Sold Date:
April 17, 2022
Start Date:
January 27, 2022
Final Price:
$49.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
1596
Buyer Feedback:
7
Vinyl: VG+ Play Graded. Sounds Great! Has some marks that don't affect the sound quality. A&M Labels are Clean and
Bright and have CRC on the Label. This is the 1976 A&M SP-3703 Columbia Record Club 1ST PRESSING! This is the audiophile acclaimed pressing, Mastered at The Mastering Lab of Hollywood and as it's a Columbia Record Club disc, it's Pressed by Columbia's Renowned Terre Haute, IN Pressing Plant!! Terre Haute pressings are considered one of the Finest in the World for their crisp high ends and fat bottoms. It sounds like you're in the Concert Hall! Frampton's Finest Hour! Classic Rock Defined! Bob Mayo on the Keyboards, Bob Mayo!!! all
music gives it 4 1/2 stars!!
See Review Below!
In the dead wax: Matrices, etched. Also has TML (stamped) ((Mastered at The Mastering Lab, Hollywood, CA)) and T1 ((Pressed at Columbia's Terre Haute, IN Pressing Plant)) Complete Dead Wax information cheerfully provided upon request.
Cover: VG+ (see photos) Liner notes by Cameron Crowe! Nice
high gloss on cover. Front and back of cover artwork and text are rich,
clear and bright, with some ring wear. Seams, corners and spine are
solid and clean, with some wear. No splits. No writing. Spine print is crystal clear.
Goldmine Standards. I play grade every record that I sell on eBay as I have found you can't rate a record accurately by just visually inspecting it. 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).
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.
by Bruce Eder
At the time of its release, was an anomaly, a multi-million-selling (mid-priced) double LP by an artist who had previously never burned up the charts with his long-players in any spectacular way. The biggest-selling live album of all time, it made a household word and generated a monster hit single in "Show Me the Way." And the reason why is easy to hear: the / graduate packed one hell of a punch on-stage -- where he was obviously the most comfortable -- and, in fact, the live versions of "Show Me the Way," "Do You Feel Like I Do," "Something's Happening," "Shine On," and other album rock staples are much more inspired, confident, and hard-hitting than the studio versions. [The 1999 reissue in A&M's "Remastered Classics" (31454-0930-2) series is a considerable improvement over the original double CD or double LP in terms of sound -- the highs are significantly more lustrous, the guitars crunch and soar, and the bottom end really thunders, and so you get a genuine sense of the power of 's live set, at least the heavier parts of his set, rather than the compressed and flat sonic profile of the old double-disc version. and the band sound significantly closer as well, even on the softer songs such as "Wind of Change," and the disc is impressive listening even a quarter century later. Of course, one must take this all with a grain of salt as a concert document -- as was later revealed, there was considerable studio doctoring of the raw live tapes, a phenomenon that set the stage for such unofficial hybrid works as 's and countless others.]