It’s beginning to look a lot like Disc-mas. In these final days of December, as Record Store Day Black Friday again takes over independent music shops, vinyl exclusives are the reason for the season for hundreds of thousands of music fans. This year, there are about 175 releases that are seeing fans line up around the country — most of them LPs, give or take the occasional CD, cassette or “Wicked”-branded turntable that’s been added to the mix.
Contemporary stars like Billie Eilish, Chappell Roan, Role Model, Icona Pop, Illenium and Post Malone all have material in the mix, along with the expected titans of yesteryear and today like Fleetwood Mac, Talking Heads, Bob Dylan, Billy Joel, Tom Petty, Miles Davis, Joni Mitchell, Prince, Bill Evans and the Grateful Dead.
We’ve picked out 25 of these titles we either have our own eyes set on or figure large numbers of others will. But our list of recommendations is only about a sixth of the overall selection of titles, so if you want to see the full, unabridged and unannotated list for quick reference, scroll all the way to the bottom. In the meantime, once again: Happy Disc-mas; streaming is over if you want it.
Bob Dylan, “The Original Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan”


(13,400 copies; single LP, black vinyl)
Dylan freaks will go to town — or go to Village — snapping this one up. Described as the “original unedited version” of “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,” this RSD exclusive release contains 13 tracks, including four that were removed prior to its original release: “Rocks and Gravel,” “Let Me Die in My Footsteps,” “Rambling, Gambling Willie” and “Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues.” Yes, those four tracks eventually found their way out to the public, but it’s still fun to hold a somewhat different version of one of his signature albums that almost snuck out into the multiverse. A few copies of this particular “canceled” edition from the early ’60s have been among the most valuable Dylan collectibles there are. The release this is most comparable to is an RSD version of “Blood on the Tracks (Test Pressing)” that came out in 2019; you can’t buy that release on Discogs now for under $160. Fortunately, this “Freewheelin’” is being released as a more generous 13,400 copies, versus the mere 7,500 for the coveted “Blood” item, but sleeping on it is still not advised.Talking Heads, “Tentative Decisions: Demos & Live”


(7,500 copies; single LP plus bonus 7″ single; clear vinyl)
The name of this release is “get your ass down to the store now.” Rhino has begun putting out a series of Talking Heads album-by-album retrospective boxed sets recently, but the label has also been good about issuing separate live albums or other collections of rarities from that same early period. Some fans might argue that absolutely everything that is in the vault should go on the boxed sets, but then, arguably, that would take the fun away from side projects like this appearing. The release includes both an LP and a single. The long-player features 10 demos from 1975-76, well ahead of the band’s ’77 debut, plus, as an 11th track, a live version of “Artists Only” from a 1976 club gig. The bonus single isn’t even by Talking Heads, per se, but the Artistics, as the trio of David Byrne, Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz (minus Jerry Harrison) were known while students at Rhode Island School of Design. The 7″ goes all the way back to 1974 and includes their super-seminal demos of “Psycho Killer” and “Warning Sign.” and “Psycho Killer.” Unreleased Talking Heads material has been some of the first stuff to disappear from store shelves across several recent Record Store Days, and while 7,500 copies once would have been considered a lot for an RSD exclusive, that counts as on the stingy side for this one, so pick this one up early or prepare to be tense, nervous and unrelaxed.Chappell Roan, “The Subway/The Giver”


(30,000 copies; 7″ single; lavender vinyl)
Obviously, neither “The Giver” nor “The Subway” is anything fans haven’t streamed and loved a thousand times by now. But the collectibility factor of having Roan’s two fine post-“Princess” songs of the past year on one slab of vinyl can’t be overstated for those fans. Both have previously been released not just on DSPs but as stand-alone 7” singles, but this is the first time they’ve been released together as A/B sides. For only about $16.99, you too can take it like a taker.Warren Zevon, “Epilogue: Live At The Edmonton Folk Music Festival”


