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Billy Super Duper

Billy Super Duper
Billy Super Duper (Album artwork).jpg
Studio album by Marc Bolan & T. Rex
Released 1982
Recorded 1972 and 1975 at Chateau d'Herouvile, France; 1977 at Decibel Studios, London; 1982 at Crescent Studios, Bath, England
Genre Glam rock
Label Marc on Wax
Producer Marc Bolan, John & Shan Bramley
T. Rex chronology
You Scare Me to Death
(1981)You Scare Me to Death1981
Billy Super Duper
(1982)
Dance in the Midnight
(1983)Dance in the Midnight1983
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3.5/5 stars

Billy Super Duper is an album by English glam rock act T. Rex. Released in 1982 by record label Marc on Wax, it was the first LP of entirely new and unheard material released after Marc Bolan's death in 1977 as the previous posthumous release, You Scare Me to Death consisted of demos first released in 1974. Billy Super Duper consists of studio outtakes and home demos recorded by the band between 1972 and 1977, with arrangements produced by John and Shan Bramley (the heads of the Marc Bolan Fanclub at the time). The album was intended to "complete" the demos and bring them up to date with contemporary music.

Billy Super Duper was released in 1982 by record label Marc on Wax. It did not chart in the United Kingdom.

The concept behind the album was to release songs that would be on Bolan's next album, which was to be titled Jack Daniels had he survived; however, several songs were recorded for the aborted 1975 concept album Billy Super Duper, and the title track led to the album taking this name. The album bears little resemblance to Bolan's intended rock opera and is missing several key tracks that were recorded for the album and were readily available to the producers.

This album remains to be the only way of hearing the song "Billy Super Duper" and the versions of "Depth Charge" and "Write Me a Song", which were never released in their unedited format. This led to many rumours being speculated about the fate of these tracks, including speculation that the producers permanently erased Bolan's guitar tracks or damaged the original tapes whilst editing them; in particular, the song "Billy Super Duper", which was originally fifteen minutes long, exists on this release at less than a third of its original length.


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