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Rarities 2001-2010

Eric Clapton

Rock - Released August 11, 2023 | Bushbranch - Surfdog Records

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Complete Studio Albums & Rarities

Stevie Nicks

Rock - Released July 28, 2023 | Rhino Atlantic

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**Audio for this release has been delivered to us in the highest available resolutions. Discs 1, 2, and 7 are not available in 24-bit Hi-Res but can be be downloaded in CD quality.**
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Moon Safari Rarities

Air

Electronic - Released January 19, 1998 | Parlophone (France)

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In 2024, Air look to provide a compelling demonstration of what English author Simon Reynolds termed "retromania" in his 2010 book of the same title. The French duo is performing their debut album, the revered Moon Safari from 1998, live for the first time in front of an audience. This event celebrates nostalgia (given the album's 25-year-old status, or more precisely, 25 and a half years - at this point, fans are intimately familiar with the melodies of "Sexy Boy" and "Kelly Watch The Stars"). It introduces a sense of novelty and freshness; perhaps since the group have long disappeared from public view and have never before performed this album live.It’s a success: Nicolas Godin and Jean-Benoit Dunckel seem as if they’ve returned from another dimension where time hasn’t altered the musicians’ faces or frames, the scenography, resembling a three-dimensional painting, is magical, and the music of Moon Safari is retro-futurist and trippy. This marks a return to the original album, as well as a bonus disc that digs up rare tracks dating from the same period, so there are no stunning revelations over the course of the record’s nine tracks, but we at least can confirm that Air’s music has definitely passed the test of time. An unlikely combination of influences for the time (from prog-rock to cartoon soundtracks, as well as synth pop), the music of Moon Safari was also avant-garde, and paved the (milky) way for the daydreamers of the new millennium. © Stéphane Deschamps/Qobuz
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Keep Walkin': Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978

Nancy Sinatra

Pop - Released September 29, 2023 | Boots Enterprises, Inc.

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Nancy Sinatra and the team at Light in the Attic knocked it out of the park with the 2021 compilation Start Walkin' 1965-1976, an absolutely top-shelf selection of twenty-three of singer's best cuts from her prime era that beautifully showcased her hits as much as it did the wide streak of weird that ran through much of her material during that time. That set was so good that one would be rightfully suspicious that this 2023 companion piece focused on deep cuts, rarities, and unreleased tracks would be a barrel-scraping exercise meant for completists only. Well, the barrel may be getting scraped, but Nancy Sinatra's output from the mid-'60s through the mid-'70s was a delightful combination of high-gloss AM radio perfection and freewheeling experimentation.  These tracks may not have had the same cultural impact as "These Boots Were Made for Walkin'" or "Some Velvet Morning" but are still rewarding in their own way.The collection starts off strong with the evocative pop-noir of "The City Never Sleeps at Night" (the bouncy b-side of "Boots") and "The Last of the Secret Agents," a dazzlingly goofy novelty number that served as the title theme for a 1966 parody of James Bond films starring Sinatra. Although there are a few weaker numbers scattered throughout—"Tony Rome" is atypically apathetic, and an inexplicable cover of the Move's "Flowers in the Rain" shows that baroque psychedelia may not have been Sinatra's forte—Keep Walkin' is more than balanced out by dizzyingly great numbers like the languid and louche "Easy Evil" (a 1972 demo that was previously only available on the 1998 Sheet Music compilation) that show how her willingness to be weird never abated.Sinatra's early '70s material is often overlooked. Not only did the cultural zeitgeist decidedly move on from her style—too square for the cool kids and too quirky to be "easy listening"—but she only released two albums during the decade, both in 1972. She nonetheless had a great run of non-LP singles between 1973 and 1976, and while some of those A-sides made their way onto the Start Walkin' collection, Keep Walkin' rounds out the tracklist by including her phenomenal cover of Lynsey De Paul's "Sugar Me" (as well as the B-side, a somewhat questionable cover of "Ain't No Sunshine") and the stunning "Kinky Love" from 1976. © Jason Ferguson/Qobuz

Rarities 1983-1998

Eric Clapton

Rock - Released February 17, 2023 | Bushbranch - Surfdog Records

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B-Sides, Demos & Rarities

PJ Harvey

Alternative & Indie - Released September 8, 2022 | UMC (Universal Music Catalogue)