(2,200 copies; two LPs, on three sides with an etching on side 4, black vinyl)
Warren Zevon fever has been upon us — and that’s a happy thing to say, in 2025 — with his recent Rock Hall of Fame induction and a tribute show in Los Angeles. This live album comes along at an opportune time to pile on the remembrance, then, although bittersweet hardly begins to get at the mixed feelings that may come listening to the great man’s final gig. It wasn’t intended as a final gig, as when he took to the Edmonton Folk Music Festival stage on August 9, 2002 for a one-off, two-man acoustic show, he’d been feeling a bit under the weather but had no notion he’d soon be diagnosed with a terminal illness. (As the liner notes say: “Not having been to the doctor in 20 years or so…) As Zevon performed with his frequent compadre of that summer, Matt Carsonis (who penned the aforementioned liner), mirth was in the air — as seen in the choice of “Canadee-I-O” as the closing number, after he’d already thrown the Canadian audience a bone with a cover of Joni Mitchell’s “A Case of You.” Familiar favorites like “Lawyers, Guns and Money” are mixed with rarities like what Cartsonis calls the “second and last” live performance of “Dirty Life and Times.” Of course, 2,200 copies is not much for something like this. But do know that if you miss the vinyl, then streaming and CD versions are coming just one week later, for your playing-it-all-night-long satisfaction.Fleetwood Mac, “Live 1975”


(5000 copies; two LPs, clear vinyl)
The chain will keep your Record Store Day line together. Actually, don’t expect to hear that “Rumours” classic on this set; if you’re doing your 50th anniversary math right, you will know that the tour this captures was the very first one then-new members Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks did with the veteran band, on the heels of joining up for the self-titled “Fleetwood Mac” album in 1975. So, filling out the performance, along with classics from that reboot like “Rhiannon,” “Landslide” and “I’m So Afraid,” are reinterpretations of numbers introduced by other band frontmen before them, like the estimable “Oh Well” and “The Green Manalishi,” which Lindsey has a delicious time tearing his teeth into. In fact, the opener, “Get Like You Used to Be,” dates all the way back to Christine McVie’s pre-Mac days as Christine Perfect, as Barry Alfonso’s liner notes on the gatefold jacket point out. The cover photo is almost worth the price of admission, offering one of our last glimpses of Stevie as a shaggy brunette. It’s a wonderful glimpse of a band momentarily content to be freshly anointed rock A-listers without quite yet counting as world-dominating. If you’re a true fan, you may already have this material; it was included as the third CD in a 2018 boxed set celebrating the “Fleetwood Mac” LP. But for most of us it’s new, distinct and worthy.
“Wicked: For Good: The Soundtrack”


(15,000 copies; two LPs; picture discs)
No good deed goes unpunished, and so back in April, when Universal released a Record Store Day-exclusive edition of the first “Wicked” film soundtrack in a quantity of only 2,000 copies, something akin to mass hysteria resulted, the likes of which haven’t been seen since Taylor Swift was putting out very limited RSD editions. That hysteria led to panic and then fury, and let’s just say it’s a good thing the hundreds of thousands of people who were shut out from getting a copy are mostly not actually witches. The anger over missing out on that one should be tempered, seven months later, as for Black Friday Universal is releasing nearly eight times as many copies of the sequel soundtrack’s RSD variant into the indie marketplace. Also perhaps tempering the demand/supply problem is that, unlike the previous release, this one doesn’t have an exclusive bonus track, and several other big-box stores or online retailers have their own “For Good” vinyl exclusives. Still, a picture-disc 2-LP set with alternate cover art and a 12” x 14” poster is something that “Wicked” completists will emerge from their bubbles for in large, possibly even line-dominating numbers… Note that the faithful are also being baited on this RSD BF by two exclusive Crosley turntables, one green and Elphaba-themed, the other set to spin grooves in Glinda pink.Billie Eilish, “Live”


(20,000 copies; 10-inch EP; black vinyl)
Eilish has bee one of Record Store day’s most reliable supporters, and/or product providers, and she hasn’t left vinyl buffs in the lurch this time, either. The four songs she did for Amazon’s Songline series have been released digitally — “duh!,” as she might say — but they haven’t been released in any physical format until this 10-incher. Prepare to tee up stripped-down versions of the mega-hits “Birds of a Feather” and “Wildflower” as well as the slightly deeper “Hit Me Hard and Soft” cuts “Skinny” and “L’Amour de ma Vie” — winners all. A pressing of 20,000 is a healthy amount, but we’ll see whether it’s healthy enough for the artist’s very activated fan base.Elton John & Brandi Carlile, “Who Believes In Angels? (Live at the London Palladium)”


