Warner Records Vinyl, CDs & Cassettes
Talking Heads – Stop Making Sense (2-LP Vinyl) Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers – Live At The Fillmore, 1997 (4-CD Box Set) Red Hot Chili Peppers – Greatest Hits (CD) Emmylou Harris – Songs Of The West (CD) Emmylou Harris – Profile 2-Best Of (CD) Gary Clark Jr. – Live North America 2016 (CD) The Meters – Now Playing (LP Vinyl) Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers – Echo (2-LP Vinyl) Dire Straits – Money For Nothing (2-LP Vinyl) Talking Heads – Speaking in Tongues (CD) Tom Petty – Wildflowers (One-Step 2-LP Vinyl) Tom Petty – Wildflowers & All the Rest (4-CD) Brad Mehldau – The Art of The Trio, Vol. 4: Back At The Vanguard (CD) The Black Keys – Peaches! (Cassette) The Black Keys – Peaches! (LP Vinyl) The Black Keys – No Rain, No Flowers (CD) The Black Keys – Peaches! (CD) Red Hot Chili Peppers – Return of the Dream Canteen (2-LP Vinyl) Red Hot Chili Peppers – One Hot Minute (LP Vinyl) The Black Keys – No Rain, No Flowers (LP Vinyl) Fleetwood Mac – Mirage Tour 82 (3-LP Vinyl) Joni Mitchell – Hits (CD) Red Hot Chili Peppers – Californication (180 Gram 2xLP Vinyl) Green Day – Father of All… (LP Vinyl)
Warner Records has been around since 1958, founded as the music arm of the Warner Bros. film studio and eventually growing into one of the most consequential labels in popular music history. The story of how it got there is worth knowing, because it explains why the catalog looks the way it does.
The turning point was the early 1960s, when the label acquired Reprise Records from Frank Sinatra and began building a philosophy around artist freedom that was genuinely unusual for the era. That reputation attracted a remarkable range of people over the decades. Fleetwood Mac made some of their defining records here. So did James Taylor, Van Halen, Prince, the Grateful Dead, Black Sabbath, and the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Arlo Guthrie's Alice's Restaurant found its home on Warner. So did early Joni Mitchell, the Doobie Brothers, and the Faces.
What comes through across all of it is range. This is a label that could sign a country-tinged folk singer and a heavy metal band in the same year and make both feel equally at home, because the thing they were actually selling was the artist, not a sound.
The records in this collection pull from across that history. Some are cornerstones of collections people have been building for decades. Others are the kind of thing you find and wonder how it slipped past you the first time around. Either way, you're shopping from a catalog that shaped a large portion of what rock and roll became.