Carpenters JAPAN ONLY AUDIOPHILE 12" 45rpm NM Mega Rare "Yesterday Once More" +1

Sold Date: June 27, 2015
Start Date: June 20, 2015
Final Price: $19.99 (USD)
Bid Count: 1
Seller Feedback: 896
Buyer Feedback: 78


Carpenters Yesterday Once More 12" 45rpm RECORD/MAXI SINGLE   

This is one of the rarest items for Carpenters collectors. 1978 Japanese only vinyl 12" 45 rpm MAXI single also featuring Please Mr Postman, housed in a unique picture sleeve complete with the 'Audio Panic 78' obi-strip. Manufactured by King Records Japan, catgalog number CML3. 

Condition (Sleeve / Disc) = NM/NM

(Mint > NM > EX > VG > Fair > Poor, with +/-, if any)

Grading is based on visual observation only. 

Buyer pays for  shipping+handling costs as stated below. We sent the total invoice to your E-mail address within 24 hours after the auction end.   Payment should be made in 7days after the auction end.

Postage : Worldwide $ 9.00 (Registered Economy Airmail)

 About 10~14days delivery period. With tracking number. No Insurance. Buyer assumes all the risk of lost and damage during transit.

***This is shpped from Japan. US$4.00 postage is not applied. Please don't make payment before recieving an invoice from us.***


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Why Japanese vinyl releases are so special?

Premium Quality Pressings Japanese vinyl releases are premium quality pressings, much sought after by audiophiles and collectors alike. Japanese pressings are synonymous with quality - the vinyl shines like no other countrys' pressing - everything about their releases feels special. It is a famous story that when US audiophile label Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab first released their series of high quality pressings the records were manufactured in Japan. The sonic quality of Japanese pressings is considered to be among the best in the world.  
Obi All Japanese LPs were issued originally with an obi.  This delicate paper strip, usually wrapped around the left side of the album cover, often contains marketing information and album content details, all printed in Japanese kanji and ~kana script. Obi designs can be as varied as the LPs they adorn, and some series of obi designs can be as collectable as the artists' albums they decorate. Obis make a unique, attractive addition to the overall package and are becoming increasingly rare, especially on LPs from the 1960s and 70s. Their delicate and disposable nature meant that very early obis were routinely discarded, so that now they can often be worth several times more than the record they accompany.
Sleeve Printing and Insert Japanese releases are beautifully presented; their covers usually printed on better quality heavy stock paper and almost always including a bonus lyric insert with dual language Japanese & English text.

As you see now, Japanese records make, regardless of your musical taste, a stunning addition to any collection. Audibly and visually they present the collector with a feast of delights. Genuine mint condition records, complete with inserts and obi, are becoming rarer every day. Whatever the digital age throws at you there is still a valid opinion that says vinyl sounds best with Japanese records you get top quality pressings, a tactile picture sleeve that looks stunning and you can sing along from the lyric insert. This is the real alternative to a download!

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