Bonnet’s level of conviction.

From the moment the band launched into their set, I could feel the raw energy of the Whisky beginning to hum. The album opens with “Eyes of the World,” a 1979 Rainbow classic that immediately sets the stakes high. It’s a bold choice, demanding vocal dexterity right out of the gate, and Bonnet delivers. But the true centerpiece of the evening—and perhaps the emotional anchor of the entire record—is “Since You’ve Been Gone.”

Bonnet himself notes that this track “put Rainbow on the map,” and hearing it live in 2025 feels like a victory lap. The audience connection is electric; you can almost hear the crowd sweating along with the band as they belt out that iconic chorus. It captures the essence of a great live performance: the shared passion between artist and fan.

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Graded on a Curve:
The Dave Clark Five, Glad All Over

Celebrating Dave Clark on his 86th birthday.Ed.

The Dave Clark Five were one of the most successful and acclaimed bands of the British Invasion of the 1960s. Unlike The Beatles and many others of that time and place, however, they were not from Liverpool. The group was from Tottenham, in north London. Their big, booming, stomping, brassy and infectious sound propelled them to seven top-ten UK singles and eight top-ten US singles.

The DC5’s unique sound centered around Clark’s pounding drums, Mike Smith’s full-throated voice and wide-ranging keyboard styles, and Denis Payton’s honking sax. The group was rounded out by guitarist Lenny Davidson and bassist Rick Huxley. Huxley also played harmonica and all four members, other than Smith, supplied bracing backing vocals. Unlike most of the groups of the British Invasion, their sound did not center around guitars. They were the first British group after The Beatles to appear on The Ed Sullivan Show and they were inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame in 2008.

The group disbanded in 1970, but Dave Clark, who was the group’s manager and producer, has always curated the group’s legacy with aplomb. Among his many other activities through the years are acquiring the rights to the seminal British music television show Ready Steady Go! and, in the 1980s, he wrote and produced the 1986 theatrical musical Time.

There have been excellent collections of the group’s music on CD and vinyl, but the latest reissue is the best yet. The group’s debut U.S. album Glad All Over, originally released in 1964 and one of four albums released by the group in the U.S. that year, has been reissued on white vinyl in glorious mono, from the original master tapes from BMG.

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Graded on a Curve:
The Best of 2025’s
Box Sets & Expanded Releases

To kick off the week, here are ten of the finest box sets or expanded releases of 2025.

10. Clikatat Ikatowi, The Trials and Tribulations of… (Numero Group) Post-hardcore emerged in the 1980s (DC, Louisville, Chicago, Boston) as young musicians gained adeptness on their instruments and became frustrated with the stylistic restrictions on the right side of the hyphen. However, this new genre really flourished in the decade following as a younger generation absorbed the foundational post-hardcore records and caught the bands (that didn’t quickly break up) on tour.

San Diego was a bit of a hot spot of ’90s post-hardcore, and across this superb 3LP set, the city’s Clikatat Ikatowi brandish a highly consistent style with roots in records issued by the Touch and Go (Slint) and Homestead (Honor Role, Squirrel Bait) labels. An even bigger influence is the Dischord scene, which continued to hone post-hardcore deep into the ’90s alongside these more youthful upstarts. Any of the cuts on this superb collection would’ve fit nicely onto a ’90s-era compilation on Kill Rock Stars or an ’00s release on Troubleman Unlimited.

9. Kenny Burrell with Art Blakey, On View at the Five Spot Cafe: The Complete Masters (Blue Note) This is the second, and one would assume, given the titular addendum (although one can never be sure), final expansion of performances originally recorded in 1959 and released the same year. Capturing guitarist Burrell in the midst of a fertile creative stretch, these 14 selections across three LPs alternate a quintet with tenor saxophonist Tina Brooks, pianist Bobby Timmons, bassist Ben Tucker, and drummer Blakey with a quartet where Brooks lays out, and Roland Hanna takes Timmons’ spot.

