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These recently released CD's and books are sure to please any BOB DYLAN - The Bootleg Series Vol. 18: Through The Open Window, 1956-1963 (Legacy Recordings, $149.99) This next volume in the award-winning Bootleg Series tells the story of Dylan's emergence and maturation as a songwriter and performer, from Minnesota to the Greenwich Village bohemia in the early 1960s. It includes rare Columbia Records outtakes, recordings made at club dates, in tiny informal gatherings, in friends' apartments, and at jam sessions in long-gone musicians' hangouts. The 8CD Deluxe set features 139 tracks -- 48 never-before released performances, as well as 38 super-rare cuts plus a hardcover book with extensive liner notes by Sean Wilentz and over 100 rare photographs. The last two discs of the set consist of the unreleased complete recording of Dylan's 1963 landmark show at Carnegie Hall, mixed from original tapes.
BUCKINGHAM NICKS (Rhino Records, $16.92) The legendary debut studio album from Stevie Nicks & Lindsey Buckingham. Buckingham Nicks is the only studio album by Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks as a duo, prior to them joining Fleetwood Mac. Originally released in 1973 and unavailable for decades, the album has been sourced from the original analog master tapes and will be available for the first time on CD. Released on September 5, 1973, Buckingham Nicks quickly faded from commercial view but never disappeared from the cultural conversation. Recorded at Sound City Studios in Los Angeles and produced by Keith Olsen, the album introduced Nicks and Buckingham's tightly wound harmonies and sharply contrasting songwriting voices across 10 tracks -- ranging from the folk-rock shimmer of "Crystal" to the sunbaked strut of "Don't Let Me Down Again." THE WHO - Who Are You Deluxe (Geffen, $19.98) The Deluxe 2CD set of The Who's 1978 LP Who Are You pairs the original album newly remastered plus a CD of tracks taken from the studio sessions, demo recordings and live material. CD2 Sessions & Demos includes previously unreleased versions of "Who Are You," "New Song," "Trick Of The Light," "Guitar Pen," "905," "Good Time Coming," "Sister Disco," "Music Must Change," and "Who Are You." The two discs are presented in an 8-panel digi-pack with a 28-page booklet.
JOHN LENNON - Power To The People: Live at the One To One Concert Super Deluxe 9CD/3BR (Capitol, $224.98) On August 30, 1972, John Lennon & Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band with Elephant's Memory and guests headlined 2 historic ONE TO ONE concerts at Madison Square Garden, NYC. These benefit shows played to a combined audience of 40K people and helped raise over $1.5 million to support children with disabilities. They were his only full-length concerts after leaving the Beatles and the last shows John & Yoko performed together. Produced by Sean Ono Lennon, both concerts have been completely remixed and re-engineered by Paul Hicks and Sam Gannon, using new HD multitrack transfers by Rob Stevens with mixes mastered by Alex Wharton at Abbey Road. Also includes a 204-page book, newsprint poster, 2 postcards, 2 sticker sheets, 2 replica tickets, VIP backstage pass & VIP after-show invitation. The concerts are presented separately as "afternoon," "evening" and "hybrid" shows on 3 HD Audio Blu-ray discs in HD Stereo, 5.1 Surround & Dolby Atmos.
OZZY OSBOURNE - Last Rites (Grand Central Publishing, $17.98) An instant New York Times bestseller, Last Rites is a self-effacing and unexpectedly affecting portrait of the Prince of Darkness in twilight, mixing ancient stories of Ozzy's rock star rapscallionism (entertaining, always) with meditations on the inevitability of death that grow thicker as the book lurches toward the only conclusion it can. It's t h e s h o c k i n g , b i t t e r l y h i l a r i o u s , n e v e r - b e f o r e - t o l d s t o r y o f O z z y ' s d e s c e n t i n t o h e l l . A l o n g t h e w a y , h e r e f l e c t s o n h i s e x t r a o r d i n a r y l i f e a n d c a r e e r , i n c l u d i n g h i s m a r r i a g e t o w i f e S h a r o n , a s w e l l a s h i s r e f l e c t i o n s o n w h a t i t t o o k f o r h i m t o g e t b a c k o n s t a g e f o r t h e t r i u m p h a n t B a c k t o t h e B e g i n n i n g c o n c e r t , s t r e a m e d a r o u n d t h e w o r l d , w h e r e O z z y r e u n i t e d w i t h h i s B l a c k S a b b a t h b a n d m a t e s f o r t h e f i n a l t i m e . Last Rites is the redemption narrative that The Osbournes couldn't be -- genuinely big-hearted rather than contrivedly quirky, refusing to overwrite past ugliness but still brimming with gratitude... a fitting final encore for a life lived at extremes.
THE CARS - Let the Stories Be Told (Da Capo, $26.16) This inside account of the life of a rock band bristles with extravagant details and penetrating insights, much like his masterpiece biography of Leon Russell, but Bill Janovitz's The Cars: Let the Stories Be Told persuasively makes the case for the Cars as one of the essential American rock bands of their day. Janovitz brings a fellow musician's perspective, a scholar's depth and a fan s enthusiasm to this riveting, rollercoaster ride of the entire bell curve of the storied band's epic career. "The definitive story of The Cars." - Rolling Stone ![]()
The music legend writes about discovering the man who wasn't By Colleen Kratofil in People
In 2012 Smith -- the oldest of four siblings raised in Chicago and South Jersey -- and her sister Linda took a DNA test that showed they were, in fact, half sisters. A few years later another DNA test determined Smith's birth father was "100 percent Ashkenazi," unlike Beverly and Grant. Recently Smith tracked down the name of her father thanks to the "sleuthing and detective work" of her "very private" oldest daughter, whom she has welcomed back into her life after placing her for adaption when Smith was 20. "It's kind of a miracle, really," says Smith, who's also mom to sons Jackson, 43, and Jesse, 38. Her father was a former soldier named Sidney who eventually married another woman following his liaison with Beverly and died in 1965 at age 53. The singer admits she was "sad" to learn that Grant, who died in 1999, wasn't her biological dad, but "in the end, it doesn't matter. My love for my father eclipses blood," she says, adding, "One shaped my mind, and one gave me life. I was very fortunate."
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