(4,000 copies; single LP; black vinyl)
Elton John issues some kind of retrospective product virtually every semiannual Record Store Day, but for this one, he’s putting out something spanking new — a commemoration of the one-off show he did in partnership with Brandi Carlile at the London Palladium on March 26 of this year, broadcast as a special on CBS the following month. This disc features four live versions of songs the two had cooked up together for their early-2025 studio album, the acclaimed and currently Grammy-nominated “Who Believes in Angels?” The other six selections are mostly their jointly performed versions of Elton classics, plus a take on Carlile’s solo career with a concert version of “The Joke.” There is some misinformation in the RSD website description of this release, which promises “the complete 10-song setlist from the historic night”; fans will know that the pair actually performed 15 songs at that show. (If only this LP included their cover of the country classic “He’ll Have to Go,” among other tunes left out.) Still, 10 tracks’ worth of Elton/Brandi goodness on vinyl — including a to-die-for duo version of “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me” — make for a fine sunset to the year. (If you missed Variety‘s current cover story on Elton, including his own RSD picks, check it out here.)Bad Brains, “Live at the Bayou“


(2,500 copies; 2 LPs; black vinyl)
Will all hell break loose now that the “Jazz Detective” is turning out to be a punk-rock detective? Record Store Day habitues have known and loved producer-archivist Zev Feldman for the almost exclusively jazz projects he has drawn out of secret archives for Resonance and other labels focused on that genre. But he’s always sworn he was a rock guy, too, even if his extensive work in the realm of vault material didn’t reflect that. Now he’s put his rock bona fides to use with a double-disc set of ear-blasting magnificence recorded by one of punk’s most influential bands, Bad Brains, in Washington, D.C. in 1980–81, produced for the Time Traveler label. “I was absolutely blown away, because these recordings on ‘Live at the Bayou’ predate their entire full album discography,” Feldman said in a recent interview with D.C. television. “It basically rewrites history.” You’ll have to do your own historic research — this is the rare Feldman gatefold release that doesn’t include copious liner notes — but then, throwing it at you with no prep is the punk-rock way to do it. Maybe it’s not too late for a hardcore barnburner like “Banned in DC” to actually bring out the National Guard. (A CD version will follow the RSD vinyl exclusive by one week, on Dec. 5.)
Various Artists, “Rock the Plaza: Concert to Save the Historic Plaza Theatre in Palm Springs”


(1,200 copies; two LPs; black vinyl)
Here’s some fortuitous and probably coincidental timing: The historic Plaza Theatre in Palm Springs is having its grand reopening this coming Monday, after a long renovation effort. Meanwhile, this two-LP set (which will also be released in CD form on Dec. 5) documents the 2022 all-star concert that was the last major event produced there before all the multi-million-dollar work got underway. Brian Ray, a desert area resident known as Paul McCartney’s longtime bassist-guitarist, assembled the talent for the occasion. It included Alice Cooper, in fine voice; Paul Rodgers, in really fine voice (you’ll lament his not being able to make this year’s Rock Hall induction even ore after hearing him here); and guitar hotshot Orianthi and Queen of the Stone Age (and desert dweller) Josh Homme. The latter two team up for a duet of “Something Stupid,” paying homage to P.S.-er Sonny Bono, but nothing beats Alice starting the record off with “No More Mr. Nice Guy.” When the Plaza reopens next week with a Cynthia Erivo show, it’ll be gratifying proof that nice theaters finish first.
Joni Mitchell, “Rolling Thunder Revue”


