The Libertines' debut album, Up the Bracket, turns 20 in October, and to celebrate, Rough Trade Records is reissuing the album in a variety of formats, including remastered vinyl editions and a deluxe box set with 65 bonus tracks. It's due out on October 21.
In addition to the remastered version of the original album, the Up the Bracket box set includes demos, studio outtakes, radio sessions, b-sides and live recordings -- including their entire April 10, 2002 performance at London's 100 Club -- a DVD of their videos and television appearances, and cassette of their earliest demos. There's also a 60 page booklet featuring new interviews with the band, a foreward by Matt Wilkinson, rare archival photos, and memorabilia.
The double-LP vinyl edition comes with a bonus 7" single featuring "A Time for Heroes" and a demo of "The 7 Deadly Sins." You can check out the box set packaging and tracklist below.
Led by Pete Doherty and Carl Barat, The Libertines were a genuine sensation in the UK. They projected an image that was as much a gang as as a band, four inseparable mates against the world, with a shambolic style that always seemed (and actually was) on the verge of falling apart, which was part of the appeal. (Doherty's problems with substance abuse were as written about as their music, if not more.) Produced by The Clash's Mick Jones, Up the Bracket managed to catch lightning in a bottle with such classics as "Time for Heroes," "I Get Along," "Boys in the Band," and the title track. You can listen to the original album below.
The Libertines are also celebrating Up the Bracket's 20th anniversary live this summer, including a just announced show at London's Wembley Arena on July 23. Also on the bill are two bands who sprung up in the wake of Up the Bracket, The Cribs and The Paddingtons, as well as Louis Dunford and Amazonica.