The music these groups delivered to the Five Spot’s audience wasn’t perfect, in large part because the club’s piano was out of tune; so it was in ’59, and so it remained two years later when Eric Dolphy’s At the Five Spot was recorded, a profound gesture of disrespect during jazz’s supposed heyday. But Timmons and Hanna largely overcome this obstacle (as does Mal Waldron on the two Dolphy volumes), with Hanna particularly impressive in the quartet configuration. Blakey is his usual solid self, as is Tucker. Getting to hear more from the under-recorded Brooks is a treat. But it’s really Burrell’s show. He never lays a note wrong.

8. Xmal Deutschland, Gift: The 4AD Years (4AD) Formed in 1980 in Hamburg, Germany, with an all-female lineup, Xmal Deutschland emerged as part of the Neue Deutsche Welle scene, releasing their first single on the NDW-affiliated ZickZack label. That means Xmal is aptly categorized as post-punk, but it was a Goth orientation that surely attracted the band to 4AD’s owner-operator Ivo Watts-Russell and, by extension, landed them in late ’80s US import bins.

The most sensible comparison is Siouxsie and the Banshees, but Xmal had a harder edge that underscored a disinterest in imitation. Still, far too many prospective listeners, at least in the US, were dismissive of Xmal as the Goth genre became near-synonymous with poser-dom. That’s silly, and this set, which rounds up everything the band recorded for 4AD (that’s two LPs and two EPs inside ’83-’84), makes a strong case for Xmal as residing near the head of the original gloom-merchant class.

7. Ida, Will You Find Me (Numero Group) Marking the quarter century anniversary of what was to be Ida’s major label debut (for Capitol), the fourth album by this enduring New York City band (properly released by Tiger Style in 2000) gets a massive expansion, available either as a four LP or five CD set, with the latter holding a whopping 103 tracks (the vinyl comes with a download of the entire kaboodle).

It’s too often the case that a musical act’s major label debut connects as a disappointment, but in this almost instance, Ida was clearly bringing their best record to the (turn)table. That the deal fell through is almost certainly for the best, because Will You Find Me could’ve easily gotten lost in the shuffle, and then possibly stuck in legal purgatory. It didn’t; instead, it landed as a creative breakthrough. It’s a record wholly deserving of this bold enlargement, which is the dictionary definition of deep dive.

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Graded on a Curve:
Eddie Grant,
“Electric Avenue”

Here I spent decades, hell, most of my life, thinking Eddy Grant’s synth-fueled, hard-rocking, reggae-flavored, let’s dance dawn-of-the-eighties MTV anthem “Electric Avenue” was about having a good time. I guess it would have helped to listen to the lyrics.

Because, and you probably know this, my lyrics-conscious brothers and sisters, it’s actually about a riot, the Brixton Riot of 1981 to be specific, and Eddy isn’t heading on down to Electric Avenue to have a good time, as I spent decades believing. He’s going to light shit up, and I’m not talking electricity. And it wasn’t the first protest song by the Guyanese-British musician–he’d been on the front lines since the mid-sixties as guitarist of the Equals, the UK’s first major interracial rock group, for whom he wrote the incendiary tracks “Police on My Back” (which the Clash culturally appropriated!) and “Black Skinned Blue Eyed Boys.”

The Equals were a top-notch rock/soul/reggae/pop act, and their most popular songs were apolitical, from their first (and biggest) hit “Baby Come Back” (1967) to “Viva Bobby Joe” (sample lines: “Bobby Joe and his funk machine, yeah, yeah/Everybody’s gonna see a sensation, a sensation”).

They had some bubblegum in them too; “Michael and the Slipper Tree” must have resonated with the kiddie crowd, ditto “Rub a Dub Dub” (the Equals Jamaican-born lead vocalist Dervan “Derv” Gordon wants to smell like a rose for his baby). And “Laurel and Hardy” is kiddie novelty rock at its most blatant. “Honey Gum” isn’t as chewy chewy as you’d expect, but it still has bubble-blowing appeal. Why, they even recorded a cover of The Music Machine’s bubblegum standard “Little Bit of Soul.”

