De La Soul ‎– 3 Feet High And Rising - SEALED New VMP Vinyl Me Please Record LP

Sold Date: June 25, 2020
Start Date: June 23, 2020
Final Price: $399.00 $170.00 (USD)
Seller Feedback: 134
Buyer Feedback: 0


De La Soul ‎– 3 Feet High And Rising - SEALED New VMP Vinyl Me Please Record LP. Condition is New. Shipped with USPS Media Mail.


From VinylMeRecords:


Why We Picked This Record


Andrew Winistorfer: This is a title that, at least as long as I’ve been at Vinyl Me, Please, has been one of the most requested Records of the Month. Everytime we do a classic rap album, there’s people on social media saying, “Why haven’t you done 3 Feet High and Rising?” which became especially loud when we did Buhloone Mindstate last year in Rap & Hip Hop. It’s been big on our surveys, too. Sometimes, the answer here is as simple as people want this record, this record rules, we love this record and we can put it out. We’re just giving the people what they want. Just so happens they want one of the best rap albums of all time.


Cameron Schaefer, Vinyl Me, Please Head of Music: This feels like the feeling I had when we did Ready to Die. We’re known for doing the less obvious stuff, but sometimes, this is one of the best records that’s ever been made, and I want it. One of the benefits of working at Vinyl Me, Please in the capacity that we do is that we’re in a position where we can sort of curate to our own wants and record collections (laughs).


You’re talking to someone who has used Classics as basically that for more than a year now, so, agreed (laughs).


Yeah, I want a really good remastered reissue of 3 Feet High and Rising, and now we’re going to get it.


And since this is a record that got in before rap sampling costs got out of control, it’s one of the rare records that exists as it did back then in vinyl form, but because of the way their contracts were written, it would cost thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars for this to ever make it to streaming services intact, so the best way to hear it is on vinyl.


This album was born to be played on vinyl, too; all the samples were sourced from old records, so this should be heard on record in its best form.


Another fun fact is that this is our first ever ’80s album in Essentials. We did Queen Latifah in Rap & Hip Hop last summer, but in six-plus years of being a club, this is our first ’80s album in our main subscription. It’s not like we actively avoided that decade or even tried to do one on purpose, but it’s crazy that it took this long. People are always like, “When are you going to do an ’80s album?” and I’m sure they mean Kajagoogoo. But this is ’80s. We did it!


Yeah, that’s nuts. In some ways, I’m glad it’s this, and not what people are thinking of when they think “The ’80s!”

Package Details


This one was remastered from the original tapes by Rick Essig at REM Sound, and comes in a heavyweight wide-spine jacket with spot-UV embossing on it.


And it comes on cool splatter vinyl.


The vinyl colors are really nice and match the cover perfectly. The album art lends itself to a crazy package color-wise, and I think we honored that without distracting from it. Visually this is one of the nicest packages we’ve ever made