Joy Division - Heart and Soul Box - 4 CDs - Rhino (2001) 

This 4 CD box with 81 tracks was released by Rhino in 2001 celebrating the enduring legacy of Joy Division. The box itself is in very good condition with some wear on the front and back covers and inside from being stored in a box for 15 years. The corners are definitely worn. There is a cut in the UPC on the back cover. The 4 discs have never been played. The booklet is included and in excellent shape. Please check the photos. Sorry that some are out of focus. 
Please ask if you have any questions. 

No international buyers. Paypal only.
This will be carefully packed and shipped once payment is received. 

Detailed item info

Album Features
UPC:081227840624
Artist:Joy Division
Format:CD
Release Year:2001
Record Label:Rhino/Warner Bros. (Label)
Genre:Alternative
Number Of Discs:4

Track Listing
DISC 1:
1. Digital
2. Glass
3. Disorder
4. Day of the Lords
5. Candidate
6. Insight
7. New Dawn Fades
8. She's Lost Control
9. Shadowplay
10. Wilderness
11. Interzone
12. I Remember Nothing
13. Ice Age
14. Exercise One
15. Transmission
16. Novelty
17. The Kill
18. The Only Mistake
19. Something Must Break
20. Autosuggestion
21. From Safety to Where...?

DISC 2:
1. 12" version) She's Lost Control 12 - (mix
2. Sound of Music
3. Atmosphere
4. Dead Souls
5. Komakino
6. Incubation
7. Atrocity Exhibition
8. Isolation
9. Passover
10. Colony
11. Means to an End
12. Heart and Soul
13. Twenty Four Hours
14. The Eternal
15. Decades
16. Love Will Tear Us Apart
17. These Days

DISC 3:
1. Warsaw
2. No Love Lost
3. Leaders of Men
4. Failures
5. The - (previously unreleased) Drawback
6. Interzone - (previously unreleased)
7. Shadowplay - (previously unreleased)
8. Exercise One
9. Insight - (previously unreleased)
10. Glass - (previously unreleased)
11. Transmission - (previously unreleased)
12. Dead Souls - (previously unreleased)
13. Something Must Break - (previously unreleased)
14. Ice Age - (previously unreleased)
15. Walked in Line - (previously unreleased)
16. These Days - (previously unreleased)
17. Candidate - (previously unreleased)
18. The - (previously unreleased) Only Mistake
19. Chance (Atmosphere) - (previously unreleased)
20. Love Will Tear Us Apart
21. Colony
22. As You Said
23. Ceremony - (previously unreleased)
24. In a Lonely Place (Detail) - (previously unreleased)

DISC 4: LIVE PERFORMANCES:
1. live) Dead Souls - (previously unreleased
2. The - (previously unreleased, live) Only Mistake
3. live) Insight - (previously unreleased
4. live) Candidate - (previously unreleased
5. live) Wilderness - (previously unreleased
6. live) She's Lost Control - (previously unreleased
7. live) Disorder - (previously unreleased
8. live) Interzone - (previously unreleased
9. live) Atrocity Exhibition - (previously unreleased
10. live) Novelty - (previously unreleased
11. live) Autosuggestion - (previously unreleased
12. live) I Remember Nothing - (previously unreleased
13. live) Colony - (previously unreleased
14. live) These Days - (previously unreleased
15. live) Incubation - (previously unreleased
16. The - (previously unreleased, live) Eternal
17. live) Heart and Soul - (previously unreleased
18. live) Isolation - (previously unreleased
19. live) She's Lost Control - (previously unreleased

Details
Playing Time:308 min.
Distributor:WEA (Distributor)
Recording Type:Studio
Recording Mode:Stereo
SPAR Code:n/a

Album Notes
HEARTANDSOUL includes the complete albums UNKNOWN PLEASURES (1979) and CLOSER (1980) as well as early demos when the band was called Warsaw, rarities, outtakes and singles. The whole of Disc 4 features previously unreleased live recordings.Joy Division: Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Bernard Sumner, Stephen Morris.Producers include: Martin Hannett, Martin Rushnet, Stuart James, Tony Wilson, Bob Sargeant.Compilation producer: Jon Savage.Recorded between 1977 and 1980. Includes liner notes by Peter Morley, Jean-Pierre Turmel and Jon Savage.With the exception of Joy Division's last single, Love Will Tear Us Apart, which faded out gradually into the anguished silence of singer Ian Curtis' suicide, none of the band's songs ever really ended; they either fell apart or collapsed, as if to bring about a proper end to something beyond their grasp. Joy Division couldn't stand still. After introducing the listener to a world of shadow, unspeakable beauty, hopeless vulnerability, terror, and love so pure it contains loss and death, not only in Curtis' lyrics but in the music's totality and power, the band needed to move on to the next signpost, the next weighstation of the unknowable. In the late '70s, in the aftermath of punk's self-consuming, self-absorbed disintegration, Joy Division changed everything. This quartet from Manchester, England, went, in a very brief time, from just another three-chord-wielding bunch of louts called Warsaw, who took themselves too seriously, to become an entity that challenged you to believe that music could take you to places you never really dreamed you could go, and perhaps never wanted to. This four-CD box set, comprising 80 tracks (about five hours), includes virtually everything the band ever recorded. It was originally issued in the U.K. in 1997, and available only sporadically as a ridiculously expensive import. The Warner Bros. edition is identical with the exception of the quality of the paper stock used on the box's cover; it's a bit thinner, but also a bit glossier, so it's a tradeoff (this writer prefers the American issue). It contains all of the Warsaw material, both studio albums (Unknown Pleasures and Closer), all of the singles, live material, both John Peel sessions, and a number of studio demos and alternate takes. Among the singles, there are the tracks from the very-limited-edition Sordide Sentimental single "Atmosphere" b/w "Dead Souls" and the Earcom 2 compilation tracks "Autosuggestion" and "From Safety to Where...?" There are even early, rough studio versions of "Ceremony" and "In a Lonely Place" with Curtis on vocals; these songs comprised New Order's first single when the remaining band members continued after Curtis' death. As Paul Morley states so accurately in his liner notes: "Joy Division showed me with a dizzying dip of the mind, the dark."The package is handsome beyond belief, a long box that presents itself like a landscape designed in typical Factory Records fashion by Peter Saville, Jon Wozencroft, and Howard Wakefield. There are plenty of gorgeous photographs and plenty to read, not only by Morley and John Savage but also reflections by the remaining bandmembers themselves. The lyrics are all here, courtesy of Deborah Curtis, Ian's widow. But package and legend aside, it's the music that is most mysterious. Nearly 20 years after the band's dissolution, it still sounds so forward, so out of time and place as to be not only current but also perhaps even timeless. In four minutes of any Joy Division song, one could enter worlds of pain, loss, rage, and rebirth (or, alternately, travel those worlds in the reverse order). Influenced by the Velvet Underground and punk rock, Joy Division went far beyond those entities in search of something that was unobtainable in rock & roll. Rock was only the place where these artists looked together to make the world of appearances disappear

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