TVD Radar: Camera Obscura, Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi 25th anniversary reissue in stores 5/8

VIA PRESS RELEASE | On May 8, 2026, Camera Obscura will celebrate the 25th anniversary of their debut album, Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi, with a vinyl reissue via Merge Records.

Out-of-print on the format since its initial UK release on Andmoresound in 2001, the 25th anniversary edition is the most definitive version of Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi ever pressed to vinyl, featuring both “Eighties Fan” B-sides—“Shine Like a New Pin” and “Let’s Go Bowling”—which were later added to expanded CD reissues of the album.

In addition to the black LP available from Merge Records, a limited edition, green and gold swirl vinyl edition, which includes a band-signed facsimile of the flyer advertising the release of “Eighties Fan,” is available exclusively from Glasgow’s Monorail Music.

“We’ve been working towards a re-release of this album for some time now,” says Tracyanne Campbell, “so we’re really delighted that it’s happening and pleased that folk can finally have their own vinyl copy.”

Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi first reached Stateside in 2004, after the success of Camera Obscura’s 2003 Merge debut Underachievers Please Try Harder. New fans who weren’t keyed in to the UK import market or to what John Peel was spinning on his BBC Radio programs would be forgiven for mistaking Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi as a follow-up to their breakthrough album as opposed to their first.

The album is a remarkably-assured opening statement, a fully realized expression of a sound that has enthralled listeners from their first spin of the Stuart Murdoch (Belle & Sebastian) produced “Eighties Fan” to their last listen of the band’s 2024 return to the studio Look to the East, Look to the West.

Those fans have clamored for Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi to receive the vinyl reissue it has long deserved. Setting the needle down on tracks like “Swimming Pool,” “Pen and Notebook,” and “Happy New Year,” it’s easy to hear why: each of the album’s 12 songs are perfectly-observed slices of life rendered cinematic through opulently-detailed arrangements. It’s eternal, bedrock pop music as only Camera Obscura could make it, suitable for the hi-fis of 1966 and 2026 alike.

Along with the reissue of Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi, Camera Obscura are also announcing a change to their upcoming North American tour: “Due to unforeseen circumstances,” they note, “we regretfully have to cancel our planned shows in Guadalajara and Queretaro in Mexico in June.” Fans in Mexico can still see Camera Obscura in Mexico City at their June 5 engagement at Grand Forum Coyoacán. In addition, fans in California will now have an opportunity to celebrate songs from throughout Camera Obscura’s stories career with the addition of three new shows.

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