Stone Roses TURNS INTO STONE 180g 2xLP Gray Vinyl Record NEW & SEALED & NUMBERED
Sold Date:
April 20, 2019
Start Date:
February 20, 2019
Final Price:
$33.97
(USD)
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The Stone Roses
Turns Into Stone
Numbered Limited Edition
Colored 180g 2xLP
New Deluxe Edition Remastered
Colored Copies Are Limited / Call To Confirm Colored Copies Are Still Available
You can tell a lot about a band by the songs they leave off their albums. Manchester’s
Stone Roses released just two albums - the self-titled 1989 debut and, five years later, the follow-up,
Second Coming. But those albums tell only part of the story. The missing bits can be found on
Turns Into Stone, originally released in 1992 and scooping up early singles and B-sides that didn’t appear on the band's iconic debut.
The album’s provenance speaks nothing of its quality: here can be
found some of the greatest songs the four-piece ever recorded, from
their poppets single, “Elephant Stone,” to the towering “One Love” and
the anthemic “Fools Gold,” the track on which their hybrid of
atmospheric indie and acid house found its most perfect balance. It’s
the track that allowed the group’s rhythm section of Gary ‘Mani’
Mounfied (bass) and Alan ‘Reni’ Wren (drums) to shine and the one that
gave them cred beyond the indie scene - Run DMC even sampled it on
1990’s “What’s It All About?”
Quite why
The Stone Roses chose not to put these songs on an album is a mystery, but
Turns Into Stone
itself was controversial at the time. In a protracted battle with
record label Silvertone, the band were unable to release any new
material for several years due to an injunction against them, and
Turns Into Stone
was released without input from the band - unlike the majority of their
releases, it boasts no cover art from the guitarist, painter and
sculptor John Squire.
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PACKING VINYL THE CORRECT WAYI package each record to avoid bent corners and seam splits. Here’s how:
* All records are packaged in new vinyl mailer boxes and assembled using a variation of bubble wrap, shrink and cardboard flats.
* ALL records are put inside a 2-3 mm clear sleeve. (I use the soft sleeves, not the ones that sound like you’re opening a bag of Doritos when you work with them.)
* If the record is used or open, the vinyl and its inner sleeve will always be shipped outside the jacket but inside the same clear sleeve.
* I reinforce the corners of each box mailer (no matter what size it is) by using cardboard “planks” secured to each corner around the edge to prevent damage when tossed around in the mail. This makes a difference.
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