Global Times

Rarities by late stars Prince, Bowie and Cohen to come out for Record Store Day

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Rare music from three stars who died last year – Prince, David Bowie and Leonard Cohen – will come out next month for the 10th anniversar­y of Record Store Day, the celebratio­n of vinyl’s rebirth.

Launched in 2007 by struggling US shops in hopes of stirring interest, Record Store Day has grown quickly as well as internatio­nally as vinyl finds a renewed audience among collectors.

Some 350 limited- edition works will go on sale on April 22, organizers announced Tuesday.

An original tribute album to Cohen, Like a Drunk in a Midnight Choir, will raise money for a cancer charity.

The album features covers of Cohen songs by artists including Joseph Arthur, the rich- voiced indie singer and painter, and psychedeli­c folk rocker Avi Buffalo.

Reissues from Prince – himself an avid record collector who frequented the Electric Fetus store in Minneapoli­s – will include 12- inch maxi- singles of six songs including “Pop Life” and “Sign o’ The Times.”

Twelve- inch maxi- singles are known for their high audio quality as the same amount of vinyl that ordinarily covers one side of an album goes to a single song.

Among the Record Store Day releases announced ahead of Tuesday are two albums by Bowie including a three- LP live work from 1974 called Cracked Actor.

Pink Floyd said Monday it will put out for the first time an early 15- min- ute version of “Interstell­ar Overdrive,” recorded in 1966 before the legendary band had a record deal.

In classical music, label Warner Classics will put out the first vinyl edition of cello virtuoso Rostropovi­ch’s world premiere of Shostakovi­ch’s Cello Concerto No. 2, performed in 1967 with the composer in attendance.

The vinyl features an X- ray image of a bone and pelvis – a reference to bootleg records in the Soviet era that were made illicitly on hospitals’ leftover X- ray paper.

Vinyl sales in the US and several European countries have reached levels not seen since the 1980s, but the sector remains a sliver in a music market in which CD sales are declining and streaming is soaring.

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