
Against The Odds: 1974 â 1982
Super Deluxe Collectorsâ Edition
- 6 studio LPs - Blondie, Plastic Letters, Parallel Lines, Eat To The Beat, Autoamerican, The Hunter
The first six studio albums, recorded for Chrysalis between 1976 and 1982.
- 4 bonus LPs
Period demos, alternate takes, studio goofs, synth experiments, air checks and home recordings
- 7â single
Moonlight Drive b/w Mr. Sightseer
- 10â LP
The complete 1975 Alan Betrock Queens basement session plus a previously unissued 1974 rehearsal tape.
- 120 page discography book
An exhaustive look at Blondieâs international notoriety via picture sleeves and regional pressings.
- 144 page hardback book
Liner notes and oral history by Erin Osmon, with essays from Mike Chapman, Richard Gottehrer, and Ken Shipley. Includes an extensive collection of rare and previously unpublished photographs, tape boxes, and other miscellaneous ephemera.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 124 songs
- 36 previously unissued
- Remastered from the original analog tapes, vinyl cut at Abbey Road Studios, London
- The first in-depth catalogue overview ever for the legendary New York band who have sold over 40-million records worldwide
- Complete band involvement and endorsement including access to Chris Stein and Debbie Harryâs untouched vaults of demos etc.
Thereâs a certain un-assuming barn just outside Woodstock, New York. Itâs easy to picture; the deep mythology of pop music history assures that much. For nearly two decades, the bulk of Blondieâs audio and visual archive sat inside.
One hundred reel-to-reel tapes, half a dozen cassettes, a few storage tubs crammed with records, bits of promotional flotsam, flyers, a stray Warhol print, and mirrored dressing room signage from four sold-out January 1980 nights at Londonâs Hammersmith Odeon. All of it lay silent through twenty humid summers, twenty frigid winters, and 20,000 rodents.
There were knives collected in Asia and sex worker advertisements pilfered from the UKâs red telephone boxes of the late 1970s. In a corner, a dust-caked RIAA-certified gold record for Eat To The Beat reclined against a wall, its protective glass scarred by a bullet hole.âIggy and I were shooting guns at a wall in my basement one night,â guitarist Chris Stein told us. âThis was a casualty.â
From this chaotic hoard of ephemera, this long-gestating project was born.
Over the years, Blondieâs many partner record companies have done an exemplary job archiving the bandâs recorded legacy, given the miles itâs logged and the oceans itâs had to cross. From Larry Uttalâs Private Stock Records to Terry Ellis and Chris Wrightâs Chrysalis, which was absorbed by Capitol and then Universal, the bandâs reels have been moved, transferred, baked, re-boxed, remixed, and barcoded more than a few times. We pored over every foot of magnetic tape and, thanks to our brand new 24-bit, 192KHz transfers, have expanded the dynamic range of Blondieâs six LPs.
Weâve scoured the earth for era-appropriate photos, pic sleeves, lyrics sheets, fan club newsletters, postcards, jukebox strips, and even eight-track tapes. There will always be more to find. Whether itâs a mislabeled cassette tape squirrelled away in a New Jersey garage, a previously unknown Thai 45 variant, or a roll of film excavated at the Long Beach flea market, slivers of Blondie will continue to poke into our collective unconscious until there ceases to be any consciousness to poke.
What the seven members of Blondie set to tape over those first eight years remains among the most timeless music of its era, or any era. This is not hyperbole. Walk into a grocery store and Rapture fills the air. Spend an hour with any classic rock, â80s throwback, LITE FM easy listening, or rockinâ oldies station and you will rediscover Heart of Glass.
Watch any given documentary on the birth of punk or hip hop, read any âBest Albums of All Timeâ list, and the stark three-color imagery of Parallel Lines will undoubtedly flash by. Visit any sports arena in the world and count the moments before you hear Call Me.
Blondie has transcended the realms of mere bands, evolving out of pop and punk to become a vital strand of American musicâs core DNA.
Let this box set serve as a map of the genome.
12 LP:
- Blondie
- Plastic Letters
- Parallel Lines
- Eat To The Beat
- Autoamerican
- The Hunter
- âPlaza Soundâ (Bonus LP #1)
- âParallel Beatsâ (Bonus LP #2)
- âCoca-Colaâ (Bonus LP #3)
- âHome Tapesâ (Bonus LP #4)
- âOut In The Streetsâ (10â LP)
- âMoonlight Driveâ (7â single)
Produktinformationen
Produktinformationen
Versand & RĂŒckgabe
Versand & RĂŒckgabe
Description
Super Deluxe Collectorsâ Edition
- 6 studio LPs - Blondie, Plastic Letters, Parallel Lines, Eat To The Beat, Autoamerican, The Hunter
The first six studio albums, recorded for Chrysalis between 1976 and 1982.