(5,500 copies; single LP; black vinyl)
When Bob Dylan put out his “Rolling Thunder Revue” boxed set six years ago, commemorating the 1975-76 tour he did with a revolving roster of artists in a traveling circus-like atmosphere, one question a lot of music fans had was: Why only Bob? Where’s material from all the other performers? It’s still a long way from all of those additional performers being present and accounted for on similar retrospective releases. But at least Joni Mitchell has now released some of her own live sessions from the Revue. As is typical with a lot of Rhino RSD releases (like the Fleetwood Mac live album recommended above), Mitchell’s “Rolling Thunder Revue” is a vinyl pull-out from a much larger CD boxed set. In this case, these tracks were previously issued on the 2024 boxed set “Joni Mitchell Archives, Vol. 4: The Asylum Years (1976-1980)” (and some also appeared on an LP condensation of that collection). But does it make for a terrific stand-along release, whether you have that big box or (especially, obviously) if you don’t? Of course. A disclaimed on the back cover cautions that “some of these recordings were produced informally and on non-studio-grade equipment,” so there’s some variance in vintage quality. But getting these nine Joni performances in one ball of wax — complete with several introductions by Rolling Thunder ringmaster Bob Neuwirth — is a lovely memento of a time when the usually sensible Mitchell was convinced to run off with the circus. (Also: that cover photo.)Yusef Lateef, “Golden Flower: Live in Sweden”


(1,750 copies, numbered; 2 LPs; black vinyl)
Producer-archivist Zev Feldman didn’t just blow his creative brains out with the aforementioned Bad Brains release this time around. He kept himself busy with a surfeit of other releases closer to his traditional wheelhouse, including a B.B. King title, two separate live albums from Rahsaan Roland Kirk and this astounding release from sax and flute great Yusef Lateef. Feldman has already championed the latter multi-instrumentalist great with a 2024 release, and follows it up here with a double-LP that pairs two very different sets with very different ensembles — a 1967 TV taping with pianist Lars Sjösten, bassist Palle Danielson and drummer Albert “Tootie” Heath, and a 1972 festival gig with pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Bob Cunningham and Heath, both originally broadcast on Swedish radio. The extensive liner notes are, as usual for Elemental releases, a big part of the package (and another compelling reason to go for the large-format RSD vinyl and not the CD that’ll be out a week later). Among those contributing to the notes are Dave Matthews Band saxophonist Jeff Coffin, a disciple of Lateef’s who is the keeper of some of his most precious instruments, as well as Chico Freeman and memoir co-author Herb Boyd. Everyone in those notes describes Lateef’s style as indescribable, though you can’t blame them for trying. Lateef himself resisted the word “jazz,” which he considered corny, and preferred “autophysiopsychic.” Sure, we’ll go with that.
Billy Joel, “Live From Long Island”


(1,500 copies; three LPs; black vinyl)
Wait, only 1500 copies? Those are some old-school RSD numbers for as big an artist as Joel. They may be right to press it in that limited a quantity, or they may be crazy. In any case, this concert, which went down on Dec. 29, 1982 at the Nassau Coliseum during the “Nylon Curtain” tour, has a long history of being released in different formats, if not necessarily staying in print. The show was filmed and first released on VHS in 1983. It was remixed this decade by Brian Ruggles for inclusion in Joel’s “Album Collection Volume 2” boxed set of 2023, with five of the 22 songs in the new audio-only version having not been heard on the old home video release (“Don’t Ask Me Why,” “She’s Always a Woman,” “Goodnight, Saigon,” “Stiletto” and “Until the Night”). That boxed set will run you about $300, so if you want a solid live representation of the singer in one of his peak eras, you may be grateful for this much more affordable pull-out from that set. Even as Joel has had to remove himself from the road now due to health issues, interest may be as high as it’s been in eons due to the recent HBO documentary.Prince & the Revolution, “Around the World in a Day”


(1,985 copies; five 7″ singles; multiple vinyl colors)
The 40th anniversary of the album commonly referred to as “the followup to ‘Purple Rain’” is being commemorated with a clamshell-boxed set containing four 7-inch singles. Four are as they originally appeared in 1985 —”She’s Always in My Hair” shows up as the B-side to the two most famous of them, “Raspberry Beret” and “Pop Life.” The fifth single in the set presents two versions of “4 The Tears In Your Eyes,” which Prince first gave to the “We Are the World” charity album. After 40 years, “Around the World in a Day” has finally outgrown being underrated in the wake of the monster that immediately preceded it, and honoring its indelible singles makes for a swell birthday party. As for the unusual quantity specified for the release… we see what you did there, Sony Legacy.
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, “The Live Anthology – From the Vaults Vol. 1”