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 12/15/25

Los Angeles, CA | L.A. record shop asks public for help staying open: ‘2025 has been one of the most difficult years.’ Los Angeles is home to some of the world’s best record shops, but a litany of factors is making them a dying art. …Sick City Records, located in Echo Park, sadly finds itself in that situation. According to a report from the Los Angeles Times, decreased foot traffic and increased rent are heavily impacting the shop, which sells vinyl, clothes and even offers haircuts from a singular barber chair located inside. “In January, when the Eaton and Palisades fires broke out, the shop was desolate for around a month,” L.A. Times writer Cerys Davies wrote in the publication’s De Los column. “Then, right as summer kicked off—usually a lucrative season for record-collecting tourists stopping by—ICE raids began happening all over the city.”

Accord, NY | Accord Record Store Freakout Spot Opens Holiday Pop-Up in Kingston: Following an unexpected shut down, the beloved shop pops up in the former Fletcher & Lu space on Broadway at least through January. “We wanted to open a record store where people who don’t buy records could go in and still have fun,” says Rob Davis of the idea behind Freakout Spot record store, explaining, “I got dragged to a lot of record stores by my dad when I was younger.” When he teamed up with his wife, Lila Allen, this past January to open a pop-up in the other half of the building that houses Bluebird wine shop in Accord, accessibility was top of mind. “Lila is the other half of the store. She curates really great books, items, clothes, oddities,” he says. “The shop looks and feels the way it does because of her.”

Inglewood, CA | Inglewood’s Recordland spins new life into old media for Calgarians: The vintage revival of vinyl calls for out with the new and in with the old. In a world dominated by technology and screens, Gen-Z—people born between 1997 and 2012—seem to crave nostalgia they never experienced through the “old ways,” embracing entertainment through records, books, and film cameras. Streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music continue to dominate the music industry. Still, vinyl has made a comeback in recent years, drawing people to the music scene in a more traditional way. Record stores are seeing a renewed interest away from instant playlists. Gen Z has sparked a vintage revival, seeking to disconnect from digital spaces and opting for more handheld options.

Poughkeepsie, NY | Darkside Records Relocates to Downtown Poughkeepsie: Poughkeepsie record store Darkside Records has moved from its location at 611 Dutchess Turnpike to its new building at 32 Cannon Street in downtown Poughkeepsie. The official reopening of the store on Nov. 21 invited the public to the new location to browse, shop and see how this beloved Poughkeepsie spot has taken their business to new heights. Darkside’s signature bright green walls and endless selection of records, CDs, cassettes, merchandise and much more have found a new home in this upgraded space, marking a new era for Darkside, and one that brings it closer to the community. Darkside Records, which originally opened in 2011 with its first-ever location on Poughkeepsie’s Main Street, moved to Dutchess Turnpike about five years later.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

I was (I was staring at the water) / I was staring at the water / I had one hand on my head between you and the water / I had one hand on my head in the water / I had my hand over my mouth / And I watched the moon over New Jersey / I had

You’re making me feel like a dollar in your hand / You’re making me feel like I’m a zero dollar man / You’re making me feel like a dollar in your hand / You’re making me feel like I’m a zero dollar man

God is real, God is real / I’m not kidding, God is actually real / I’m not kidding this time / I think God is actually for real / God is real, God is actually real / God is real, I wouldn’t joke about this / I’m not kidding this time

This second week of December finds us LA canyon dwellers basking in the beautiful morning sunshine. As I flip through my pile of fresh vinyl releases from 2025, what’s not to be grateful for? There’s plenty of diversity to choose from.

There’s a bunch of cool, male rock stars emerging,—and big thanks to Cameron Winter for being so fucking cool.

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TVD Radar: T. Rex, Electric Warrior & Devo, Q: Are We Not Men?
A: We Are Devo!
Rhino
High Fidelity editions
in stores now

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Rhino High Fidelity (Rhino Hi-Fi) expands its acclaimed series of limited-edition, audiophile vinyl reissues today with two pivotal albums: T. Rex’s Electric Warrior and Devo’s Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!.

Each album was cut from the original analog master tapes by Kevin Gray and pressed on 180-gram black vinyl at Optimal in Germany. Both releases are limited to 5,000 individually numbered copies and available exclusively at Rhino.com and select Warner Music Group stores internationally. As a bonus, Electric Warrior has two 7-inch singles, “Hot Love” and “Bang A Gong (Get It On),” available to bundle. Order HERE.

