Fear of Music….quite the opposite really
Yeah I’m back again and nice of you to back in as well. For some people it’s gambling or drinking, for others it might be drugs or sexual indiscretions, gardening or buying shoes. Almost everyone I know has one chronic addiction or another and in many cases more than one. My primary one for about 30 years has been music, listening to it, collecting it, thinking about it and more recently playing it (badly). Since I was old enough to have a bit of spare cash it seems that purchasing new or used records and cassettes and then compact discs has been something I’ve never really managed to stop myself from doing. The record companies depend on people like me, in the 1980s if a 12″ single was a remix I’d be tempted to get it in addition to the 7 inch. If the 12 inch had three B-Sides as to one on a 7 inch I’d be right there. When the 90s came along with CDs upstaging vinyl far too rapidly CD singles would often come as part one and part two featuring different tracks, yet again enough to make me open my wallet.
In the last decade the reissue market and the anniversary market have both been beefed up extensively to try and get what’s left of consumers
(typically my age and above) to buy something we already own and again I confess that I do it more and more often. In recent years back catalogs by artists such as The Clash, Echo and the Bunnymen, Pulp and Billy Bragg have all been reissued with special packaging, bonus tracks and DVDs. Ridiculously I find myself (with the example of the Bunnymen or The Clash) doing the following; buying the vinyl album when it first came out, often adding a cassette for my tedious journeys on the London underground, replacing the vinyl with a CD at some point between 1990 and 2000 and then falling for the 20th, 25th etc. anniversary edition of said album. It doesn’t happen with every artist but it is definitely happened with the brands mentioned previously and a few more besides. Luckily nobody at Polydor or Rough Trade have given that special anniversary treatment to The Jam or The Smiths just yet, I’m sure they will and I’m equally sure that I’ll tell myself I really need a new copy of ‘Meat is Murder’ or ‘The Gift’ because of the artwork and demo sessions on the new disc.If you download all of your music you probably think I’m mad but then again I think downloading is like McDonald’s versus the proper nutrition of having a record (CD) collection.
I’m writing this because today I popped into couple of record shops one of whom was having a special sale and temptation got the best of me, but you’ll be glad to know I found some things I really needed including some stuff I already owned but not with the concert DVD! If it doesn’t bore you to death I might once a week or so pick out a CD from my collection at random and let you know just why I like it and hopefully you might too. I’ve been waiting a few years and avoiding the $17-$20 price all of the Talking Heads special reissues that came out a few years ago, today was the day my patience paid off as I managed to get the special editions of each of the first three albums with the DVD used for just nine dollars each but with 20% off because of the anniversary sale. So now I need to sell my original CDs of those and recoup a few dollars but that’s all right. I also got Pulp – Peel sessions double CD, Kate Nash new CD, The Clash live at Shea Stadium (finally and after you had all told me I had to), Brett Anderson, XX new CD, two Elvis Costello reissues. The Clash was just $4.99 and in total I spent much less than I expected. Next I have to go to another town and another record shop because a couple of special orders I placed have arrived. I don’t watch TV (hardly) so I have my excuses all lined up.
I know it’s a bit mad but I hadn’t gone record shopping for a few months and I’m all set now until October except there is that new James album coming out next week. These Talking Heads reissues are really lovely so I know what I’m doing this weekend, but the ‘Fear of Music’ doesn’t have those little raised grooves to represent the diamond plate flooring like the original album cover. If you don’t know what I’m talking about then you missed a great year in 1979….I think the best year for music ever.
Back soon ~ Tim





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