(7,500 copies; two LPs; turquoise vinyl)
Petty’s spectacular “Live Anthology” of 2009 was available in enough of a variety of formats to be slightly confusing to the consumer. If you really wanted the full enchilada, you bought a deluxe edition — only available via his webstore or via Best Byy (RIP to their social media) — that included a 14-track bonus CD. Now, those 14 numbers have finally been ripped to vinyl in the form of a double-LP with a foil-stamped numbered cover. None of these tracks, which range from hits like “I Need to Know” to a cover of “The Ballad of Easy Rider,” have appeared on vinyl before.B.B. King, “Broadcasting the Blues: Live from Germany & Sweden”


(2,500 copies; two LPs; black vinyl)
Two European concerts from 1968 and 1973, featuring Sonny Freeman and the Kingpins, and a full horn section for the Stockholm, all never before released. Derek Trucks is among those contributing to the copious liner notes.
Post Malone, “Long Bed”


(5,000 copies; single LP; orange vinyl)
In the case of both the Post Malone and Jelly Roll releases this year, they have taken all the tracks that amounted to bonus digital-only songs at the time and made a full separate vinyl album out of them. Here, for Posty, that means the first release in a physical format of nine tracks from the digital deluxe version of his country album “F-1 Trillion,” now issued separately and under a whole different name. Interestingly, nearly every track that originally appeared on the standard edition of that hit album was a duet with a country superstar, which may have counted as gilding the lily. These, though, are all solo tracks he might not have had as much confidence in, minus the guest star wattage; some fans have found some of these tunes actually superior to the duets.Jelly Roll, “Beautifully Broken (Pickin’ Up The Pieces)”


(8,000 copies; single LP; “tequila sunrise” vinyl)
See our notes on the Post Malone release, above. When this country star’s “Beautifully Broken” album came out last year, fans picking up the viny at the time couldn’t help but lament that it was missing 13 tracks from the concurrently released digital deluxe version. Well, here they are on vinyl at last, broken off into what amounts length-wise to a whole separate album and then some, available in physical format for the first time.Various Artists, “Jazz Dispensary: Green Bullets”


(4,100 copies; single LP; green vinyl)
If you revere the 1970s as the prime of a place where soul, funk and jazz came together, there’s nothing sweeter than Jazz Dispensary’s semiannual RSD releases, which seem to disappear faster off shelves every year, given their reputation for sterling, atmospheric compilations. This one, pressed on a very pretty, marbled green vinyl, describes itself as “soundtracking an imaginary 1970s action film about a heist gone very, very wrong.” A soundtrack for your every daily acitivity, heightened a little larger and more dangerous than life> That, too. The 1973-79 selections come from sources as varied as the Isaak Hayes Movement, Dizzy Gillespie and Merl Saunders.
Icona Pop, “I Love It (Feat. Charli XCX)”


(4,400 copies; single LP; green glow-in-the-dark vinyl)
Not nearly enough RSD vinyl pieces glow in the dark. We could use more, to light our way. To the rescue come Icona Pop and Charli XCX with their joint hit “I Love It,” the standard version of which is the leadoff track among these 10, followed by nine remixes of the very same number, in an example of variations on a theme as splendid excess.
Role Model, “Kansas Anymore (The Longest Goodbye)”


(3,000 copies; two LPs; colored vinyl)
The expanded version of his 2024 sophomore album adds four additional tracks to make it an RSD-exclusive double album — live versions of “Sally, When The Wine Runs Out” and “Some Protector” from a Vevo show, an acoustic version of “Deeply Still In Love,” and his collab with Laufey on “The Longest Goodbye,” which now lends this deluxe edition its subtitle. He says goodbye, but we say hello…King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, “Live in 24”


(1,500 copies; EP; shaped picture disc)
Shaped or die-cut vinyl used to be a staple of RSD, before the novelty wore off. King Gizzard is bringing it back with this paper airplane-shaped EP. The four song collection was inspired by the band’s “Flight b741” album and incorporates songs from various live recordings as part of the band’s Bootlegger series. Just don’t try sending it sailing through the air.Illenium, “In My Arms/Refuge”