Recently released as part of Rhino’s High Fidelity Reel-to-Reel line, Electric Warrior crystallized Marc Bolan’s transformation from cult folk hero to the godfather of glam with its release in 1971. The album topped the charts in the UK and was certified gold in the US, powered by hits like “Bang A Gong (Get It On)” and “Jeepster.” Working with producer Tony Visconti, the band built a sleek, groove-driven sound—equal parts grit and glitter—that came to define glam’s golden age.

In the new liner notes, Visconti recalls how sessions for the album gained momentum when the band moved from London to Los Angeles, and finally New York, where they cut three songs in a day, including “Lean Woman Blues” and “Jeepster.” “I could tell this was one of the best times of Marc’s life from how great these tracks turned out—they fully complemented the tracks we had just recorded in LA. He was so happy,” he writes. “We knew we had a hit album.”

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TVD Radar: Melanie, There Should Have Been A Rainbow in stores 1/2

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Think of Melanie and, once past “Brand New Key” and “Lay Down,” the most immediate image is probably a shy, nervous 22 year old stepping out alone onto the Woodstock stage, knowing that hardly anyone in that vast sea of humanity had even heard of her before.

A few had. The previous year, her debut album Born To Be caught some radio play around New York (and spawned a couple of hits in Europe); earlier in ’69, her sophomore set, Melanie, was built around songs she recorded on a much-acclaimed visit to the UK. Still America regarded her as a total newcomer and, while she was happy to discuss her folk club past, she was equally willing to let people hold onto that preconception. How wrong, however, it was. And if history had taken a slightly different turn around 1964, the whole world would already have known exactly who Melanie was.

Dropping on January 2, There Should Have Been A Rainbow is, effectively, Melanie’s true debut album and, as such, it readily stands alongside Bob Dylan’s recently released Bootleg Series examination of this same period, an unerring portrait of a young artist heading for fame. Indeed, while the CD includes 19 songs from throughout this period, the 11 song vinyl is a direct approximation of how that first LP might have lined up.

Recorded in a New York apartment across four sessions between 1963–1965, There Should Have Been A Rainbow captures the teenager already in full control of the voice and guitar style that would so single her out for attention (and adoration) at the end of the decade—only the songwriting has still to fully develop, but even the handful of her own songs that are included here pack plenty of pointers for the future.

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Graded on a Curve: Wings, Wings & Ringo Starr, Sentimental Journey, Beaucoups of Blues, Ringo, & Goodnight Vienna

It’s been a busy year for Paul McCartney, and he capped off 2025 with the conclusion of another tour and a retrospective of the music of his band Wings. This will make the third Wings/McCartney best-of, after the single Wings Greatest album, double Wingspan, and double All The Best. All of these sets include both Wings and solo McCartney tracks. This is truly the first all Wings set and the best of the sets in every way.

The Wings 3 LP Limited Edition Color Collection, available exclusively through Paul McCartney’s website, is a three-album set of 180-gram color vinyl, featuring clear, green, and pink colors, respectively, housed in a die-cut hardback slipcase box. Sometimes, reissue projects can appear rushed, make questionable choices, and prompt fans and critics to debate format and approach. By contrast, it’s evident that great care and thought went into the packaging of this set.

McCartney has again recruited Hipgnosis legend Aubrey “Po” Powell as the Creative Director. His involvement here is a key factor in how well-conceived this box is and what a welcome addition it is to McCartney’s extensive reissues and archival projects over the years. Powell had previously worked with McCartney on projects such as Venus and Mars, Wings Greatest, video projects, and tours.

Along with two posters, an art print litho, and a sheet of stickers, the booklet in this package is beautifully designed. This is a textbook case in how to create an information-rich yet aesthetically pleasing booklet. Each Wings album, presented in chronological order, is given a two-page spread featuring photos and artwork for the sleeve, album, and single jackets. Also included are sidebars that tell the story of Wings in a way that is neither dry nor the typical factual history, and that include a summary of releases, tour dates, and session notes.

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TVD Radar: Fanny, Mothers Pride baby
pink vinyl reissue in stores 2/6

VIA PRESS RELEASE | First Real Gone Music put out all of Fanny’s Reprise albums on CD—now they’re doing the same on LP!

