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Dinosaur Jr.

Without A Sound (2025 Reissue)

Limited Green Splatter LP - £31.99 | Pre Order
Originally released in the summer of 1994 at the height of interest in the US underground rock scene, ‘Without A Sound’ was Dinosaur Jr’s sixt...
Dinosaur Jr.

Farm (15th Anniversary Edition)

limited deluxe lime green 2LP with 4 bonus tracks - £37.99 | Buy
This expanded deluxe edition of 'Farm' features four songs never pressed to vinyl and never given worldwide release:“Houses”, “Wheneve...
Dinosaur Jr.

WITHOUT A SOUND (deluxe expanded edition)

limited remastered yellow 2lp in gatefold sleeve - £36.99 | Buy
this Remastered and expanded edition of the hit 6th album Includes related B-sides and never-before-on-vinyl live tracks.
Dinosaur Jr.

Beyond (15th Anniversary)

Limited Purple & Green LP - 1 per customer - £21.99 | Buy
Celebrating the 15th anniversary since its original release, Dinosaur Jr is reissuing “Beyond” on limited edition coloured vinyl with a special edit...
Bug (2023 reissue)
  1. Freak Scene
  2. No Bones
  3. They Always Come
  4. Yeah We Know
  5. Let It Ride
  6. Pond Song
  7. Budge
  8. The Post
  9. Don't
  10. Keep The Glove

Dinosaur Jr.

Bug (2023 reissue)

Baked Goods Records
  • CD

    Released: 17th Mar 2023

    £11.99
    Buy

'Bug' is dinosaur jr.

's third studio album originally released in 1988. It was the last Dinosaur Jr album with original bassist Lou Barlow until Beyond in 2007. NME critic Jack Barron deemed Bug "the most comprehensive rock statement of the year so far" in a 1988 review for the magazine, noting Dinosaur Jr.'s predominantly "torpid" approach and commenting that the music "trepidates everyday reality away", while rating the album "8.999999" on a ten-point scale. In a retrospective review of Bug for AllMusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine described "Freak Scene" as the album's "masterpiece" and opined, "Although the majority of the album is firmly situated in the sprawling, noisy metallic fusion of hard rock and avant noise, Bug also demonstrates that J Mascis has a talent for winding folk-rock". While finding its songs "quite uneven", Erlewine concluded that the album nonetheless constitutes "a major step forward for Mascis". Writing for Drowned in Sound in 2005, Mike Diver said of Bug, "The songwriting has increased tenfold since You're Living All Over Me ... really, if you like music – be it grunge, indie, punk, whatever – you will love this. Period. Go spend some money already." Keith Cameron of Mojo wrote, "Bug marks the emergence of Mascis writing by rote. When applied to such an outlandishly great song as 'Freak Scene' his skills still blazed, however, and as formulaic exercises in discordant alienation go, Bug is better than most