The album was originally released on
cassette and
LP. The American edition, released by
Uni Records prior to its merger with the Decca and
Kapp labels to form
MCA Records, went out of print following the release of Newton-John's 1973 album,
Let Me Be There, and became a rare collector's item. However, the original American edition of
Let Me Be There features six tracks from
If Not for You. The album was first released on CD in Japan in 1990 as part of the EMI Pastmasters series (Cat.# CP21-6074). The album was simply called
Olivia Newton-John, which was the full title of the original vinyl / cassette release in England in 1971. (It was initially released as
Olivia Newton-John in England, and
If Not for You in foreign territories, including the US and Australia.) This EMI 1990 CD release did not feature any of the original album artwork. Instead, the front cover photo is a "live" picture of Olivia from a 1977 appearance in Japan. The packaging included a Japanese-language
obi, and a folded white paper insert, containing all the song lyrics in English on one side, and in Japanese on the other. In Australia, Festival Records re-released the album on
CD in 1993 and also in a digitally remastered edition along with other albums of Newton-John's discography in 1998. In this latter case, at least the first run of the remastered CD release (Festival Cat.# D34320 / D19809) was seriously botched. The first track on the album, "Me and Bobby McGee", was missing entirely from the CD; thus the CD started with the Bread cover, "If", and contained only 11 of the 12 songs. Further, three of the latter songs on this release were out of sequence, though the CD labeling lists all 12 original songs in their original sequence. However, the overall sonic quality of the 1998 remastered edition was praised. == Track listing ==