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Though the reissue campaign that presented PJ Harvey's albums with their demos was extensive, it still didn't gather everything in her archives. She fills in those gaps with B-Sides, Demos & Rarities, a comprehensive set of harder-to-find and previously unreleased material that covers three decades of music. Kicking off with a handful of previously unreleased demos, the collection celebrates what makes each track special within Harvey's chronology. Short but fully realized versions of "Dry" and "Man-Size" reaffirm that by the time she hits the record button, she knows exactly what she's doing; the guitar and voice sketches of "Missed" and "Highway 61 Revisited" are as formidable as the finished takes; and the demo of the B-side "Me Jane" (yes, that's how thorough this set is) offers one of the Rid of Me era's catchiest songs in an even rawer state. B-Sides, Demos & Rarities reinforces just how vital Harvey's non-album tracks are to her creative trajectory. The uncanny carnival oompah of "Daddy," a "Man-Size" B-side, feels like one of the earliest forays into the eeriness that gave an extra thrill to To Bring You My Love, White Chalk, and much of Harvey's later work. She continues Is This Desire?'s experimentation on "The Bay," which contrasts songwriting befitting a classic folk ballad with pulsing keyboards and jazzy rhythms, and continues to try to make sense of the world's chaos on Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea-era material spanning the whispery Saturn return of "30" to "This Wicked Tongue," an updated expression of biblical sin, desire, and torment that delivers one of the set's most quintessentially PJ Harvey moments. Fittingly for such an anachronistic-sounding album, White Chalk's B-sides reach back to Harvey's earliest days: "Wait" and "Heaven" date back to 1989 and deliver sprightly, strummy folk-pop that's almost unrecognizable as her work. The set's previously unreleased music contains just as many revelations. One of its most notable previously missing puzzle pieces is the demo of Uh Huh Her's title track. A shockingly pure expression of rage, jealousy, and sorrow, it may have been too raw and revealing even for a PJ Harvey album, but it's a shame that it and the like-minded "Evol" didn't make the cut. Conversely, "Why'd You Go to Cleveland," a 1996 collaboration between Harvey and John Parish, and the 2012 demo "Homo Sappy Blues" are downright playful, proving the complete picture of her music includes something akin to fun. Highlights from the collection's 2010s material include "An Acre of Land," a lush ballad rooted in the British folk traditions that are just as essential to her music as punk or the blues, and the 2019 cover of Nick Cave's "Red Right Hand," which pays homage to a kindred spirit while transforming the song into something more desolate and plaintive. A must-listen for anyone following Harvey's archival series, B-Sides, Demos & Rarities serves as a fascinating parallel primer to her music and the multitudes within it.© Heather Phares /TiVo
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Rarities 2

Ane Brun

Pop - Released October 27, 2023 | Balloon Ranger Recordings AB

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B-Sides & Rarities

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

Rock - Released August 20, 2021 | Mute, a BMG Company

There was a time not so long ago when Nick Cave revelled in the role of the dark prince of rock. Now however, buffeted by the vagaries and tragedies of life, he's grown spooky in a more understated way. As the onetime new wave rebel has aged and settled into a more sedate lifestyle, the tone and tenor of his songs has turned ever more brooding and pensive; austerity and explorations of the stark and spare have become his latest compulsions. Here on an intriguing odds 'n' sods compilation of lesser known or unreleased tracks from his recent work with his band The Bad Seeds, the quieter, more introspective Cave is showcased, expanding the portrait of the moving target he and his music will always be. "King Sized Nick Cave Blues," an unreleased track from 2014, is almost gospel. The next track "Opium Eyes," set to a rumbling beat with random demonic vibraphone notes, makes for a warlock chant. The sad, solo piano and voice-only track, "Euthanasia" segues into the full band "Life Per Se," another somber exploration with viola and loudly hummed background vocals. Both were recorded for the 2014 Skeleton Tree sessions that occurred just after the accidental death of Cave's son Arthur, an event that's had the audible effect of giving an even sadder hue to much of what Cave has written since. Musically, he has progressively settled into more lyrics slowly spoken or sung over lilting electronic backgrounds, a trend heard in "Big Dream (w/ Sky)" an unreleased track from the 2018/2019 sessions that became the album, Ghosteen. "First Bright Horses," an early version of the eventual Ghosteen track, "Bright Horses," verges on a cracked, almost Waitsian beauty. A rare duet, "Free to Walk," with Debbie Harry, from the 2009 Jeffrey Lee Pierce Sessions Project is a refreshing interlude. While Cave's music has grown hushed, his familiar angst joined to his astute ear for poetics continues to trigger lyrics that are cryptic and coolly angular. In "Accidents Will Happen" he sings, "Well, let me tell you a little more about Mabel/ She is shaped like an inverted ducks pond chair/ I roll out my tongue when she walks past/ Fix her with my famous jelly-eyed stare" and on"Steve McQueen," from the Skeleton Tree sessions, his menacing persona returns, albeit at a lower volume, as he recites: "I'm the atomizer/ I'm the vaporizer/I turn everything to crud/ I like it here in your flesh and blood." Bad Seeds partner Warren Ellis is a large part of what's heard here whether it's his violin loops that sway from side to side in "Animal X" and "Lightning Bolts" or his piano leading the way on a slow, sweeping, large forces 2019 performance of "Push The Sky Away," the title track to the Seeds' 2013 album, which was recorded as part of a concert with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. Like the sessions they are drawn from, the sound and mixes heard on B-Sides and Rarities are beautifully spacious and detailed with Cave's voice seemingly in the room next to you. Especially sweet for longtime fans, this collection is more proof that Cave remains one of the current era's musical visionaries. © Robert Baird/Qobuz
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Morricone: Cinema Rarities for Violin and String Orchestra