Yes, that’s right, Fanny fans—we’re finally giving the band’s 1973 album Mothers Pride its first vinyl reissue. All four Reprise albums have their champions among Fanny followers, but Mothers Pride is definitely the most controversial entry in the band’s catalog, as Todd Rundgren agreed to produce the album on the condition that he and he alone oversee the album mix. The result was a record that cemented Fanny’s popularity in the UK but failed to make a dent in the charts here in the States despite such classics as “Summer Song.”

The two-page insert includes not just the lyric sheet but the rare promo flyer that accompanied some copies, and they’ve had the album remastered for its baby pink vinyl release. Another seminal ‘70s rock record from everybody’s favorite “forgotten” all-female rock band!

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Graded on a Curve: Lancelot Link and the Evolution Revolution, Lancelot Link and the Evolution Revolution

It’s true, the old saying—give 50 monkeys electric guitars and sooner or later they’ll write “Louie Louie.” And the proof lies in one of the greatest unsung bands of the bubblegum music era, Lancelot Link and the Evolution Revolution.

How unsung? They don’t even merit a chapter in the 2001 Feral House Bubblegum Bible Bubblegum Music Is the Naked Truth. Or a mention even. And this despite the fact that Lancelot Link and the Evolution Revolution were real live chimpanzees! Who played cool kiddie punk songs like “Sha-La Love You” and “Magic Feeling”! And looked even cooler playing them!

Could it be because playing rock and roll wasn’t Lancelot Link’s day job? Link spent the bulk of his time foiling the evil plots of C.H.U.M.P.’s nemesis, such as Baron von Butcher, Creto (his chauffeur), and Ali Assa. Seen on ABC Television’s Saturday morning all-live-chimp Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp. Being a secret agent is a time-consuming gig, which could be the reason why Lancelot Link and band only released one LP, 1970’s Lancelot Link and the Evolution Revolution. That or the TV show got cancelled after one season.

Here’s a fun fact—the chimpanzee actors on Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp, were given chewing gum to get them to move their mouths so that human voices could be dubbed over them. You can’t get any more bubblegum than that! You didn’t have to give the guys in the 1910 Fruitgum Company chewing gum to get them to sing “1,2,3 Red Light”! The poor bastards were working for peanuts!

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 12/12/25

Cornwall, ON | “Bud, this one’s for you.” Sister’s first record at brother’s music store. The walls of Bud’s Records pulsed with music, memory, and meaning as Wet for Days, the all-girl Ottawa mom punk band, performed their first-ever Cornwall show and celebrated the release of their debut self-titled vinyl album. For frontwoman Sarah Gott, the night was deeply personal. “This is the first full-length record we’ve ever put out,” said Gott. “It’s been four or five years in the making, and we finally did it. Pressing to vinyl has always been a dream, before I die, I wanted to do this.” The all-ages show at Bud’s Records marked the first time a full band performed at the shop, which holds special significance. It was founded in 2019 by Sarah’s brother Bud, who passed away suddenly in 2020. His bandmate Jason Lavoie and Jason’s partner Emily have kept the store thriving since.

Guelph, ON | Let’s shop in Guelph for the holidays at Royal Cat Records: This little record shop really rocks. Whether you just got your first turntable or you are a seasoned collector, Royal Cat Records has something for your collection. Are you looking for the perfect gift this year for someone special? We want to help. The Guelph Mercury Tribune is featuring local businesses and what they have to offer, just in time for the holidays. Downtown Guelph’s favourite record store has a lot of choices for the folks on your list who love vinyl, or music-themed gifts. You can check out Royal Cat Records at 21 Macdonell St. and if you can’t get free two-hour street parking, it’s right around the corner from the Market Parkade.