(3,000 copies; 7″ single; shaped picture disc)
More shaped vinyl! King Gizzard can’t have all the fun with that this year. So Illenium has issued a phoenix-shaped picture disc of “In My Arms (feat. HAYLA)” b/w “Refuge (feat. Norma Jean Martine).”
Spinal Tap, “The End Continues”


(2,000 copies; single LP; black vinyl)
The RSD-exclusive version of what amounts to the soundtrack album for this year’s “This Is Spinal Tap” sequel includes some favorite reprises from the movie, like duets with Paul McCartney, Garth Brooks and Elton John (two, in the latter’s case). but it also throws in three original numbers that weren’t prominently featured in the film or included on other versions of the OST. Plus a poster and alternate cover art. But the main reason to pick this up, or at least our primary reason for including it in this roundup? The vinyl weight touted in the promotional copy says the record goes up to… 181 grams.
The full 2025 RSD Black Friday exclusives list
Here is the full list of exclusives for Record Store Day Black Friday 2025:
a-ha – Take on Me 40th Anniversary 12-inch
Jhene Aiko – Guidance / Sun/Son 7-inch
America – Hearts 50th Anniversary LP
Asking Alexandria – Asking Alexandria 2LP
Albert Ayler and Don Cherry – Europe 1964 4LP box set
The B-52’s – Wild Planet LP picture disc
Bad Brains – Live at the Bayou: Washington D.C. July 14, 1980 / March 15, 1981 LP
The Band – Jericho 2LP
James Bay – Chaos and the Calm LP
Matt Berninger – Get Sunk at Union Chapel: Live 10-inch
Ray Barretto – Together LP
Big Head Todd and the Monsters – Sister Sweetly LP
Black Kids – Partie Traumatic Deluxe Edition LP
Bluey – Bluey the Album 5th Birthday Zoetrope Edition 2LP
Benson Boone – Pulse 12-inch
Bratmobile – The Real Janelle and the Peel Session LP
Breather Resist – Charmer LP
Eric Burdon and War – The Very Best of Eric Burdon and War 2LP
Cage the Elephant – Live From the Vic in Chicago 2LP
Eric Carr from KISS – Rockology: The Liquid Vinyl Numbered Edition LP
Eric Carr from KISS – Unfinished Business: The Liquid Vinyl Numbered Edition LP
Phil Collins – 12”ers 12-inch
Alice Cooper – Welcome to My Nightmare Live From the Forum 6/17/75 2LP
Larry Coryell and the Eleventh House – Riviera ’76 LP
Creed – Live in San Antonio (11/14/1999) 2LP
Curren$y – Pilot Talk II LP
Ronnie D’Addario – Written by Ronnie D’Addario LP
Miles Davis – Live at the Plugged Nickel: December 23, 1965 Second Set 2LP
The Dead Milkmen – Big Lizard in My Backyard 40th Anniversary 2LP
John Debney – The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water 10th Anniversary Edition LP picture disc
Deee-Lite – The Very Best of Deee-Lite 2LP
Deltron 3030 – Deltron 3030 25th Anniversary 2LP and cassette
Devo – Merry Something to You 12-inch picture disc
The Dillinger Escape Plan – Under the Running Board 7-inch
Disclosure – The Singles Vol. 2 12-inch
Doctor Who – The Last Voyage 2LP
The Doors – Live in Copenhagen 1968 2LP
Dr. Dre – Compton: A Soundtrack by Dr. Dre (Instrumental Edition) 2LP
Dying Fetus – Into the Cesspool 12-inch die-cut picture disc
Bob Dylan – Masters of War (Live in Alan Lomax’s Apartment) 7-inch
Bob Dylan – The Original Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan LP
Billie Eilish – Live 10-inch
Danny Elfman – Big Top Pee-Wee: The Original Soundtrack Album LP picture disc
En Vogue – Born to Sing LP
The English Beat – The Beat at the BBC 2LP
Bill Evans – Portraits at the Penthouse: Live in Seattle LP