Marco Serino

Classical - Released October 6, 2023 | Arcana

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One of the difficulties facing a composer of movie music is finding the happy middle between the unobtrusive, but dull, and the stirring, but distracting. In a recent BBC survey, some of the composers capable of staking out that elusive territory include the legendary Max Steiner, Bernhard Herrmann, John Barry, John Williams, and the late Ennio Morricone, whose scores for the so-called "spaghetti westerns” brought him fame, though he did not restrict his talents to that genre alone.Violinist, arranger, and conductor Marco Serino worked with Morricone in his latter years creating concert suites from his earlier movie scores, some of them released on Morricone: Cinema Suites for Violin and Orchestra. In this sequel, Cinema Rarities for Violin and String Orchestra, Serino has delved into the late composer's lesser-known scores, including some for pictures never released outside of Italy. The titles were chosen, as the excellent and thorough booklet informs us, for their rarity and "distinctly Italian character.” About half of the arrangements are by Morricone, the rest by Serino.There is no disputing this is gorgeous music and few will fail to note the soaring themes and lush arrangements. The playing by both the soloist and orchestra is superb, polished, and refined. The same lushness, polish, and dolcissimo might prove excessive for some listeners, as it eventually did for this one, who by recording's end, found himself strangely craving the sound of a brass band and the juice of a lemon. © Anthony Fountain/Qobuz
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Because You’re Mine Hits & Rarities

Screamin' Jay Hawkins

R&B - Released May 26, 2023 | Prime Entertainment, MFI Resources & Jay Hawkins

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The Turning Year – Rarities

Roger Eno

Classical - Released April 21, 2023 | Deutsche Grammophon (DG)

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Complete Rarities - I.R.S. 1982-1987

R.E.M.

Alternative & Indie - Released January 1, 2014 | CAPITOL CATALOG MKT (C92)

A digital-only release arriving in May of 2014, Complete Rarities I.R.S. 1982-1987 offers 50 stray tracks that have come out on various reissues, B-sides, and even the 1987 compilation Dead Letter Office, which was the first time R.E.M. attempted to tie up loose ends. The CD of Dead Letter Office contained Chronic Town, but that debut EP is absent on this collection (it hasn't appeared on any of the deluxe reissues of I.R.S. titles either). It's an unfortunate omission -- Chronic Town is a pivotal part of American indie rock -- but even with its absence, Complete Rarities I.R.S. 1982-1987 is a worthwhile clearinghouse of oddities, demos, outtakes, and live cuts from R.E.M.'s golden era. There are no new excavations here. The bulk of the collection is based on Dead Letter Office and the bonus disc included with the two-CD version of the 2006 compilation And I Feel Fine...: The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982-1987, with the rest rounded out with bonus tracks available either on expanded European editions from the '90s or various other reissues. There is plenty to love here -- the original Hib-Tone single of "Radio Free Europe"/"Sitting Still"; exuberant early versions of "All the Right Friends" and "Bad Day," songs they'd later revive; a nervy demo of "Just a Touch"; a live medley of "Time After Time," "Red Rain," and "So. Central Rain"; the entirety of Dead Letter Office -- and hardcore fans who have somehow managed to not get this music into their R.E.M. collections should consider picking up this useful digital set.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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The Last of Us Part II: Covers and Rarities

