CURTIS MAYFIELD Curtis VG/VG+ 1970 Curtom CRS-8005 1ST PRESSING! PHIL UPCHURCH
Sold Date:
July 19, 2024
Start Date:
January 22, 2024
Final Price:
$44.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
1828
Buyer Feedback:
0
Vinyl: VG/VG+ Play Graded. Not quite a VG+ but better than a VG! Has some warm vinyl snap, crackle and pop. Curtom Labels are clean and bright, with side 2 having an initial written on it, which doesn't obscure any of the printing on the label. This is the 1970 Curtom CRS-8005 1ST PRESSING! Mayfield scores on his first Solo record after leaving The Impressions. Defining moment for Psychedelic Soul. A tremendous amount of talent are on this recording, including bassist/guitarist Phil Upchurch! Not a bummer on here. The sound does not suffer from the tasteful addition of strings here and there. Move On Up and Don't Worry, are Stone Grooves and the Entire album is Crucial... allmusic gives it 5 stars!!!
In the Dead Wax: Matrices, etched. Complete Dead Wax information cheerfully provided upon request.
Cover: VG/VG+ (see photos) Gatefold. Front, gatefold and back of cover artwork and text are clear and bright, with some shelf wear. Corners, seams and spine are clean, with some wear. No splits. No stickers. An initial is written on the top left corner. There's also a light discoloration on the top left and back right cover. 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).
U.S.
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All records are packaged securely with the vinyl outside the jacket (to avoid seam split in transit). The vinyl and jacket are sandwiched between two cardboard stiffeners and shipped in a custom cardboard record mailer box.
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Why buy a first or early pressing and not a re-issue or a ‘re-mastered’ vinyl album? First and early pressings are pressed from the first generation lacquers and stampers. They usually sound vastly superior to later issues/re-issues (which, in recent times, are often pressed from whatever 'best' tapes or digital sources are currently available) - many so-called 'audiophile' new 180g pressings are cut from hi-res digital sources…essentially an expensive CD pressed on vinyl. Why experience the worse elements of both formats? These are just High Maintenance CDs, with mid-ranges so cloaked with a veil as to sound smeared. They are nearly always compressed with murky transients and a general lifelessness in the overall sound. There are exceptions where re-masters/re-presses outshine the original issues, but they are exceptions and not the norm. First or early pressings nearly always have more immediacy, presence and dynamics. The sound staging is wider. Subtle instrument nuances are better placed with more spacious textures. Balances are firmer in the bottom end with a far-tighter bass. Upper-mid ranges shine without harshness, and the overall depth is more immersive. Inner details are clearer. On first and early pressings, the music tends to sound more ‘alive’ and vibrant. The physics of sound energy is hard to clarify and write about from a listening perspective, but the best we can describe it is to say that you can 'hear' what the mixing and mastering engineers wanted you to hear when they first recorded the music.
Curtis Review by Bruce Eder
The first solo album by the former leader of , Curtis represented a musical apotheosis for Curtis Mayfield -- indeed, it was practically the ""
album of '70s soul, helping with its content and its success to open
the whole genre to much bigger, richer musical canvases than artists had
previously worked with. All of Mayfield's years of experience of life,
music, and people were pulled together into a rich, powerful, topical
musical statement that reflected not only the most up-to-date soul
sounds of its period, finely produced by Mayfield himself, and the
immediacy of the times and their political and social concerns, but also
embraced the most elegant R&B sounds of the past. As a producer,
Mayfield embraced the most progressive soul sounds of the era,
stretching them out compellingly on numbers like "Move on Up," but he
also drew on orchestral sounds (especially harps), to achieve some
striking musical timbres (check out "Wild and Free"), and wove all of
these influences, plus the topical nature of the songs, into a neat,
amazingly lean whole. There was only one hit single off of this record,
"(Don't Worry) If There's a Hell Down Below We're All Going to Go,"
which made number three, but the album as a whole was a single entity
and really had to be heard that way.
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