GENRE; Pop/Rock
RELEASE DATE; 12 December, 2025
RATING; 4/5
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Studio Albums 1970–1977 collects T. Rex’s eight canonical records into a single, lovingly assembled box that traces Marc Bolan’s transformation from whimsical folk-poet to glam-rock visionary. Released by Edsel/Demon on December 12, 2025, the set reproduces the original LP artwork, includes a booklet of new notes and full lyrics, and appends era-appropriate singles as bonus tracks — a handy, authoritative archive for newcomers and completists alike.
Listening straight through, the arc of Bolan’s ambition is impossible to miss. Early tracks still carry Tyrannosaurus Rex’s pastoral mystique, but by Electric Warrior and The Slider he’s forged a compact alchemy of swaggering riff, glittering texture and nursery-rhyme lyricism — “Bang a Gong (Get It On)” and “Metal Guru” remain as immediate as ever. Later records such as Tanx and Bolan’s Zip Gun show a restless inventor experimenting with fuller production and occasional missteps, yet even their flaws retain an odd charisma that rewards repeat plays.
Sonically, these transfers feel warm without being syrupy; the collection’s sequencing highlights how hooks and atmosphere sustain Bolan’s songs regardless of arrangement. The inclusion of standalone singles as CD-only bonuses and the booklet’s contextual notes add value for collectors; casual listeners will find Electric Warrior and The Slider alone worth the price of admission.
If the set has limits, they’re the inevitable gaps any decade-spanning anthology faces: rarities fiends may crave alternate takes, and vinyl purists might prefer original pressings. Nonetheless, The Studio Albums 1970–1977 stands as an essential, well-curated portrait of Bolan’s peak years — messy, glittering, human, frequently sublime, and proof that glam rock still rewards close attention. The packaging is tasteful and informative, and the box makes a persuasive case: play it loud, play it again — Bolan’s songs reveal new charms with every spin.