Glenside, PA | Vinyl Chickie Selling Late Philly Radio Legend’s Christmas Music: The Glenside record store obtained CDs that were among the personal collection of legendary WMMR radio host Pierre Robert. The late Philadelphia radio legend Pierre Robert won’t be forgotten this holiday season. Vinyl Chickie has begun selling some of Robert’s Christmas music with permission from his estate. Vinyl Chickie—the record store ranked as the best one in the Philadelphia region by “Philadelphia Magazine”—acquired some Christmas CDs that belonged in Robert’s personal collection. Owner Lisa Schaffer has decided to sell the CDs at $10. each (cash only) with all proceeds going to @northeastcommunityfridge, which a good friend of hers operates. The CDs went on sale on Tuesday morning.

Dunfermline, UK | New record shop unveiled on Dunfermline’s East Port: In a sound addition to the city, a new record store has opened shop on East Port. Drawn to Dunfermline’s music scene, Spaniards, Antonio Figuerola and Nuria Torres unveiled ‘Veneno Music Store’ on Saturday, a nostalgic shop offering albums for all tastes. Situated between Timpson and Outback hairdressers, the shop feels like an early 00s music store, with rows of VHS tapes, a box TV showing old music videos and even a record-covered ceiling. Antonio said: “I grew up in a record shop because my father owned one in Spain, and I’ve been selling records online for many years. I thought, ‘Why don’t I open my own shop?’ “I found this place, and it was a good price, so I thought I’d just go for it.”

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TVD Radar: George Michael, Faith expanded red and black vinyl reissue in stores 2/20

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Few albums have defined an era and redefined a generation of pop music quite like Faith, George Michael’s groundbreaking 1987 debut solo album. Nearly four decades later, its influence continues to resonate across music, fashion, and culture, an enduring testament to the artistry, courage, and creative vision of one of the world’s most beloved and successful performers.

To celebrate its continued impact and influence, George Michael Entertainment and Sony Music have announced that on 20th February 2026, multiple limited-edition Faith vinyl variants will be available on Red + Black Marble vinyl, Picture Disc as well as 1LP and 2LP black vinyl plus audio Blu-Ray. More than a decade since Faith has been available to purchase in vinyl anywhere in the world, today’s announcement marks an exciting new era for any avid vinyl collector and George Michael fan. Pre-order here.

Written, arranged, produced, and performed almost entirely by George Michael, Faith marked the emergence of a new type of pop icon, an artist capable of blending soul, R&B, and rock into a sleek, emotionally charged, and deeply personal sound.

The album catapulted the then 24-year-old artist to global superstardom, outselling Michael Jackson, Madonna, and Prince, and earning him a GRAMMY® Award for Album of the Year, three American Music Awards, and a record-breaking run of four US No. 1 singles, including “Faith,” “Father Figure,” “One More Try,” and “Monkey.” All of which makes George the only British male solo artist ever to achieve four US number-one singles from a single album on the Billboard Hot 100, a record that remains unmatched.

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TVD Radar: Yoshiko
Sai, Mikkou reissue in stores 2/13

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Wewantsounds is delighted to continue its Yoshiko Sai reissue program with the release of Mikkou, the Japanese singer-songwriter’s 2nd album released in 1976 on Black Records.

The album, produced by ace arranger Isamu Haruna, keeps the same formula as Mangekyou with Yoshiko Sai’s beautiful songs and dreamy vocals over cool funky arrangements, this time featuring legendary guitarist Masayoshi Takanaka. This is the first time Mikkou is widely available outside of Japan, with remastered audio, original artwork, and a 4 page insert including new liner notes by Hashim Kotaro Bharoocha who interviewed Yoshiko Sai for this special occasion.

Yoshiko Sai holds a singular place in Japanese music history. Since her 1975 debut Mangekyou, the Japanese singer-songwriter has captivated listeners with her ethereal voice, poetic lyrics, and enigmatic presence, earning a devoted cult following that endures decades later.

Building on the highly acclaimed reissue of her debut Mangekyou, Wewantsounds is pleased to present Mikkou, Sai’s second album, originally released in 1976 on Black Records. Produced by Isamu Haruna and featuring some of Japan’s finest session musicians, including the cult guitarist Masayoshi Takanaka, the record showcases Sai’s signature blend of poetic songwriting and ethereal vocals, carried by subtly funky arrangements. Yet Mikkou represents a bold broadening of her artistic palette, drawing inspiration from the Silk Road and the rich cultural heritage of her native Nara.

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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