UNCUT

THE BEST ARCHIVE RELEASES

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30 REM Monster 25th Anniversar­y CRAFT

Perhaps REM’S most divisive album got a full remix this year courtesy of producer Scott Litt. Once a heavy, glammy return to rock after the lighter textures of Automatic For The People, the new Monster was now a little more in keeping with its predecesso­rs, for better and for worse. Those keen to discover more about this period could also delve into a world of demos.

29 PETER LAUGHNER Peter Laughner SMOG VEIL RECORDS

This vital, 56-track retrospect­ive assembled home and rehearsal recordings, live cuts and radio appearance­s by Laughner, an important American catalyst, best known for his work with Rocket From The Tombs and Pere Ubu. The mix of covers (Dylan, Reed, Television) and originals illustrate his developmen­t and his fixations. A final disc had 13 solo recordings made on the night Laughner died in his sleep – June 22, 1977.

28 SUPER FURRY ANIMALS Guerrilla: 20th Anniversar­y BMG

The sampladeli­c third album by Cardiff’s most forward-thinking band celebrated its 20th birthday this year, its Beachboys-meets-aphex-twin lunacy still sounding as revolution­ary in 2019. Plus, a plethora of B-sides, demos and unheard tracks – including early versions of this century’s “Lazer Beam” and “Frequency” – shed light on the record’s strange (and costly) gestation.

27 VARIOUS ARTISTS World Spirituali­ty Classics 2: The Time For Peace Is Now LUAKA BOP

The second album in Luaka Bop’s ‘World Spirituali­ty Classics’ series following Alice Coltrane’s ashram excursions, The Time For Peace Is Now was a revelatory compilatio­n of obscure 1970s gospel. And rather than the massed choirs and roaring affirmatio­ns of gospel cliché, we discovered church groups moving with the times, responding to the likes of Curtis Mayfield and Gil Scottheron with moody guitars, funky beats and quasi-political messages.

26 TUBBY HAYES QUARTET Grits, Beans And Greens: The Lost Fontana Studio Session 1969 FONTANA JAZZ/DECCA

Tubby Hayes was the closest thing Britain had to John Coltrane; after the unearthing last year of Coltrane’s brilliant Both Directions At Once, it was fitting that this year’s most essential jazz archive release was a lost Hayes LP, recorded in mid-1969 but shelved following the failure of his kitsch Tubby Hayes Orchestra album. This, though, was the real Tubby: rakish, fluent, eternally cool.

25 DAVID SYLVIAN Secrets Of The Beehive VIRGIN/UMC

A host of remastered vinyl reissues from Sylvian’s post-japan years – Brilliant Trees, Alchemy – An Index Of Possibilit­ies, Gone To Earth and Secrets Of The Beehive – reminded us of his gifts for noir balladry, instrument­al abstractio­n and austere atmospheri­cs. Key was 1987’s …Beehive, whose sparse, elegant and intense qualities set the template for Sylvian’s future career.

24 ANNE BRIGGS Anne Briggs TOPIC

Reissued as part of the Topic Records 80th birthday celebratio­ns, there were, however, no extra tracks on this magnificen­t debut album. In keeping with the frill-free nature of the original, we got readings of traditiona­l songs (Briggs’ “Willie O’ Winsbury” will still be staggering when all record reviewing is done by an app), and two of her original songs. Essential.

23 BOB DYLAN (FEATURING JOHNNY CASH) Travelin’ Thru, 1967 – 1969: The Bootleg Series Vol 15 COLUMBIA/LEGACY RECORDINGS

Unlike recent, hefty instalment­s in the Bootleg Series, Vol 15 was a relatively modest set focusing on previously unavailabl­e recordings made with Johnny Cash and unreleased tracks from the John Wesley Harding, Nashville Skyline and Self Portrait sessions. The Cash sessions provided the heart, though – highlights included a mash-up of “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” and “Understand Your Man” among much good-natured studio banter.

22 CARAVAN The Decca/deram Years (An Anthology) 1970–1975 UNIVERSAL

Despite the absence of their hazy debut, this CD boxset collected the greatest work by the Canterbury Scene’s warmest, silliest bunch. 1970’s pastoral If I Could Do It All Over Again was the peak here, but there were feather-soft jazz-rock gems sprinkled throughout, from the sweet’n’sour balladry of 1973’s “The Dog, The Dog, He’s It At Again” to the 19-minute “For Richard” on ’74’s Live At The Fairfield Halls.

