We missed concerts. And album release parties. Even televised performances in front of live audiences.
Now it's the holiday season, and another round of the COVID blues is upon us, thanks to the surge in cases, government rules and CDC recommendations. We need music more than ever.
So we've compiled a gift guide for music lovers on your holiday shopping list. Stuff that won't need to be returned the day after the gifts are opened. Some recordings, books, gift cards and even special items for fans of two special artists, Taylor Swift and Bob Dylan.
Recordings
Prince, "Sign o' the Times" super-deluxe reissue: Expanded to 92 tracks, his best studio album is given a gloriously glam redo that abundantly shows how hyper-productive, insanely creative and stylistically diverse this one-man Minneapolis band was in 1985-87. A live European concert and a DVD of Prince's 1987 New Year's Eve gig with guest Miles Davis at the then-recently opened Paisley Park are testament to his spectacular prowess as a performer and bandleader. This super-deluxe set is indisputable weighty evidence that Prince was the complete rock star. (Warner Bros., $160)
Elvis Presley, "From Elvis in Nashville": Whether you consider this 1970 material overlooked or underrated, there is no question that the King did some of his best singing ever in these Nashville sessions, which led to three albums after his run of made-in-Memphis hits in '69. Whether on outtakes or previously released versions, Elvis' passion, commitment and versatility shine through on "Bridge Over Troubled Water," "Funny How Time Slips Away," "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me," a spontaneous and rollicking "I Got My Mojo Workin'," and many other remarkably Southern soul tracks in this four-CD compilation. (Sony Legacy, $45)
The Replacements, "Pleased to Meet Me" deluxe: Minneapolis' ne'er-do-well rock legends are apparently doing well as a Warner Bros. catalog act. Their second box set in as many years expands their transformative, Memphis-made 1987 album into a three-CD, one-LP collection. Highlights include newly unearthed demos with soon-to-be-fired guitarist Bob Stinson and the era's many unreleased songs, such as "Birthday Gal" and "Election Day." It's a bit much, but die-hard 'Mats fans still can't get enough. ($65)
Bob Mould, "Distortion": Alongside his ultra-roaring 2020 album, "Blue Hearts," the ex-Minneapolitan indie-rocker also bundled together his post-Hüsker Dü catalog into two tidy, deeply detailed packages. The 24-disc CD set has everything, from 1989's "Workbook" on up to 2019's "Sunshine Rock." The eight-LP, 140-gram vinyl set only goes up to 1995 but is probably more enticing to fans who already — and only — own that stuff on CD, including the output by his other power trio, Sugar. ($135 for CD set, $187 for LPs)
Sade, "This Far": What a perfect year to revisit the healing, empowering, soulful albums by one of pop/R&B music's most soothing voices. All six of her studio LPs from 1984 to 2010 — also of the era to now be buried in fans' CD or cassette bins — have been remastered and pressed to 180-gram vinyl for this collector's set. ($180)