Canadian rock legends TRIUMPH will release a 40th-anniversary box set of their classic 1981 album “Allied Forces” to celebrate this year’s Record Store Day. In addition, the trio — drummer Gil Moore, guitarist/vocalist Rik Emmett and bassist Mike Levine — has been named Canadian Ambassadors for Record Store Day, which takes place June 12 and July 17.

“We’re really proud to be this year’s ambassadors,” Moore said in a video message.

“When I got interested in music, my buddies and I in the neighborhood, we had a pilgrimage pretty much every weekend. On Saturday morning, we’d all get to the bus station and get ourselves downtown. And here in Toronto, we had Sam The Record Man on Yonge Street, which was the record store that was the ‘be all, end all’ of vinyl… That’s what got me started playing drums,” he explained.

“So make your way over to your local record store and parse through those beautiful vinyl records, find some music that you wanna fall in love with, and turn it up loud.”

The TRIUMPH box set, due out June 12 via Round Hill Records, will include the following:

* Vinyl #1: Picture disc of original “Allied Forces” studio album
* Vinyl #2: 2xLP live in cleveland 1981
* Vinyl #3: 7″ single – tribute 2021
* Version of “Allied Forces” + “Magic Power” live from Ottawa 1982 (never before released)
* 11×17 Maple Leaf Gardens Poster (Canada exclusive)
* 24-page booklet featuring rare photos and behind the scenes + “Allied Forces” essay
* 40th-anniversary “Allied Forces” retro tour book
* 40th-anniversary “Allied Forces” retro tour poster
* 40th-anniversary “Allied Forces” retro tour pass
* Rik pics (three hand-drawn cartoons)
* Handwritten lyrics (“Magic Power”, “Allied Forces” and “Fight The Good Fight”)

“We’re extremely proud of ‘Allied Forces’,” Levine said in a press release. “It was the record that started the global rocket ride for us. And we’re also excited to share with our fans some really great moments from our archives with this box set.”

TRIUMPH reformed its classic lineup of Moore, Emmett and Levine for an invite-only event in November 2019 at Moore‘s MetalWorks studio in Mississauga (a suburb of Toronto), Ontario, Canada. The reunion — which was taped for the forthcoming documentary “Triumph: Lay It On The Line” — stoked discussion whether the band would join the ranks of other veteran rockers for a reunion tour.

In an interview with Canada’s The Metal Voice, Moore was asked about the possibility of new music from TRIUMPH in the not-too-distant future. He responded: “It’s hard to say. There’s nothing stopping us. Obviously, MetalWorks is still there.

“We played three songs in the film, and they’re recorded,” he continued. “So, actually, that live performance is part of the documentary. And Mike and Rik and I have kicked around the idea of going back in the studio. Mike and I recorded a little bit on Rik‘s last album.

“We’re all quite busy, so finding the time to do it, and the musical inspiration and so on, it could happen. We’ll see.”

TRIUMPH hasn’t released a studio album since 1992’s “Edge Of Excess”.

Back in 2016, Moore and Levine reunited with Rik as special guests on the “RES 9” album from Emmett‘s band RESOLUTION9.

After 20 years apart, Emmett, Levine and Moore played at the 2008 editions of the Sweden Rock Festival and Rocklahoma. A DVD of the historic Sweden performance was made available four years later.

Emmett has said in various interviews over the years that he would welcome the chance to play TRIUMPH songs with Moore and Levine again but that those two have been reluctant to commit. “If the carrot was big enough and golden enough, I think it would make Mike and Gil, but especially Gil, do it,” Emmett told the QMI Agency back in 2012.

Moore, Levine, and Emmett formed TRIUMPH in 1975, and their blend of heavy riff-rockers with progressive odysseys, peppered with thoughtful, inspiring lyrics and virtuosic guitar playing quickly made them a household name in Canada. Anthems like “Lay It On The Line”, “Magic Power” and “Fight The Good Fight” broke them in the USA, and they amassed a legion of fiercely passionate fans. But, as a band that suddenly split at the zenith of their popularity, TRIUMPH missed out on an opportunity to say thank you to those loyal and devoted fans, a base that is still active today, more than three decades later.

Comments

comments