January 21st Events

Auctions and Pop Ups See All

Ken Block 1977 Ford F-150 Hoonitruck Gets No Reserve Auction During Barrett-Jackson 2025 Scottsdale Car Sales Event
Auto Shows | Jan 18 - Jan 26, 2025
United States > Arizona > Scottsdale > > 85260

Firsts, Starts and Openings See All

Releases - Entertainment See All

Releases - Products See All

The Cell
Blu-ray Releases | Jan 21, 2025

Shows and Fairs See All

Ken Block 1977 Ford F-150 Hoonitruck Gets No Reserve Auction During Barrett-Jackson 2025 Scottsdale Car Sales Event
Auto Shows | Jan 18 - Jan 26, 2025
United States > Arizona > Scottsdale > > 85260
Epcot International Festival of the Arts
Art Festivals | Jan 17 - Feb 24, 2025
United States > Florida > Orlando > > 32830

January 21st In History

Notices See All

Louie Anderson
Deaths | Jan 21, 2022
Jack Lord
Deaths | Jan 21, 1998

Releases - Entertainment See All

The Conversation
Film Screenings and Series | Jan 14 - Jan 27, 2022

Shows and Fairs See All

Noir City Film Festival
Film Festivals | Jan 19 - Jan 28, 2024
United States > California > Oakland > > 94610
Epcot International Festival of the Arts
Art Festivals | Jan 12 - Feb 19, 2024
United States > Florida > Orlando > > 32830
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Tom Waits Middle-period Albums Remastered for Vinyl, CD and Digital Release | Jul 12 - Oct 6, 2023

Tom Waits Middle-period Albums Remastered for Vinyl, CD and Digital Release

CD Releases, Digital and MP3 Releases, Milestones, Vinyl Releases | Jul 12 - Oct 6, 2023

Bernie Grundman Mastering, Island Records, Universal Music Group

Personally overseen by Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan, Waits middle-period albums — released on Island Records between 1983 and 1993 — have been newly remastered from the original tapes and will be reissued on vinyl and CD this fall by Island/Universal Music Group.

Waits’ transformative breakthrough, Swordfishtrombones (1983), its sprawling sequel, Rain Dogs (1985), and the trilogy-completing stage musical, Franks Wild Years (1987), will kick off the series September 1, 2023. This release marks 40 years to the day that Swordfishtrombones was released into the wild, ushering in a new and critically acclaimed musical era for Waits and his longtime songwriting and production partner, Brennan.

The epic song-cycle, Bone Machine (1992) and the under-appreciated Waits (with Robert Wilson and William S. Burroughs) musical fable, The Black Rider (1993), will follow October 6, 2023, just after the September 30th anniversary of The Black Rider.

Ahead of their physical releases, all of the albums were available to stream July 12, 2023, featuring the newly remastered audio.

Each album will be released on CD, as well as two vinyl options: 180-gram black vinyl and a limited edition color variant that will be available exclusively via TomWaits.com and UDiscover Music. Swordfishtrombones will be pressed on canary, Rain Dogs on opaque sky blue, Franks Wild Years on opaque gold, The Black Rider on opaque apple and Bone Machine on translucent milky vinyl.

All albums were mastered by Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering under the guidance of Waits’ longtime audio engineer, Karl Derfler. Swordfishtrombones was sourced from the original EQ’ed ½” production master tapes while Rain Dogs, Franks Wild Years, Bone Machine and The Black Rider were sourced from the original ½” flat master tapes. Bellman meticulously transferred the tapes and then remastered the audio in high resolution 192 kHz/24-bit. The lacquers for all titles were cut by Alex Abrash at AA Mastering. The new vinyl editions will come with specially made labels featuring photos of Waits from each era in addition to artwork and packaging that has been painstakingly recreated to replicate the original LPs, which have been out of print since their initial release. Surprisingly, The Black Rider and Bone Machine were never released on vinyl outside of Europe and will be making their vinyl debut in most of the world.

Waits went from 1970’s-era “bluesy, boozy” wordsmith and melodist with seven albums behind him to sound sculptor, miner of the subconscious, abstract orchestrator, sonic cubist—while retaining his innate lyricism, melodic invention, humanity. A rough analogy: Picasso switching from exquisite literal depictions to pouring his brain and id out onto canvas. Waits was still painting, in other words, but the frames were made of blood and bone and feathers and old carburetors.

Working with experimental composer Francis Thumm, and taking inspiration from the music of found-object composer Harry Partch—plus Waits’ friend, Captain Beefheart—the renowned singer-songwriter reinvented his sound, album by album.

As he put it in a 1983 interview: “I tried to listen to the noise in my head and invent some junkyard orchestral deviation—a mutant apparatus to drive this noise into a wreck collection.”

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