From Jagger to Joni, now that’s a Christmas selection box!
TIM DE LISLE
KIRSTY MACCOLL TROPICAL BRAINSTORM One LP
Vinyl is booming, with UK sales up tenfold since 2012, so some classic discs are finally available in black. On her last and best album, the late lamented
Kirsty showed that she was the Victoria Wood of pop.
ARETHA FRANKLIN ARETHA
Four CDs or two LPs
On vinyl this has a rare weakness: it’s too short. On
CD, though, it measures up to a stupendous career. Its 81 songs range from crackly 1950s recordings to a cover of Adele’s Rolling In The Deep, via duets with George Michael, Annie Lennox and Smokey Robinson. The finale is her turn at the White House in 2015, when the Obamas persuaded Aretha to sing (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman in front of its writer, Carole King.
ROLLING STONES TATTOO YOU 40TH
ANNIVERSARY
Two LPs
This could be the last time Jagger and Richards were really on song as co-writers.
AZTEC CAMERA BACKWARDS AND FORWARDS
Nine CDs
The box-set, once reserved for pop’s senior citizens, has now reached the 1980s. Roddy Frame of Aztec Camera, with his timeless tunes and touching phrases, is worth it.
JONI MITCHELL ARCHIVES VOL 2 – THE REPRISE YEARS 1968-71
Five CDs
Vol1 of this fine series has a Grammy nomination, for Best Historical Album – not a gong you’ll ever find at the Brits. Vol2 captures the young Joni’s brainy genius, with a cameo from the up-and-coming DJ John Peel.
U2
ACHTUNG BABY 30TH ANNIVERSARY
SPECIAL EDITION
Two LPs
Their quirkiest album still feels fresh and includes the definitive dark ballad One.
DAVID BOWIE BRILLIANT ADVENTURE (1992-2001)
11 CDs or 18 LPs
Bowie, who once went nine years between new albums, has made up for it since he died. This seems to be his 20th posthumous release. It’s wildly assorted, from the frantic Black Tie White Noise to the fearless Outside, the laboured Earthling and the lovely Hours. The surprise is the lost album Toy, which gets a separate release (and review) next month. The treat is a BBC Radio Theatre gig in 2000: fresh from Glastonbury, Bowie’s band have a ball revamping Starman, Absolute Beginners and All
The Young Dudes.
THE BEATLES LET IT BE (SUPER DELUXE)
Five CDs or four LPs, plus extras
Half a century after breaking up, the greatest band of all are threatening to take over Christmas. They’re on the telly with Peter Jackson’s Get Back, in the bestsellers with Paul McCartney’s elegant The Lyrics and in the record shops with Giles Martin’s remix of Let It Be. It includes the abandoned album Get Back, which rocks.
GEORGE HARRISON ALL THINGS MUST PASS (UBER DELUXE)
Eight LPs or five CDs, plus extras
Let It Be is fascinating partly because you can see the solo careers poking through. George’s debut album, a triple, was his masterpiece. It now comes in a wooden crate, which is ironic as he liked to think outside the box. He might have scoffed at the price: £859.99. Happily there’s a slimmer edition for a tenth of that.
VARIOUS ARTISTS
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR DELUXE EDITION
Three CDs or two LPs
The 1970 concept album that begat the rock opera by
Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. Songs such as Hosanna and I Don’t Know How To Love Him still glow, and the central character may be even more popular than The Beatles.
BRYAN FERRY
FIRST SIX SOLO ALBUMS
One LP each
Twelve years in the life of Bryan, from the artful remakes of These Foolish Things to the soulful soundscapes of Boys And Girls.
RADIOHEAD KID A MNESIA
Three LPs or two cassettes Kid A, Amnesiac and offcuts: hours of wintry beauty.
RANDY NEWMAN
ROLL WITH THE PUNCHES
Eight LPs
All his solo albums since 1979: two-thirds biting satire, one-third gorgeous ballads.
EAGLES
LIVE AT THE FORUM 76
Two LPs
A taster for their long-delayed outdoor tour, now due in June. You can book in any time you like, but you may never land.