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The Second Golden Age of Vinyl: The 10 Best Reissues This Year

Written by on November 26, 2025

If you’re looking for vinyl records that sound better than streaming, it’s a great time to be a music fan. For years, executives wondered how big the vinyl business could get — I remember being told it would peak soon in 2014, when the format accounted for $315 million in U.S. revenue, according to the RIAA, or 6.5% of the recorded music business. (Last year vinyl brought in $1.4 billion, or 7.9% of the U.S. total, just under the size of the U.S. Latin business.) For years, labels had a hard time just producing enough vinyl to meet demand. Now that these issues are sorted out, however, they are turning their attention to making better — and more expensive — vinyl.

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Some of the prices are surprisingly high — but, often, so is the quality. This fall, Interscope introduced its Definitive Sound Series (DSS) with deluxe editions of Dr. Dre’s The Chronic and A Perfect Circle’s Mer De Noms that sell for $125 each — they are made with a “one-step” process where a stamper is created directly from a master lacquer — and many albums from specialty reissue labels like Mobile Fidelity and Analogue Productions cost $60 or more. Warner Music Group’s Rhino and Universal Music Enterprises each started two new lines of reissues — Rhino High Fidelity and the more reasonable Rhino Reserve; and Verve Vault and Vinylphyle. This is the best time to be a vinyl fan since the format was phased out in the late ’80s. 

For labels, the appeal of these releases is obvious: They can sell the same albums again, for more money, whether they do it themselves or license the recordings to an independent reissue label like Mobile Fidelity or Analogue Productions. I have now owned at least five copies of the first Velvet Underground album — a CD, a box-set reissue, a scratchy flea market record, a good vinyl reissue and this new Vinylphyle reissue — which is good business for an album that peaked at No. 171 on what was then the Billboard Top LPs chart.  I think the Vinylphyle record sounds better than any of them, so it’s worth it. 

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Do audiophile reissues really sound so much better? Is there really such a big difference? The answer is that it depends — first on whether you have a stereo and turntable good enough to get the most out of great vinyl, and then on the original source of the audio (analog or digital), the mastering, even the pressing plant. The jargon can get a bit thick — one-step process, half-speed mastering — so I listened closely and I found that many of this year’s high-end vinyl reissues sound obviously and significantly better than other versions of the albums. Here is a highly unscientific list of 10 of my favorites from 2025. 

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