Sierra Ferrell – Trail of Flowers LP picture disc
The Flaming Lips – Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots Live at the Zoo Amphitheatre, Oklahoma City, August 30, 2024 2LP
Fleetwood Mac – Live 1975 2LP
Fred again.. – Actual Life Piano Live (20th November 2024) LP
Fred again.. – Actual Life 2 Piano Live (20th March 2022) LP
Fred again.. – Actual Life 3 Piano Live (22nd December 2022) LP
Ghost-Note – Fortified LP
Ghost – Skeleta LP picture disc
GloRilla – Ehhthang Ehhthang 2LP
Good Kid – Good Kid 1 2 3 4 2LP
Grateful Dead – The Warfield, San Francisco, CA Oct 4 and 6, 1980 2LP and 2CD
Grateful Dead – On a Back Porch Vol. 2 LP
Vince Guaraldi Trio – A Charlie Brown Christmas 60th Anniversary pop-up gatefold LP
Charlie Haden – Live at the Jazz Record Mart LP
George Harrison – Living in the Material World zoetrope LP
The Head and the Heart – Ghosts in the Machinery 12-inch
John Lee Hooker – Chill Out 30th Anniversary LP
Icona Pop – I Love It (feat. Charli XCX) 12-inch
Billy Idol – 77 12-inch picture disc
Illenium – In My Arms / Refuge 7-inch picture disc
In Flames – Breathing Fire: In Flames Live 2024 LP picture disc
INXS – Live From Royal Albert Hall London 1986 LP
Jazz Sabbath – Jazz Sabbath Live 2LP
Jelly Roll – Beautifully Broken (Pickin’ Up the Pieces) LP
Billy Joel – Live From Long Island 3LP
David Johansen and the Harry Smiths – David Johansen and the Harry Smiths LP and SACD
Elton John and Brandi Carlile – Who Believes in Angels? Live at the London Palladium 2LP
Larry June, 2 Chainz and the Alchemist – Life is Beautiful (Chopped Not Slopped) LP
Junior M.A.F.I.A. – Been Gettin’ Money: The Get Money 30th Anniversary 12-inch
Doug Katsaros – The Tick Original Soundtrack 2LP
Jorma Kaukonen – Wabash Avenue 2LP and CD
Kesha – Holiday Road 7-inch
B.B. King – Broadcasting the Blues: Live From Germany and Sweden 2LP
Marcus King – No Room for Blue 12-inch
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard – Live in 24 die-cut paper airplane-shaped vinyl
Rahsaan Roland Kirk – Seek and Listen: Live at the Penthouse 2LP
Rahsaan Roland Kirk – Vibrations in the Village: Live at the Village Gate 2LP
La Luz – Extra! Extra! 12-inch
Ladytron – Nightlife 2LP
Yusef Lateef – Golden Flower: Live in Sweden 2LP
Led Zeppelin – Trampled Under Foot 7-inch
Bill Lee – The Descendants of Mike and Phoebe: A Spirit Speaks Deluxe Edition LP
Little Brother – The Minstrel Show 20th Anniversary Deluxe Edition 2LP
Love – The Complete Elektra Albums 5LP box set
G. Love and Special Sauce – Ode to R.L. Boyce LP
Madness – Hit Parade LP
Maitreya Kali (Craig Smith) – Apache-Inca 2LP box set
Post Malone – Long Bed LP
Briston Maroney – Live at Red Rocks 2LP
Bruno Mars – It’s Better if You Don’t Understand 12-inch
Matchbox Twenty – Mad Season Live 2001 2LP
Curtis Mayfield – Curtis Rhino Reserve LP
Mister Romantic – Dream a Little Dream of Me 7-inch
Joni Mitchell – Rolling Thunder Revue LP
Montrose/Sammy Hagar – Live! KSAN Radio Session 1973 LP
Mötley Crüe – Home Sweet Home 12-inch picture disc
Motörhead – Live at Brixton ’87 LP
Larry Mullins and Mike Watt – We Will Fall LP
Municipal Waste – Massive Aggressive LP
Koh Nakagawa – Tokyo Gore Police 3LP
Neil Frances – Took a While / Stay Strong Play Long 2LP
Randy Newman – Trouble in Paradise: Demos LP
Olivia Newton-John – Xanadu Live and Remixed 7-inch
Nico – Live in Reims Cathedral December 13th, 1974 LP
The Notorious B.I.G. – Big Poppa (Remix) 12-inch
O.A.R. – Live From Madison Square Garden 3LP
