Sold Date:
December 11, 2024
Start Date:
January 14, 2024
Final Price:
$42.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
1844
Buyer Feedback:
54
Vinyl: VG Play Graded. Sounds Very Good! This is the 1972 Curtom CRS-8014 1ST PRESSING, Mastered by Sam Feldman at Bell Sound and Pressed at Monarch Records Mfg. Corp, Los Angeles, CA!! Mayfield continues his winning streak on this Landmark score for the OST of one of the most Legendary Blaxploitation movies, ever. And it was Mayfield's score that helped make the movie transcend the genre it created by using thought provoking lyrics that didn't moralize nor criticize. Another Defining moment for Psychedelic Soul. Not a bummer on here. The sound does not suffer from the tasteful addition of strings here and there. Pusherman, the Title track, Freddie's Dead, and virtually all the others are Stone Grooves and the Entire album is Crucial... One of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time!! allmusic gives it 5 stars!!!
In the Dead Wax: Matrices, etched. On both sides: the MR glyph for Monarch, sF for Sam Feldman and Bell Sound ((Mastered by Sam Feldman at Bell Sound, NYC and Pressed at Monarch Records Mfg. Corp., Los Angeles, CA)) Complete Dead Wax information cheerfully provided upon request.
Cover: VG+ (see photos) Gatefold. Includes the Original Company sleeve. Front, Gatefold and back of cover artwork and text are clear and bright, with some wear and some creases. Corners, seams and spine are clean, with some wear. No splits. No stickers. No writing. Spine print is clear.
Goldmine Standards. I play grade every record that I sell on eBay as I have found you can't rate an LP accurately by just visually inspecting an album. I wipe the dust off of every cover with clean, unscented baby wipes. I professionally clean the vinyl. (I also operate a Vinyl Record Cleaning business for your dusty/dirty records--if interested, send me a message).
The choice of Curtis Mayfield to score the blaxploitation film Super Fly was an inspired one. No other artist in popular music knew so well, and expressed through his music so naturally, the shades of gray inherent in contemporary inner-city life. His debut solo album, 1970's , had shown in vivid colors that the '60s optimist (author of the civil-rights anthems "Keep On Pushing" and "People Get Ready") had added a layer of subtlety to his material; appearing on the same LP as the positive and issue-oriented "Move On Up" was an apocalyptic piece of brimstone funk titled "(Don't Worry) If There's a Hell Below, We're All Going to Go." For Super Fly, Mayfield wisely avoids celebrating the wheeling-and-dealing themes present in the movie, or exploiting them, instead using each song to focus on a different aspect of what he saw as a plague on America's streets. He also steers away from explicit moralizing; through his songs, Mayfield simply tells it like it is (for the characters in the film as in real life), with any lessons learned the result of his vibrant storytelling and knack of getting inside the heads of the characters. "Freddie's Dead," one of the album's signature pieces, tells the story of one of the film's main casualties, a good-hearted yet weak-willed man caught up in the life of a pusher, and devastatingly portrays the indifference of those who witness or hear about it. "Pusherman" masterfully uses the metaphor of drug dealer as businessman, with the drug game, by extension, just another way to make a living in a tough situation, while the title track equates hustling with gambling ("The game he plays he plays for keeps/hustlin' times and ghetto streets/tryin' ta get over"). Ironically, the sound of Super Fly positively overwhelmed its lyrical finesse. A melange of deep, dark grooves, trademarked wah-wah guitar, and stinging brass, Super Fly ignited an entire genre of music, the blaxploitation soundtrack, and influenced everyone from soul singers to television-music composers for decades to come. It stands alongside and as one of the most vivid touchstones of '70s pop music.