21 THE FALL 1982 CHERRY RED

Not a great year for the UK – high Thatcheris­m, high unemployme­nt, Falklands War – but a spectacula­r one for The Fall, and most of it is found here. The quality of the band in this iteration (check the frozen wastes of the Hex Enduction Hour album), is selfeviden­t. This set also includes the hinterland: live shows, radio sessions, and the Room To Live LP.

20 PRINCE 1999 WARNERS

Prince’s 1982 album of liberating funkrock jams found him entering an intense purple patch. Hence this expanded edition was rich in top-quality unreleased tracks from his legendary vault: the taut, fiery riffage of “Rearrange”, the rousing “Bold Generation” and the semilegend­ary “Moonbeam Levels”. And, of course, a song called “Vagina”.

19 VARIOUS ARTISTS Pacific Breeze: Japanese City Pop, AOR & Boogie 1976–1986 LIGHT IN THE ATTIC

Japanese electronic music has provided a rich seam for reissuers over the last couple of years. The flipside to the genteel ambience celebrated on Kankyõ Ongaku (see below) is the kind of beachy, new wavey, occasional­ly kitschy stuff compiled here by Vetiver’s Andy Cabic, among others. Naturally, various members of Yellow Magic Orchestra featured prominentl­y on this neon-hued cocktail of delightful­ly off-centre pop.

18 MICHAEL ROTHER Solo GRONLAND

As one of Kraftwerk, Neu! and Harmonia, the ever-youthful Rother was a huge figure in 1970s

European music – but what followed in the man’s career may be even more impressive. His solo works streamline­d his long-line practice, the quartet of albums from 1977’s Flammende Herzen to 1982’s Fenwärme offering pastoral variations on his motorik themes, like ripples in a sunlit pond.

17 DAVID BOWIE Conversati­on Piece PARLOPHONE

After a series of smaller, vinyl-only boxsets helped document Bowie’s formative steps during 1968/’69, Conversati­on Piece was the motherlode – a 5CD set of home demos, radio sessions and ephemera including 12 previously unreleased tracks and a new mix of the Space Oddity album by Tony Visconti. The album remains more than its title track: social observatio­n, heavy inner trips and tender love songs prevail.

16 VARIOUS ARTISTS Strain, Crack & Break: Music From The Nurse With Wound List Volume One FINDERS KEEPERS

Nurse With Wound’s legendary list of outsider music influences, included with their 1979 debut, has become a guide for intrepid record collectors. Now you too could experience the unsettling sound collages of Philippe Besombes, the vivid prog nightmares of Horrific Child and the glorious, full-on wibble of Etron Fou Leloublan. And that’s just the French contingent!

15 THE KINKS Arthur Or The Decline And Fall Of The British Empire BMG

Fifty years on, The Kinks’ seventh LP – with its discourses on empire, migration and Englishnes­s – seemed strangely current. Bringing the record further into focus was this deluxe boxset, its most voluminous version featuring Arthur in stereo and mono, a ‘lost’ Dave Davies solo album plus rarities, a book, a badge and four 7”s. Britain may be declining, but Arthur was rejuvenate­d.

14 NEIL YOUNG Tuscaloosa REPRISE

Another tantalisin­g dip into Young’s capacious archives, this time for a live show with the Stray Gators from 1973, recorded early on during the Time Fades Away tour. It’s a fan-friendly set, with faithful renditions of “Heart Of Gold”, “After The Gold Rush” and “Out On The Weekend” alongside fresher material. Rusties will note the presence of drummer Kenny Buttrey – replaced by the harder-hitting Johnny Barbata later in the tour.

13 GENE CLARK No Other 4AD

Ex-byrd, countryroc­ker, songwriter’s songwriter… Gene Clark was a confusing propositio­n by the time he pitched up on Asylum records in 1974. If the public heard about this excellent, introspect­ive country-rock album, they certainly didn’t buy it. Now 4AD – historical­ly a mine of singersong­writer expertise – give it the love it deserves: two additional discs of sessions, and (for the deluxe edition) a 7” and heavy booklet.

12 STEREOLAB Emperor Tomato Ketchup DUOPHONIC

Stereolab’s 2019 return to duty was matched by a welcome batch of reissues. None was quite as timely as Emperor…, a work that held their experiment­al guitar surge, vocal harmony and elegant electronic pulses in an exquisite balance. Recorded by Tortoise’s John Mcentire in Chicago, the album represente­d a transatlan­tic meeting of post-rock minds, cemented further when the band took on Slint’s David Pajo as touring bassist.

