L 29511 for the LP and C 29511 for the cassette. Platterlog only listed the album titles, no track listings, but I suspect all three formats were imports, so see the linked GNP Crescendo release.
Good to know. Surely the catalogue number must be different for the tape/vinyl/CD though. Is there a track list? It would be good to add it here if so. (Probably the same as the usual Pye release.)
I've just looked in my Platterlogs, and the CD is in the new release sheet for 3rd February 1992. The album had previously been released on LP and cassette (the former deleted by the time the CD came out), probably both released during 1989, as they don't appear in the February 1989 main catalogue, nor in the weekly release sheets after that, but do appear in the February 1990 catalogue. Looking in Billboard, BMG (later Sony BMG) didn't acquire Vogue until June 1992. I would have thought that after PRT's demise and the acquisition of their catalogue by Castle, that Australian rights would have transferred from PolyGram to Castle's Australian subsidiary, but I always find Petula's contractual situation(s) confusing, so it probably wasn't that simple.
Thanks for the info. It's very complicated. I believe Sony/BMG owned the rights in France, the USA and Australia. In the UK, PRT became Castle (I think) and then Sanctuary, and they had the rights here and in possibly some other territories. I don't know at what point things changed because Astor was indeed the licensee in Australia.
But by 1992 that reissue must have been a CD, you're right. Although it could still have been issued on vinyl too. It's quoted on a listing here Australian record labels website
The Festival CD was most probably the US CD on GNP Crescendo imported to Australia and stickered with Festival's number; IIRC, most, if not all, of Festival's 29500 series were imports. GNP Crescendo would have picked this up for the US due to their longstanding reciprocal agreement with Pet's French label Vogue, but I don't know that Festival should have had the Australian rights, as Pet was historically on Astor along with the rest of the Pye roster, and Astor was absorbed into PolyGram in the early 1980s, and PRT Records (the renamed Pye) continued under PolyGram's distribution. But did Pet's Pye/PRT catalogue revert to Vogue after PRT's demise?