Sold Date:
December 10, 2017
Start Date:
December 3, 2017
Final Price:
$24.99
(USD)
Bid Count:
1
Seller Feedback:
3143
Buyer Feedback:
30
Juan Pablo Torres - Con Todos Los Hierros - Cuban Funk/Disco - Areito LD-3629 Juan Pablo Torres - Con Todos Los Hierros - Cuban Funk/Disco - Areito LD-3629
Juan Pablo Torres - Con Todos Los Hierros - Funk/Disco Cuba - Areito LD-3629
Ring wear, writing on sleeve, two clean labels, surface marks - nothing deep. VG/VG.
Tracklist A1 El Mansiero"His professional career began when in 1961 he entered as a bomber in the . Later entered the ENA, where he studied trombone with .
In 1967 he joined the Orchestra as a trombonist led by maestro and saxophonist .
In 1976 he founded the Group with which he updated some genres of Cuban dance music with a new timbre and original arrangements.
Between the years 1979-1980 formed part with his group of the musical production titled "The Danzón", with libreto of ;This show was playing for months at the of the and in that production was established a memorable musical dialogue between his trombone and the voice of the soprano .
In 1984 he recorded for ... In 1992 he settled in the United States where, among other things, he continued teaching, composed electronic music (fashionable at the time) and made recordings with the pianist .
As a trombone teacher he created an instrument so that future aerophone players could see for themselves the necessary pressures to be generated with the lips to obtain certain notes."
All records are strictly graded. Sleeves are graded first followed by the vinyl. Example: EX/VG. I have used both the Record Collector and Goldmine magazines standards to grade my records. Where indicated records are play graded (especially those of higher value) otherwise they are inspected under a strong light.
Pre-revolution labels like Panart, Puchito,Seeco, Duarte,Velvet Records and others from the 1950's as well as the post-revolution 1960's EGREM records were pressed using thick vinyl and generally will sound better than the 1970's and later Areito recordings. The pre-revolution records will often play better than they look.
M= Mint: refers to a brand new unplayed vinyl record.
NM = Near Mint: Record played only a few times with care. May have a few light marks when examined under a bright light otherwise appears new.
EX = Excellent: The record has some signs of being played but there is very little lessening in sound quality. The cover and packaging may have slight wear and/or small creasing. EX(-) is somewhere between VG and EX. A record with an EX(+) grade can be described as better than EX but not quite Near Mint.
VG = Very Good. The record has obviously been played many times but displays no major deterioration in sound quality despite noticeable surface marks and light scratches. Normal wear on the cover or extra items without any major defects is acceptable. VG(-) signifies a record has more surface noise as well as visual marking than a VG while VG(+) is not quite in the EX category.
GOOD: The record has been played so much that the sound quality has noticeably deteriorated and a lot of surface noise can be heard. The cover and contents suffer from folding, scuffing of edges, ring wear, spine splits, discolouration, etc.
FAIR: The record is only just playable and has not been taken care of. There is considerable surface that impacts on the playback, The record may jump or skip. The cover and contents will be torn, stained, water damaged and/or defaced.
Poor: The record will not play properly and skip and/or jump throughout many tracks. The cover will be badly damaged and/or partly mussing.
Bad: The record is unplayable and may be broken. This type of record is used only as a collection filler and I will only sell such a record if it is extremely rare to obtain.