- 4 bonus LPs
Period demos, alternate takes, studio goofs, synth experiments, air checks and home recordings
- 7â single
Moonlight Drive b/w Mr. Sightseer
- 10â LP
The complete 1975 Alan Betrock Queens basement session plus a previously unissued 1974 rehearsal tape.
- 120 page discography book
An exhaustive look at Blondieâs international notoriety via picture sleeves and regional pressings.
- 144 page hardback book
Liner notes and oral history by Erin Osmon, with essays from Mike Chapman, Richard Gottehrer, and Ken Shipley. Includes an extensive collection of rare and previously unpublished photographs, tape boxes, and other miscellaneous ephemera.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 124 songs
- 36 previously unissued
- Remastered from the original analog tapes, vinyl cut at Abbey Road Studios, London
- The first in-depth catalogue overview ever for the legendary New York band who have sold over 40-million records worldwide
- Complete band involvement and endorsement including access to Chris Stein and Debbie Harryâs untouched vaults of demos etc.
Thereâs a certain un-assuming barn just outside Woodstock, New York. Itâs easy to picture; the deep mythology of pop music history assures that much. For nearly two decades, the bulk of Blondieâs audio and visual archive sat inside.
One hundred reel-to-reel tapes, half a dozen cassettes, a few storage tubs crammed with records, bits of promotional flotsam, flyers, a stray Warhol print, and mirrored dressing room signage from four sold-out January 1980 nights at Londonâs Hammersmith Odeon. All of it lay silent through twenty humid summers, twenty frigid winters, and 20,000 rodents.
There were knives collected in Asia and sex worker advertisements pilfered from the UKâs red telephone boxes of the late 1970s. In a corner, a dust-caked RIAA-certified gold record for Eat To The Beat reclined against a wall, its protective glass scarred by a bullet hole.âIggy and I were shooting guns at a wall in my basement one night,â guitarist Chris Stein told us. âThis was a casualty.â
From this chaotic hoard of ephemera, this long-gestating project was born.
Over the years, Blondieâs many partner record companies have done an exemplary job archiving the bandâs recorded legacy, given the miles itâs logged and the oceans itâs had to cross. From Larry Uttalâs Private Stock Records to Terry Ellis and Chris Wrightâs Chrysalis, which was absorbed by Capitol and then Universal, the bandâs reels have been moved, transferred, baked, re-boxed, remixed, and barcoded more than a few times. We pored over every foot of magnetic tape and, thanks to our brand new 24-bit, 192KHz transfers, have expanded the dynamic range of Blondieâs six LPs.
Weâve scoured the earth for era-appropriate photos, pic sleeves, lyrics sheets, fan club newsletters, postcards, jukebox strips, and even eight-track tapes. There will always be more to find. Whether itâs a mislabeled cassette tape squirrelled away in a New Jersey garage, a previously unknown Thai 45 variant, or a roll of film excavated at the Long Beach flea market, slivers of Blondie will continue to poke into our collective unconscious until there ceases to be any consciousness to poke.
What the seven members of Blondie set to tape over those first eight years remains among the most timeless music of its era, or any era. This is not hyperbole. Walk into a grocery store and Rapture fills the air. Spend an hour with any classic rock, â80s throwback, LITE FM easy listening, or rockinâ oldies station and you will rediscover Heart of Glass.
Watch any given documentary on the birth of punk or hip hop, read any âBest Albums of All Timeâ list, and the stark three-color imagery of Parallel Lines will undoubtedly flash by. Visit any sports arena in the world and count the moments before you hear Call Me.
Blondie has transcended the realms of mere bands, evolving out of pop and punk to become a vital strand of American musicâs core DNA.
Let this box set serve as a map of the genome.
12 LP:
- Blondie
- Plastic Letters
- Parallel Lines
- Eat To The Beat
- Autoamerican
- The Hunter
- âPlaza Soundâ (Bonus LP #1)
- âParallel Beatsâ (Bonus LP #2)
- âCoca-Colaâ (Bonus LP #3)
- âHome Tapesâ (Bonus LP #4)
- âOut In The Streetsâ (10â LP)
- âMoonlight Driveâ (7â single)
















