Yeah Yeah Yeahs are reissuing their debut album Fever to Tell. Out October 20 via Interscope/UMe, the reissue will feature previously unreleased demos, B-sides, and other rarities from the era. There’s also a new documentary about their “near downfall” called There Is No Modern Romance, which is compiled from 2003 tour footage. To celebrate the reissue, they’ll play a pair of shows: one at L.A.’s Fonda Theatre (October 25) and another at Brooklyn’s Kings Theatre (November 7); they also have festival sets at the Growlers Six and Sound on Sound. Among the previously unheard recordings is “Shake It”; check that out below.

In a press release, the band said:

A friend of a friend kept asking if we were ever gonna put Fever to Tell out on vinyl as it hasn’t been on vinyl in 10 years. That’s not right. So here it is on vinyl for the first time in 10 years plus a time capsule of photos, demos (1st ever recorded,) a mini film documenting our near downfall and other fun memorabilia, from the turn of the century NYC, made with love + the usual blood, sweat + tears of Yeah Yeah Yeahs.

The Deluxe Box—numbered, signed, wrapped in fishnet stockings, and limited to 2,000 copies worldwide—comes with two newly remastered LPs. It features nine previously unreleased demos, eight B-sides and rarities (two of which were previously unreleased), and five newspaper lyric posters. It also includes pages from Karen O’s notebook, a 164-page hardbound book of Nick Zinner’s personal photos, and more. There’s also a custom champagne cork 8GB USB stick containing video content and the vinyl’s 29 audio tracks. Find the box set tracklist here.

Besides the documentary, the video component includes a set of interviews by Lance Bangs and Spike Jonze, official videos for the album’s singles, and a live set recorded at Fillmore San Francisco. In addition to the record’s assorted rarities, four unreleased demos exclusively feature on a cassette available to the first 500 Deluxe Box buyers; “Phone Jam” is among the tracks. A slimmer version of the reissue will contain the remastered vinyl and newspaper posters.

Revisit “Nick Zinner Tells the Stories Behind 9 of His 601 Photos” on the Pitch.