Sold Date:
September 7, 2024
Start Date:
July 21, 2024
Final Price:
$65.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
409
Buyer Feedback:
0
Rare Beatles Thailand 7" HELP! (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack).
Both sleeve & record will be encased in separate protection sleeves & also extra protected in a top loader.
The record grade is Very Good. No skips but the a few of the songs have a "tinny" sound; predominantly on the guitar instrumentation
The song "A Hard Day's Night" seemingly (my personal opinion) the most noticeable.
I'm sure that this is not a defect of this particular copy, as my other copy has the same "tinny" sound.
The sleeve grading is Very Good+
There is a very small tear around the top right corner, and some minor staining around the sleeves edges.
Please judge it for yourself in the photos.
The catalogue number is TK-101 (Royal Sound being the variation label name).
The release year is probably 1965. (I don't believe that there is any official log or definite "knowing" of the year that these EPs were actually produced & released - it is all conjecture and assumptions in my honest opinion in most cases).
This first edition is a true rarity! This EP is a true gem for all who understand the rarity of these EPs & their investment potential. The record size is 7". The EP is written in English language and was manufactured in Thailand.
As I do when purchasing records, I believe it's best that customers judge the condition of the records that I list with their own opinions and personal standards for all aspects in the grade of a records.
I personally am extremely strict on grading records - I look for perfection in a record; and when perfection is far from the case, I am honest in my opinion on the grading of a record.
I do not edit the photos to make the images appear better than they are in reality. If I do photo editing at all it is to show the record as a whole as they truly are in reality.
One must always remember that these records I am offering for purchase - Thailand, Malaysian, Iranian - are subject to all kinds of weather and/or political upheaval related damage in almost all cases - not to mention the fact that most, if not all, are well over 50 years old and were not produced in the same numbers or quality that official releases were.
They were often only produced in well under a thousand copies, and the weather conditions these records were/are subjected to in Southeast Asia are far from ideal.