Ol’ Dirty Bastard – Shimmy Shimmy Ya / Brooklyn Zoo 12-inch
Old and In the Way – Live at Sonoma State 11/4/73 2LP
OTTTO – Sweaty Pool 12-inch
Longineu Parsons – Longineu Parsons LP
Charley Patton – The Father of Delta Blues: Selections from Paramount Recordings Vol. 2 LP
Pelican – What We All Come to Need and Ephemeral 3LP
Linda Perry – In Flight 2LP
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – The Live Anthology Album Art Tee T-shirt
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – The Live Anthology: From the Vaults Vol. 1 2LP
Prince and the Revolution – Around the World in a Day 5×7-inch box set
Ramones – Live CBGB 1977 LP
Ratt – Invasion of Your Privacy 40th Anniversary 12-inch
Jonathan Richman – You Must Ask the Heart 30th Anniversary Edition LP
Chappell Roan – The Subway / The Giver 7-inch
Robbie Robertson – Filmworks: Insomnia LP
ROLE MODEL – Kansas Anymore (The Longest Goodbye) 2LP
The Rolling Stones – Their Satanic Majesties Request zoetrope LP
Linda Ronstadt – The Early Years 2LP
Todd Rundgren – A Capella LP
Seals and Crofts – Greatest Hits LP
Season to Risk – In a Perfect World LP
Alan Silvestri – The Back to the Future Trilogy LP
Sleigh Bells – Treats LP
Slo Burn – Amusing the Amazing 12-inch
Son Volt – Trace 30th Anniversary 2LP
Soul Coughing – Ruby Vroom Remixes LP
Spinal Tap – The End Continues Special RSD Edition LP
The Stranglers – Rattus Norvegicus LP
Sugar – Copper Blue: The Singles Collection 4×12-inch box set
Jesse Sykes and the Sweet Hereafter – Forever, I’ve Been Being Born LP
Talking Heads – Tentative Decisions: Demos and Live LP + 7-inch
Tangerine Dream – Live at Place des Arts Montreal April 10, 1977 3LP
Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee – Live From the Ash Grove LP
Thievery Corporation – Radio Retaliation 2LP
Touché Amoré – Chasing Brightness: The Complete BBC Sessions 2011-2025 2LP
2 Chainz – T.R.U. REALigion Anniversary Edition 2LP
Various Artists – Flowers in the Afternoon: Late 1960s Sunshine LP
Various Artists – Jazz Dispensary: Green Bullets LP
Various Artists – Metal Machine Music: Power to Consume Vol.1 2LP
Various Artists – Punk Goes Acoustic LP
Various Artists – Rent: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack 2LP
Various Artists – Rock The Plaza: Concert to Save the Historic Plaza Theatre in Palm Springs LP
Various Artists – What’s This World Coming To: Garage Rock From the Sun Records Vault LP
Various Artists – Watchmen: Music From the Motion Picture LP picture disc
Various Artists – Wicked for Good: The Soundtrack 2LP picture disc
Van Halen – Live at Wembley 1995 LP
Voivod – Lost Machine Live 2LP
Morgan Wade – The Party is Over: Last Call LP
T-Bone Walker – T-Bone Blues Expanded LP + 10-inch
Ween – Shinola Vol. 1 LP
Scott Weiland – If I Could Fly / Barbarella (Live) 7-inch
Wicked – Crosley Pink Wicked Cruiser Turntable Turntable
Wicked – Crosley Emerald Wicked Cruiser Turntable Turntable
Wilco/Jeff Tweedy/Daniel Johnston – dBpm 15 LP
Witch – Fool’s Ride LP
Bobby Womack – Live in London 2LP and CD
Dwight Yoakam – And Then I Wrote… The First Three Albums of the ’90s 4LP box set
Young Fresh Fellows – Loft LP
Lester Young – Lester Leaps In: Live at Birdland 1951-1952 LP
Warren Zevon – Epilogue: Live at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival 2LP
Jeremy Zuckerman – Avatar The Last Airbender Book 1: Water (Music From the Animated Series) 2LP
variety.com
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