11 JOHN COLTRANE Blue World IMPULSE

‘Lost albums’ are the latest trend in jazz catalogue, and this – following on from last year’s Both Directions At Once – is an honourable addition to the Coltrane canon. Recorded between Crescent and A Love Supreme, in an under-thecounter fashion for Canadian filmmaker Gilles Groulx, the album contains lovely takes of familiar tunes like “Naima” and the moody title track, an original compositio­n.

10 PREFAB SPROUT I Trawl The Megahertz SONY MUSIC

Previously issued in 2003 as a Paddy Mcaloon solo affair, I Trawl The Megahertz has been recast as a ‘lost’ Sprout album – although in truth, it’s unlike anything else in his catalogue. Conceived while Mcaloon suffered detached retinas that left him almost blind, it’s an elegant study in isolation configured around orch-pop melodies and Mcaloon’s dreamlike lyrics – inspired by the shortwave radio broadcasts he listened to for solace.

9 VARIOUS ARTISTS All The Young Droogs CHERRY RED

Lovingly curated by (full disclosure!) Uncut’s very own Phil King, this threecd collection made a convincing case for junkshop glam as much more than a novelty concern. The Stooges, Mott The Hoople and Woody Woodmansey’s U-boat provided the gateway into a whole subculture of thuggish glitter-rock stomps, proto-punk transgress­ion and dubious lyrics.

8 VARIOUS ARTISTS Kankyō Ongaku: Japanese Ambient, Environmen­tal & New Age Music 1980-1990 LIGHT IN THE ATTIC

Since 2017, the Seattle label’s Japan Archival Series has been an invaluable resource for curious ears. This 3LP or 2CD anthology was the peak, collecting 25 pieces of blissfully relaxing, otherworld­ly tones from a host of musicians inspired by Eno’s ambient work and Erik Satie’s idea of “furniture music”.

7 GONG Love From The Planet Gong: The Virgin Years 1973-75 UMC/VIRGIN

In just three short years, Daevid Allen’s cosmic collective crafted their Radio Gnome Invisible trilogy, fell apart and reinvented themselves as more serious jazzrocker­s. Across 12 CDS, a DVD and a substantia­l book, their journey was catalogued here with excellent remasters, studio outtakes and – best of all – a whole flying teapot full of previously unheard live sets.

6 POPUL VUH The Essential Album Collection Vol 1 BMG

A chance to obtain for a reasonable price some of the finest LPS from the most rapturous of all the krautrock bands. Florian Fricke’s outfit are best known for the synthheavy soundtrack­s they cooked up for Werner Herzog’s films Aguirre and Nosferatu, but the revelation here was 1974’s Einsjäger & Siebenjäge­r, with Daniel Fichelsche­r’s questing guitar inspiring the band to rarefied heights.

5 NEW ORDER Movement: The Definitive Edition RHINO

Nobody was making a case for Movement as New Order’s peak, but by rounding up all the demos and live tracks dating back to September 1980 – less than four months after Ian Curtis’s death – this boxset told a fascinatin­g story: of a band confronted with a terrible event and finding an ingenious way forward.

4 BRIAN ENO Apollo: Atmosphere­s & Soundtrack­s – Extended Edition UMC

Many may not have required a reminder of the qualities of Apollo, Eno’s most beautiful, yearning exploratio­n of ambient music. This reissue celebratin­g 50 years since the Apollo 11 moon landings gave us something new, however: a fulllength thematic follow-up reuniting Eno, his brother Roger and Daniel Lanois, who showcased his lovely lap-steel skills on “Capsule”.

3 THE REPLACEMEN­TS Dead Man’s Pop RHINO

1989’s Don’t Tell A Soul was meant to be The Replacemen­ts’ pop breakthrou­gh; the songs were glorious, but its glossy mix divided fans. Finally, here was the album sounding closer to how it did in Paul Westerberg’s head, along with a slew of demos, outtakes and live versions – not to mention a heroically sloshed session with Tom Waits.

2 THE BEATLES Abbey Road EMI

As remixed by Giles Martin, the last Beatles album produced “in the old way” by his father preserved the perfectly sequenced original while remaining mindful of sonic innovation­s since. Among the additional extras were demo takes of the troublesom­e “Maxwell” and “the long one” – the triumphant eight-song medley that takes up Side Two.

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