Various Artists

Film Soundtracks - Released September 27, 2021 | Sony Classical

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B-Sides and Rarities

CAKE

Alternative & Indie - Released November 13, 2007 | Upbeat Records

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Moon Safari Remixes, Rarities and Radio Sessions

Air

Electronic - Released January 19, 1998 | Parlophone (France)

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A Lifetime of Temporary Relief: 10 Years of B-Sides & Rarities

Low

Alternative & Indie - Released March 9, 2016 | Chairkickers' Music

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The Rarities

Mariah Carey

Pop - Released October 2, 2020 | Columbia - Legacy

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Mariah Carey’s eponymous debut album Mariah Carey (June 1990) wasn’t an instant hit. It took almost six months and a Grammy performance the following year for the world to come face to face with the Mariah Carey phenomenon and for her record to go to number 1. Since then she’s sold the most albums of the 90s, become a global star and produced fifteen studio albums. To celebrate thirty years of success, the pop diva has brought out an autobiography and this compilation album – The Rarities. The first track-list is made up of unreleased tracks, remixes and B sides which were never released to the public. Some songs, like Here We Go Around Again (1990) and I Pray (2005), weren’t included in the singer’s biggest albums for reasons that remain unknown. The most interesting thing about this compilation album is the glimpse it offers into the huge amount of material produced during her golden years. Songs like the synth-filled B side Do You Think Of Me (1993) and the RnB-esque Slipping Away (1996) sit alongside covers of previously released tracks. Close My Eyes, from the 1997 album Butterfly, allows you to see how the singer’s voice has changed over time as does the album’s single – Save The Day, featuring Lauryn Hill – which was recorded in 2011. The second part of The Rarities is a live performance recorded at the Tokyo Dome in 1996. And it’s a masterpiece. This release is not the sensationalist box set one might have expected. It is a real work of art that gives a fresh perspective on one of pop’s most important singers. © Brice Miclet/Qobuz
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Complete Rarities 1988-2011

R.E.M.

Alternative & Indie - Released May 16, 2014 | Concord Records

Unlike its companion, Complete Rarities: IRS 1982-1987, the music collected on the 2014 digital-only Complete Warner Bros. Rarities 1988-2011 hasn't been anthologized often. Bits and pieces have been rounded up in singles boxes, and there was a "Rarities and B-sides" bonus disc added to the 2003 compilation In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003, but there was no Warner-era equivalent of Dead Letter Office, and the expanded editions of the albums often skimped on bonus tracks. So this mammoth collection -- 131 tracks, all instrumentals, alternate, and singles, mixes, covers, and live tracks that never appeared on albums -- is noteworthy for providing a service for dedicated fans who nevertheless stopped buying all those multi-part CD singles somewhere around New Adventures in Hi-Fi or Up. The eagle-eyed will notice there are a few songs missing -- usually, these are alternate versions from the early '90s -- but there are also a couple of live cover versions M.I.A., along with instrumental B-sides from Automatic for the People -- but the sheer heft of the set guarantees that almost all will take its title claim of "Complete" as factual; it's close enough to complete for most intents and purposes. Also, as it's a digital clearinghouse and not a sequenced compilation, it's designed to be cherry-picked and not listened to straight through (after all, it'd take many hours to finish). Unlike its I.R.S. cousin, there aren't many major songs tucked away here -- only the Automatic-era "It's a Free World Baby" and "Fretless" count, with the Accelerate flips "Redhead Walking" and "Airliner" also coming close -- which in itself suggests the shifting dynamics within the band and in the industry in the '90s and 2000s. Once Bill Berry left after 1996's New Adventures, R.E.M. worked harder to complete records, so there weren't as many rarities lying around, and that explains the lack of originals, but the real key to this absurdly large set is that the band was required to churn out B-sides for multi-part singles in every market in the world. The easiest way to do this was through live versions, covers and, for a brief moment, remixes (R.E.M.'s music never lent itself to dance mixes but 808 State did overhaul "King of Comedy"). It's flotsam and jetsam, and although it sometimes sounds like filler, there's enough enjoyable music here to make it worthwhile for those dedicated fans wishing to round out their collection.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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After Laughter Comes Tears: Complete Stax & Volt Singles + Rarities 1964-65

Wendy Rene

Soul - Released February 10, 2012 | Light In The Attic

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Rarities

Ane Brun

Pop - Released January 1, 2013 | Balloon Ranger Recordings AB